Rust & Steel Convergence draws on the same vocabulary as Bauhaus and postwar geometric abstraction, but in an industrial palette — the warm oxidised brown of rust against the cool blue-grey of steel. Circular and rectangular forms hold a balanced arrangement on a neutral ground, neither side dominating the other.
The technique keeps the fields flat and the edges clean, so each colour does its own work. The rust block reads warm and weighted; the steel block reads cool and quiet; the circles act as pivots between the two. The composition takes up factory windows, ship paint, weathered metal — the textures of working buildings, not gallery walls.
The work suits interiors that already speak the same material language — exposed brick, raw concrete, oxidised metal — and sits cleanly with leather, wool felt and worn oak. It also lifts a quieter room by introducing a single weighted contrast.
Printed on heavy matte paper as an unframed poster, or framed behind . . . Read More >>
Rust & Steel Convergence draws on the same vocabulary as Bauhaus and postwar geometric abstraction, but in an industrial palette — the warm oxidised brown of rust against the cool blue-grey of steel. Circular and rectangular forms hold a balanced arrangement on a neutral ground, neither side dominating the other.
The technique keeps the fields flat and the edges clean, so each colour does its own work. The rust block reads warm and weighted; the steel block reads cool and quiet; the circles act as pivots between the two. The composition takes up factory windows, ship paint, weathered metal — the textures of working buildings, not gallery walls.
The work suits interiors that already speak the same material language — exposed brick, raw concrete, oxidised metal — and sits cleanly with leather, wool felt and worn oak. It also lifts a quieter room by introducing a single weighted contrast.
Printed on heavy matte paper as an unframed poster, or framed behind shatter-resistant acrylic rather than glass for safer hanging. Also available as a satin-coated cotton canvas, stretched over a wooden bar, ready to hang.
Frequently asked questions
What does Rust & Steel Convergence show?
Circles and rectangles in a balanced arrangement, in rust-brown and steel-blue tones on a neutral ground.
Which art tradition does the work draw on?
Bauhaus and postwar geometric abstraction, recast in an industrial palette.
Which interiors does it suit?
Rooms with exposed brick, raw concrete or oxidised metal, and rooms with leather, wool felt and worn oak.
Does it work with colourful rooms?
Yes, most strongly with earthy palettes — terracotta, sand, deep teal — rather than bright primaries.
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#Abstract
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#Geometric
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#Geometric Abstract
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#Minimal
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#Modern