Unique Forms of Sunflowers in Space
Acrylic on canvas, 60 cm x 75 cm
This is not a field. This is a force.
In Unique Forms of Sunflowers in Space, the Quadriflower system expands, literally. The blooms tilt, multiply, and collide across the canvas. Perspective is introduced. Depth is fractured. What was once flat becomes sculptural. The sunflower is no longer contained, it moves.
This is a study in tension: repetition without calm, order without stillness. The geometry holds, but just barely. Each flower feels caught in motion, breaking from gravity, bending toward abstraction.
And yet, they remain rooted, in color, in symmetry, in the quiet discipline of the form.
This work is not about sunflowers in space. It’s about how structure behaves when it’s given velocity. A portrait of identity, multiplied and set free.
The title gently echoes the spirit of Futurism, where movement, fragmentation and force were celebrated as a new form of beauty.