Magnifying a paint stroke painted on photo paper reveals a fascinating world normally hidden from the naked eye. What may at first glance appear to be a simple brushstroke turns into a landscape full of texture, colour and subtle variations. Magnification reveals the complex structure of the paint, with each brush hair having left its mark in the pigment, which now lies on the paper as a relief of minute hills and valleys.
The colours, which may have seemed homogeneous in their original format, now reveal their true nature. Hue transitions and small blends between pigments become clearly visible, creating a rich, vibrant composition that seems to be in constant motion. The light reflections on the paint create sparkles, which in this magnification look more like a play of light and shadow than a simple visual effect.
The thickness of the paint layer varies, making some parts of the area transparent, while others remain thick and opaque, almost as if to protect themselves from prying eyes. Here and there, we see tiny bubbles caught in the pigment, frozen in time as silent witnesses of the creative process.
The close-up offers an intimate look at the material itself, something rarely observed when we view a painting on a normal scale. It lets us see the paint not just as a medium, but as a living, dynamic element in its own right, a micro-level world we would otherwise never discover.
I love experimenting with simple shapes, paint strokes and scanning and enlarging them to create something new.
Conceived by Atmani Blok, visualized with AI.
Atmani Blok is an artist with an interest in combining spirituality, art and nature... Read more…