The artwork employs hues reminiscent of cadmium-free red pigment to construct a gestural portrayal, rich in expressive lines and nuanced ambiguity. Contrary to its potentially ominous namesake, "Red 40" harnesses modernist and minimalist elements, accentuated by crisp black lines. The depicted woman assumes a posture of serene candor, evoking a sense of effortless tranquility.
Only 20 limited-edition pieces are available. Given the nature of the production process, each edition is unique and will exhibit slight variations, giving each piece authentic character and individuality.
This piece is a part of our collection in collaboration with LGBT+ VC. Check out the full collection here.
Sie Douglas-Fish (they/them) is a professional digital and analog painter and illustrator from the lands of the Secwépemc nation (100 Mile House, BC) currently living and working on the lands of the Kanienʼkehá꞉ka people (Montréal, QC). An award-winning artist, Sie holds a BFA of Visual Arts and Japanese Studies from the University of Victoria. Sie is an art tutor, advocate, and lover of learning and tech. With experience in numerous group and solo gallery shows, Sie is helping Acrylic pioneer the future of art one stroke at a time.
The Aurograph is the result of years of groundbreaking R&D by our technical team. We’ve figured out how to capture an artist’s unique style — the way they layer, mix colours, apply pressure — and teach our robots to do the same.
This represents not just a jump, but a quantum leap forward from a flat, pixel-based photo print: for the first time, we’re able to capture the aura of an art piece and produce painted, textured, hyper-precise replicas at scale.
Aurographs have thousands of strokes each — many more than are visible to the naked eye, but which contribute to the depth and three-dimensionality of the final result.
Quality pigments can't be mimicked by ink colours (like those used in printing). We produce rich textures, lustres and colours that make artworks pop.
Studies show that your brain lights up when you look at painted art — your motor neurons work to imagine how the artist performed each stroke. No two strokes — and no two paintings — are fully identical.
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