It was a rainy morning when I felt the urge to capture the quiet rhythm of water pooling in the furrows. The land was still, saturated, and glistening—each line in the soil holding traces of the sky above. I approached this piece using a red-yellow-blue triad, not for boldness, but to find harmony in restraint. The colors interact gently: the warmth of the red grounding the composition, the yellow bringing a subtle light, and the blue echoing the coolness of the rain-soaked earth.
I was interested in the way these primaries could be softened—muted into greys and browns that still retain a whisper of their origins. It’s a painting about rhythm and reflection, about how even the simplest scenes—water in a field—can hold a quiet complexity when you really begin to look