Prismatic Bloom Geometry
There are moments when a color simply insists on existing — demanding to be arranged, refracted, and framed. Prismatic Bloom Geometry began as one of those insistences. I wanted to hold the soft, organic language of petals inside the clear, deliberate lines of geometry: flowers folding into hexagons, gradients pulling light across edges, and a velocity of color that feels almost audible. The result is a piece that is at once psychedelic and meditative, vibrant and composed.
Look closely and you’ll see how the floral forms are coaxed into symmetry: petals repeat like a careful breath, each one shifting hue from cool cyan to molten magenta, from electric green to velvety violet. The triangles and hexagonal frames don’t constrain the blooms so much as give them a stage — an angular choreography that emphasizes balance and quiet precision. It’s a study in contrast: nature’s curves tempered by geometry’s certainty, movement caught and made still.
Creating this felt like translating sunlight through a prism. I layered gradients and mirrored motifs until the composition hummed with a depth I hadn’t anticipated. The psychedelic colorways were intentional: I wanted the image to ignite a room and invite a longer look, to awaken curiosity without overwhelming. There’s a contemplative quality here too — the symmetry asks you to slow down, to find calm within color.
Sustainability matters to me, so when this work leaves the screen, I prefer to reproduce it in ways that honor the planet: archival, limited-edition prints on recycled cotton rag or FSC-certified papers, printed with low-VOC inks and packaged in recycled, compostable materials. Art can change an interior and respect the world that inspired it — why not both?
Where does Prismatic Bloom Geometry belong? Over a clean-lined sofa to give a living room an unexpected pulse; above a workspace to spark creative problem-solving; even in a quiet hallway, where the piece can transform a passing glance into a moment of wonder. It’s equally at home in a modern gallery or a cozy study, and it plays beautifully with natural light or subtle gallery lighting that lets the gradients breathe.
If this piece calls to you, I’d love to hear where you imagine it living. I’m available for limited-edition prints, and I welcome commissions — whether you want this color story adjusted to suit a specific palette, or an entirely bespoke variation that carries the same fusion of floral rhythm and geometric clarity. Thank you for taking the time to look — may this prismatic bloom find a place to grow in your space.