Two Centers — On Duality, the Infinity Loop, and What Lives Between Dissolution and Generation

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Medium: Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 3ft x 4ft
Creation Date: June 2026
Collection: Abstract Inquiry
Theme: Squares, grids, vortex fields, infinity loop, figure-eight compositional structure — two forces in permanent dialogue.
Palette: Cerulean Blue · Cobalt Violet · Electric Green · Cadmium Yellow · Prussian Blue

There is a shape in mathematics that has no beginning and no end. The lemniscate — what most people call the infinity symbol — is not a decoration. It is a description of how two fields relate to each other when neither can exist without the other.

Two Centers began with that geometry. Not drawn. Felt.

The upper vortex came first — a cool blue-violet field spiraling inward, receding, dissolving into itself. There was something peaceful about it and something melancholy too. The kind of quiet that comes after something has finished. I let it develop without interference, watching the Cerulean and Cobalt Violet find their depth.

Then the lower field arrived and changed everything.

Electric green. Cadmium yellow at the core. Something cellular, almost embryonic — not placed but generated. Where the upper vortex was ending, the lower one was beginning. And between them, held in the neck of the figure-eight, a passage. Not a border. A conversation.

Four painters in the room

Wassily Kandinsky understood that abstract form carried spiritual weight before it carried aesthetic weight. His circles weren't decorations — they were cosmological arguments. The two vortex fields in Two Centers owe something to that conviction: that a form can hold meaning that language approaches but never quite reaches. The figure-eight is not a symbol here. It is a structure that thinks.

Hilma af Klint painted the invisible before abstraction had a name. Her large format works from the early twentieth century — the Paintings for the Temple series — positioned biological and spiritual forces in dialogue on the same canvas. The upper and lower fields of Two Centers exist in that same register: not illustrating duality but embodying it, asking the viewer to feel the difference between dissolution and generation rather than name it.

Lee Ufan has spent a career making work about the relationship between mark and space, presence and absence. His restrained touch always implies what is not there as much as what is. In Two Centers the blue ground is not background — it is active field, atmospheric and geological simultaneously. The vortices emerge from it rather than sitting on top of it. Ufan's philosophy of the encounter — the moment when viewer and work find each other — is what this painting is built for.

Yayoi Kusama returns obsessively to the dot, the loop, the net — forms that repeat until they become infinite. Her infinity rooms are environments of dissolution, designed to make the self permeable. Two Centers doesn't dissolve the self — it offers the self two positions simultaneously: the one that is ending and the one that is beginning. Where Kusama's infinity swallows, this painting holds the two states in productive tension.

What the painting is asking

Every painting in the Abstract Inquiry collection begins with a question I can't fully articulate. Two Centers began with something like: what is the shape of a transition?

Not the before. Not the after. The exact geometry of the passage between them.

The upper vortex knows what it was. The lower vortex doesn't yet know what it will become. Between them, in the narrow waist of the figure-eight, is the only moment that actually exists — the present, held in a shape that mathematics discovered and painting can make you feel.

This is a painting for rooms where thinking happens. For walls that you face when something in your life is moving from one state to another. The blue ground will hold the transition without rushing it. The green core will remind you that what is generating doesn't announce itself until it's ready.

Two Centers 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: Vortex fields, infinity loop, figure-eight compositional structure — two forces in permanent dialogue between dissolution and generation.
Palette: Cerulean Blue · Cobalt Violet · Electric Green · Cadmium Yellow · Prussian Blue
Artists: Wassily Kandinsky · Hilma af Klint · Lee Ufan · Yayoi Kusama
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/
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