Abstract painting with central black rectangle over muted surface, evoking symbolic doorway and emotional tension by Ritu Raj

Black Door

Medium: Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 6ft x 5ft
Creation Date: 2024
Collection: Black and White

Black Door (2024) is a threshold — a visual meditation on entry, exclusion, and everything that waits on the other side. This 72 x 60 inch mixed media painting from the Greyscale Series is composed with quiet force: a singular dark form set within a subtly shifting field of gray, its edges uncertain, its purpose unknowable.

At the center of the composition is a rectangular void, painted in deep black with faint vertical strokes. The rest of the canvas hums with texture: gentle scratches, soft smears, tiny reflective flecks that appear only when light glances off the surface. There is no handle. No hinges. No sign of what’s beyond. Only the suggestion that there might be something more.

I painted Black Door while thinking about moments of transition — those times in life when we’re poised at the edge of something, unsure whether we’re entering or exiting. The door is both metaphor and mirror. It doesn’t open. It reflects.

This work is in quiet conversation with the meditative minimalism of Pierre Soulages, whose “Outrenoir” paintings explored the interplay of black, light, and form. Like Soulages, I believe that black is not the absence of color, but the presence of depth.

Black Door doesn’t impose. It waits. It invites the viewer to imagine what lies beyond, or to simply sit with the unknowable.