Lightning Considers — On the Single Gesture, the Tidal Field, and the Intelligence of Not Striking

Something happened when you saw this. What was it?
Tell us. One click.
not for me moves me
Thank you. Every response becomes part of this painting's story.
Painting profile

Share this painting

Copy the text below to send via message, email, or WhatsApp.

Medium: Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 3ft x 4ft
Creation Date: June 2026
Collection: Abstract Inquiry
Theme: Single continuous gestural form moving diagonally against a tidal layered field — one unbroken decision crossing its own current.
Palette: Cobalt Blue · Prussian Blue · Cadmium Yellow · Phthalo Green · Midnight Blue

Lightning doesn't think. That's the myth.

The reality is more interesting. A lightning bolt is the resolution of a negotiation — between charge and field, between potential and release — that has been building for longer than the strike itself lasts. What we see is the conclusion. What we don't see is the considering.

This painting is the considering.

The blue ground came first — layered, directional, tidal. Prussian Blue over Cobalt, brushed in arcs that move like water finding its level. There is weather in this ground. There is a current. When you stand close you can see the direction of the field — it moves, consistently, from right to left. Against what is coming.

Then the yellow-green arrived. A single gesture, entering from the top left, moving diagonally down and across, crossing the current of the blue field without being deflected by it. Phthalo Green and Cadmium Yellow mixed to something that has no name — not quite neon, not quite natural. The color of something that has decided.

The gesture never breaks. It crosses itself at the center of the canvas — one moment of self-intersection, of the path meeting itself — and continues down to the lower right, where it finds its end without fanfare.

One mark. One painting. One decision made slowly enough to see.

Four painters in the room

Franz Kline understood the single gesture as architecture. His black marks on white grounds weren't spontaneous — they were constructed, deliberate, the result of small sketches enlarged until they became structural. Lightning Considers carries that same quality of deliberateness in apparent spontaneity. The yellow-green form looks like it happened fast. It didn't.

Joan Mitchell painted weather from memory — not the look of it but the feeling of it, the atmospheric pressure of a specific afternoon in a specific place that the painting holds long after the afternoon is gone. The blue ground in Lightning Considers is weather in that sense. It is a field condition, not a backdrop. Mitchell's layered grounds always had direction; this one does too.

Brice Marden spent decades with the single line — calligraphic, continuous, tracing paths that loop and cross and find their way through a ground that is equally considered. His Cold Mountain series understood the line as a form of thought, not a form of expression. The gesture in Lightning Considers is thought in that sense: it is working something out as it moves.

Sam Francis brought light into the field — his late works especially, where the gesture floated in a luminous ground that seemed to generate its own illumination. The yellow-green in Lightning Considers has that quality. It doesn't sit on the blue. It radiates from within it, as if the field produced the gesture rather than the gesture moving across the field.

What the painting is asking

There is a particular quality of intelligence that doesn't announce itself. It moves through opposition without being deflected. It crosses its own path without losing direction. It arrives without drama.

That's what this painting holds.

Lightning Considers is not about energy. It's about the decision that precedes energy — the long negotiation between potential and release that we never see because the strike is so much more spectacular.

This is a painting for people who know that the most consequential moments in their lives were decided quietly, before anyone could see them coming.

Lightning Considers is acrylic on canvas, 36 × 48 inches, part of the Abstract Inquiry Collection. Available through rituart.com.

Medium: Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 3ft × 4ft
Creation Date: 2026
Collection: Abstract Inquiry
Theme: Single continuous gestural form moving diagonally against a tidal layered field — one unbroken decision crossing its own current.
Palette: Cobalt Blue · Prussian Blue · Cadmium Yellow · Phthalo Green · Midnight Blue
Artists: Franz Kline · Joan Mitchell · Brice Marden · Sam Francis
Ritu Raj | Contemporary Abstract Painter | Phoenix

Ritu Raj is a contemporary abstract painter based in Phoenix, Arizona. His signature technique, Organic Movement, replaces the brush with thread — tracing the exact tension between control and surrender that holds a painting in motion. He has created over 200 original works collected across the US, Europe, and Asia, and is the author of the forthcoming The Shape of Seeing and The Unalgorithmic Self.

https://www.rituart.com/
Next
Next

Sonoran Fire — On the Cactus Bloom, Concentric Fields, and What the Most Armored Surface Protects