Equilibrium Spheres builds a quiet diagram in pure geometry. Several discs of varying size are arranged on a pale ground, connected by hairline lines and steadied by a few horizontal bars. The work sits in the tradition of the Bauhaus and Concrete art — a geometric abstraction that treats line, circle and weight as a language of their own — read through a Japandi sensibility.
The composition reads like a slowly built mobile, laid flat onto the paper. Each disc carries a different visual weight; the lines hold them in relation, never decorative, always structural. The consistently monochrome palette — warm off-white, soft greys, black accents — keeps attention on arrangement and proportion.
Equilibrium Spheres works over a desk, a long sideboard or a console table in a hallway. It suits mid-century furniture, pale oak and light wool textiles, and gives studios, libraries and studies, where the rest of the room is already quiet, an architectural rhythm.
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Equilibrium Spheres builds a quiet diagram in pure geometry. Several discs of varying size are arranged on a pale ground, connected by hairline lines and steadied by a few horizontal bars. The work sits in the tradition of the Bauhaus and Concrete art — a geometric abstraction that treats line, circle and weight as a language of their own — read through a Japandi sensibility.
The composition reads like a slowly built mobile, laid flat onto the paper. Each disc carries a different visual weight; the lines hold them in relation, never decorative, always structural. The consistently monochrome palette — warm off-white, soft greys, black accents — keeps attention on arrangement and proportion.
Equilibrium Spheres works over a desk, a long sideboard or a console table in a hallway. It suits mid-century furniture, pale oak and light wool textiles, and gives studios, libraries and studies, where the rest of the room is already quiet, an architectural rhythm.
Available as a giclée on heavy archival paper, as a framed edition behind shatter-resistant acrylic in oak, walnut or black wood, or as a satin cotton canvas on a wood frame. Each format is produced in Europe and shipped from the EU.
Frequently asked questions
What does the work show?
Several monochrome discs of varying size, connected by hairline lines and steadied by a few horizontal bars — a piece of geometric abstraction built on balance and proportion.
Which art movement does this belong to?
The line of the Bauhaus and Concrete art, translated into a contemporary, Japandi-adjacent palette.
Where does Equilibrium Spheres work best?
Studios, studies, libraries and entrance hallways. The geometric rhythm suits desks, long sideboards and console tables.
Which formats are offered?
Archival paper poster, framed edition behind shatter-resistant acrylic, and satin cotton canvas on a wood frame. Produced and shipped in the EU.
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#Abstract
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#Balanced Orbs
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#Geometric
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#Geometric Minimalist
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#Minimal
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#Minimalist