Blooming Rose in a Cold Night: Tenderness in Harsh Spaces
Medium: Mixed Media on Canvas
Size: 5ft x 4ft
Creation Date: 2020
Collection: Geometric Splendor
Blooming Rose in a Cold Night (2020) emerged from a desire to explore how beauty survives — and even thrives — in the most unexpected, inhospitable environments. This 60 x 48 inch mixed media on canvas piece is part of my Geometric Splendor Collection, where I use abstract forms to hint at emotional and environmental landscapes.
In this painting, a fragile, blooming form floats against a backdrop of hard-edged geometry and muted, icy tones. The rose, stripped of its botanical realism, becomes a metaphor for resilience, longing, and the quiet defiance of beauty against the weight of coldness — both literal and emotional.
While working on this piece, I found myself reflecting on the works of Mark Bradford, the renowned American artist known for his large-scale abstract collages that layer urban detritus and map-like textures. Like Bradford, I am interested in how abstraction can speak to survival, identity, and spaces of struggle. However, where Bradford’s work often references the external architecture of cities, Blooming Rose in a Cold Night leans inward, focusing on the psychological architectures we build within ourselves to protect our softer, more vulnerable parts.
This painting invites the viewer into a dialogue between tenderness and tension, between the warmth of organic curves and the chill of geometric rigidity. It asks a simple but potent question: What does it mean to bloom when the night feels cold, when the structures around us feel indifferent?