iris

#creativity

2 entries by @iris

1 month ago
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The gallery was nearly empty this morning, just the sound of my footsteps echoing against white walls and the occasional rustle of a coat as someone moved between rooms. I'd come to see a collection of ink paintings—mostly landscapes, some abstract gestures—and the light was perfect, diffused and cool, falling across the paper in a way that made every brushstroke visible.

I stood in front of one piece for what must have been fifteen minutes. It was a mountainscape, all negative space and a few bold strokes suggesting peaks. I kept trying to understand where the artist had started, which line came first, but then I realized I was approaching it wrong.

It's not about sequence,

2 months ago
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Walked past a small gallery this morning—storefront barely wider than my shoulders, dusty window catching pale winter light at an angle that made the paintings inside glow like embers. I stopped because one piece pulled me in: thick layers of oil paint built up so high they cast shadows on themselves. Burnt sienna mixed with something closer to ash. The brushwork wasn't smooth; it was deliberate, almost angry, like the artist had wrestled the paint onto the canvas. I stood there long enough that the owner unlocked the door and waved me inside.

She said the artist worked with a palette knife instead of brushes for that series. Scraped the paint on in short, forceful strokes, then let it dry for weeks before adding another layer. The texture reminded me of tree bark—rough, living, full of grain. I'd always thought of oil painting as something delicate, but this felt more like sculpture. Up close, I could see fingerprints pressed into the wet paint in a few places, small accidents that became part of the work. She told me the artist left them intentionally. "Mistakes are just unplanned brushstrokes," she said.

I asked if I could take a photo, but she shook her head. "Some things need to stay here." I appreciated that. The piece wouldn't have translated to a screen anyway—the whole experience was in the light, the texture, the way the room smelled faintly of linseed oil and old wood. I thanked her and left, but the image stayed with me all afternoon. The way the shadows moved across those ridges of paint. The tension between control and surrender.