There are moments when color feels less like paint and more like a heartbeat — steady, luminous, insistently alive. Electric Flora began with that impulse: to capture the pulse of a garden at the edge of sleep and wake, where petals hum with possibility and every hue seems to be listening.
At first glance you meet a mandala of blossoms — concentric petals and rounded forms arranged with deliberate symmetry. Look closer and the work reveals itself as a gradient choreography: hot fuchsias melt into citrus oranges, glacial turquoises bleed into botanical greens, and a soft, violet core anchors the whole composition. The result is both bold and tender, an abstract floral pattern that feels simultaneously psychedelic and calming. It’s a study in contrasts: radiance and restraint, saturation and soft diffusion.
When I made Electric Flora I was thinking about transformation — not just of color, but of perception. How does a simple shift in tone alter the way we feel a room? How can rhythm and repetition soothe the mind while igniting curiosity? This piece asks those questions visually, inviting you to pause and let the gradients do the talking. There is a symmetry here that comforts, and a playful unpredictability in the color interactions that keeps the eye moving.
Sustainability was part of the conversation from the start. My prints are produced on responsibly sourced papers with eco-friendly inks, and I always explore low-impact framing options because the environment that inspires my work matters to me as much as the work itself. Art should elevate a space without costing the earth.
Where to place Electric Flora? It thrives where you want color to be both an accent and a companion. A minimalist living room gains warmth and personality; a creative studio receives a dose of energetic calm; a reception area becomes unexpected and memorable. It’s equally at home scaled large as a focal point or as a subtle pop in a gallery wall — you name it.
If you find yourself lingering over one petal or following a gradient to its soft center, then the piece has done its work. I invite you to imagine Electric Flora in your space, to consider how a carefully balanced explosion of color might change the way you move through a room, or even the way you begin your day. For commissions, limited-edition prints, or sustainable framing options, feel free to reach out — I’m always excited to help place a piece where it can do the most good.