THE TEXTURED ONES (2025)
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Materials: Thick, textured acrylic paint with satin sheen
Size (framed): Just over 21 × 24 inches (landscape orientation)
Frame: Bespoke solid wood frame
Original: Yes
Price: £895
Edition: Original (prints available separately)
Way Out is a chaotic, playful acrylic painting packed with pattern, hidden imagery, and visual noise. Composed in a horizontal format, the work combines checkerboard motifs with scattered objects and symbols, unified through colour and a sense of joyful disorder.
Way Out is a densely layered acrylic painting that embraces chaos, humour, and visual overload. Unlike the vertically oriented works in the artist’s recent practice, this piece adopts a horizontal format, allowing imagery to sprawl outward rather than stack upward.
The composition is filled with checkerboard patterns and hidden elements — from glasses and birds to a “Way Out” sign and a jar of bon bons. The imagery resists narrative clarity, instead operating through association, curiosity, and play. A vivid palette of greens, oranges, deep reds, and pinks holds the chaos together, creating a sense of cohesion without imposing order.
THE TEXTURED ONES (2025)
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Materials: Thick, textured acrylic paint with satin sheen
Size (framed): Just over 21 × 24 inches (landscape orientation)
Frame: Bespoke solid wood frame
Original: Yes
Price: £895
Edition: Original (prints available separately)
Way Out is a chaotic, playful acrylic painting packed with pattern, hidden imagery, and visual noise. Composed in a horizontal format, the work combines checkerboard motifs with scattered objects and symbols, unified through colour and a sense of joyful disorder.
Way Out is a densely layered acrylic painting that embraces chaos, humour, and visual overload. Unlike the vertically oriented works in the artist’s recent practice, this piece adopts a horizontal format, allowing imagery to sprawl outward rather than stack upward.
The composition is filled with checkerboard patterns and hidden elements — from glasses and birds to a “Way Out” sign and a jar of bon bons. The imagery resists narrative clarity, instead operating through association, curiosity, and play. A vivid palette of greens, oranges, deep reds, and pinks holds the chaos together, creating a sense of cohesion without imposing order.