Description
This artwork captures a sky sprinkled with colorful confetti, created with acrylic, ink, and gold thread on paper with matting.
- Year: 2024
- Size: 5 x 7 inches
- Technique: Acrylic, ink, and gold thread on paper
- Sold with matting, unframed
- Protected in an acid-free sleeve, easy-to-frame size
Ready to be framed to enhance your space.
The artist
Ghislaine Riendeau
Lévis
My artistic approach is rooted in the idealization of the white goose, an infinite source of tranquility, movement, perception of sensitivity. The inspiration guiding my creation lies in a relationship between nature and freedom of expression.
Merging figurative shapes (those of the white goose) on a concrete space between the washes and the superpositions of colors make my works unique. These repeated processes provide a very personal singularity to my research as well as to the staging of the proposed visuals.
My goal is achieved when the geese, whose inspiration comes from their ancestral migration on our lands, question, invite, look and finally, force us to focus our gaze in this living universe that surrounds us.
Unframed artwork
Our unframed paper works are sold in plastic protective envelopes designed expressly for the artwork. Your new acquisition will therefore be sent to you in complete safety.
The artwork is slipped into an acid-free plastic envelope with stiff cardboard on the back to prevent any curl in the paper. This envelope is then sealed so that the work remains intact and without contact with dust.
Since the plastic envelope are acid-free, you will be able to keep the artwork in its packaging for several years (or even decades!) without fear of the artwork deteriorating. So you can take the time to choose the perfect frame for your new favorite artwork !
Despite our desire to minimize the use of polluting packaging, unfortunately we have not found yet other solutions to properly protect paper works. However, we are always on the lookout for ways to contribute to the well-being of our planet!
Importantly, paper works should never be placed in direct sunlight, which would deteriorate the colors, despite the protective plastic envelope.