Bands of Tension: Color, Conflict, and Control

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Medium: Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 6ft x 6ft
Creation Date: April 2026
Collection: Abstract Inquiry

Some paintings arrive as questions. This one arrived as pressure.

Bands of Tension is built on a simple premise — horizontal color fields stacked with architectural intention. Deep blue at the crown. Cyan, magenta, black. And at the base, red that doesn't ask permission. At first glance, the structure holds. Order appears possible.

It isn't.

What you're seeing is a negotiation that never concludes. Beneath the bands, the surface keeps a record: scraped lines, drips that changed their mind mid-fall, passages painted over and over until the canvas holds its breath. Acrylic moves fast, and I work with that speed — making marks, erasing them, letting earlier decisions push through later ones. The painting doesn't forget. It accumulates.

The horizontal format creates rhythm. But rhythm isn't peace. The eye travels across the bands and keeps being interrupted — by bleeds, by ridges where texture thickens, by the insistence of what's underneath. This is where color stops being decorative and becomes forceful. Rothko understood the emotional weight a field of color can carry; I carry that inheritance while fracturing its stillness. Richter's scraped surfaces are in the DNA of this work too — the sense that a painting is a site of decisions, not a finished statement. From Basquiat, the urgency of the mark. From Swaminathan, the belief that color itself is the argument — unmediated, elemental, enough.

Mondrian's ghost is here as well, though his geometry has been roughed up. Structure remains, but only as a point of departure.

Bands of Tension is not a painting about harmony. It's a painting about coexistence — how opposing forces share space without resolving into each other. The tension doesn't release. It sustains.

That's the invitation: not to find calm in it, but to stand inside the friction and feel it as energy.

Art that listens.

Ritu Raj | Contemporary Abstract Artist | Phoenix

Former executive turned abstract artist, I paint to explore what words cannot—creating bold works that invite reflection, connection, and quiet transformation.

https://www.rituart.com/
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Submerged Structures: Memory Beneath the Surface

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Mapping the Unseen: Lines of Inquiry in Color and Form