Structural Emergence - On white's insistence, and the art of what survives noise

... Views

Medium: Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 5ft x 5ft
Creation Date: May 2026
Collection: Abstract Inquiry
Theme: Squares, grids, bands, frames, diagonals, architectural order, or hard-edge compositional structure.

There is white in this painting that refuses to stay buried. Not as ground. Not as light source. As argument.

Structural Emergence began, as many paintings do, with a question I couldn't quite articulate. I layered reds, blues, ochres — kept building until the surface became geological, almost sedimentary. Color pressing against color. And then something unexpected happened: white began to show through. Not the white I had put down at the start. Something older. Something that had been waiting.

The painting is built on a tension that is architectural before it is painterly. The verticals and horizontals — never quite a grid, never quite free — create a scaffolding that holds the chromatic noise in place even as it seems to vibrate. Structure, here, is not the enemy of feeling. It is the condition for it.

Four painters in the room

Gerhard Richter taught me something about the politics of the squeegee — how dragging one layer across another is an act of partial erasure that paradoxically reveals. In Structural Emergence, the Organic Movement technique — string and thread replacing brush — performs a similar logic. Each pull of thread through wet paint opens channels. What was beneath becomes suddenly, briefly, visible. Richter works with photographic memory and its dissolution; I work with color's weight and what insists on surviving it.

Willem de Kooning never fully left the figure, even when he appeared to abandon it. That ambivalence — figuration pressing through abstraction like a memory the painter can't quite release — has always interested me. In this painting, white performs a similar haunting. It is not a form. But it behaves like one. It has intention.

F.N. Souza brought a particular chromatic ferocity to his canvases — reds and blacks that felt like wounds, surfaces that held violence and beauty in uncomfortable proximity. Growing up around my father's criticism of that generation of Indian modernists, Souza's urgency became part of how I understand color as an ethical force, not merely an aesthetic one. The hot reds in Structural Emergence carry some of that pressure.

J. Swaminathan is the quietest influence here, and perhaps the deepest. Where Souza burned, Swaminathan listened. His paintings have a stillness beneath their surface complexity — a sense that the image is not imposed but discovered. That quality of discovery, of a painting revealing rather than declaring itself, is what I was reaching for. White in Structural Emergence is not placed. It emerges. Swaminathan would have understood that distinction.

What light demands

There is a question I keep returning to in the Abstract Inquiry Collection: what persists when everything else is noise? The answer, in this painting, is structural. It is the thing that was always underneath — patient, insistent, not particularly interested in being dramatic about its arrival. White doesn't announce itself in Structural Emergence. It simply becomes undeniable.

Structural Emergence is acrylic on canvas, 60 × 60 inches, part of the Abstract Inquiry Collection. Available through rituart.com.

Ritu Raj | Contemporary Abstract Artist | 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

Primary Cacophony - On color that collides without cruelty