Meiko Georgouras, Forms 3, (2026) Acrylic collage on framed canvas.

$450.00
sold out

Forms 3 maps an interior landscape through layered abstraction. Suspended between drawing, painting and assembled form, the work unfolds as a visual language of fragments, pathways and shifting structures. Bands of luminous blue create a spatial field in which organic shapes and geometric divisions intersect, suggesting both containment and movement.

The painting carries the sensibility of a mind constructing order through intuition rather than fixed representation. Spirals, linear crossings and cellular motifs emerge like signals or memories surfacing through colour. The collage elements interrupt and reconfigure the painted space, creating tension between the accidental and the deliberate, the tactile and the immaterial.

As the opening work in the Forms series, Forms 3 introduces Georgouras’ exploration of abstraction as a living system where form behaves like thought itself: fluid, searching and continually reorganising. Printed and painted surfaces become mind maps, transmitting emotional and psychological states beyond language.

Forms 3 maps an interior landscape through layered abstraction. Suspended between drawing, painting and assembled form, the work unfolds as a visual language of fragments, pathways and shifting structures. Bands of luminous blue create a spatial field in which organic shapes and geometric divisions intersect, suggesting both containment and movement.

The painting carries the sensibility of a mind constructing order through intuition rather than fixed representation. Spirals, linear crossings and cellular motifs emerge like signals or memories surfacing through colour. The collage elements interrupt and reconfigure the painted space, creating tension between the accidental and the deliberate, the tactile and the immaterial.

As the opening work in the Forms series, Forms 3 introduces Georgouras’ exploration of abstraction as a living system where form behaves like thought itself: fluid, searching and continually reorganising. Printed and painted surfaces become mind maps, transmitting emotional and psychological states beyond language.