















Ganesha rises out of a storm of paint. His face is layered in thick gold and amber, the trunk curling across the canvas with real weight, and a crown of red and orange burns above calm, lowered eyes. Behind him, cobalt and steel blue slash across the surface and push the figure forward.
One raised hand offers a blessing in flecks of crimson and green. The handling stays loose and gestural, closer to a wall mural than temple painting, with every stroke left visible. It works in a living room that leans modern, or a meditation room where you want something warm and a little unexpected.
Pairs well with Abstract Wall Art, Living Room Wall Art and Spiritual Art.
The deity shows up in heavy strokes of gold and fire, charged by a wall of blue behind him. Raw, modern, and full of motion, it reads more like graffiti than devotion.
Ganesha rises out of a storm of paint. His face is layered in thick gold and amber, the trunk curling across the canvas with real weight, and a crown of red and orange burns above calm, lowered eyes. Behind him, cobalt and steel blue slash across the surface and push the figure forward.
One raised hand offers a blessing in flecks of crimson and green. The handling stays loose and gestural, closer to a wall mural than temple painting, with every stroke left visible. It works in a living room that leans modern, or a meditation room where you want something warm and a little unexpected.
Pairs well with Abstract Wall Art, Living Room Wall Art and Spiritual Art.