Focus

Medium: Mixed Media on Canvas
Size: 5ft x 5ft
Creation Date: 2023
Collection: Hand-painted Photography

"To focus is not to narrow down, but to open up." – Ritu Raj

In a world of constant distraction and overstimulation, the act of focusing has become both precious and elusive. Ritu Raj’s painting Focus (2023), from his Hand-painted Photography Collection, explores the paradox of attention in contemporary life. The work is a striking 48 x 48 inch acrylic on canvas, employing sharp geometric motifs layered atop diffused, amorphous fields of color.

Visually, the painting is a study in contrasts. Hard-edged lines intersect fluid backgrounds, echoing the tension between control and surrender. Rich blacks and deep indigos anchor the eye, while softer blues, creams, and muted reds offer moments of breath and softness. There’s an unmistakable rhythm in the composition—structured but fragmented, intentional yet ambiguous.

“Focus” resonates with the works of contemporary abstractionists like Sarah Morris, whose geometric language often reflects the patterns and dissonances of modern architecture and systems. Yet while Morris examines external structures, Raj turns inward. His geometry becomes psychological, a cartography of internal space where cognition and emotion collide.

The painting evokes a meditative atmosphere, yet it’s far from tranquil. It is alive with interruptions—marks that stutter, fields that resist resolution, shapes that seem to almost escape the frame. In this way, Focus becomes a visual representation of the internal tug-of-war between attention and overwhelm, intention and chaos.

This work is not about depicting focus as a singular beam of clarity, but as an active, shifting state. It’s about the labor of seeing and the quiet power of choosing where we place our gaze.

Focus is a compelling invitation: to become aware of our own mental movement, to recognize how clarity must be carved out of the noise, and to consider that focus may, paradoxically, contain multitudes.


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Shaping the Abstract Form

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Vision Beyond: Abstract Eyes