Claiming The Void

€3,500.00

Sumi ink on Awagami Kitakata Washi paper, mounted on wood panel. Protected with Lascaux matte varnish.

70 × 100 × 4 cm – 2025
Signed, sealed with cinnabar paste,
title, year + catalogue number on the verso
Ready to hang
Certificate of authenticity included

Claiming The Void | Breath Meditation N°64
The Breath Meditation paintings are a direct result of an active meditation practice, where inhalations and exhalations are counted, and a mark is made after each complete breath cycle.

“The blank sheet becomes a vacuum — an absence filled with potential. This work uses sumi ink (carbon) and water, the basic elements of life. Using a pipette instead of a brush, drops sink into the un-sized paper, expand through capillary action, and form traces shaped by material and physics.

Each drop follows the rhythm of my breath along a strict grid. Space, matter, and time emerge through duration, repetition, and process.

Claiming the Void is both a meditative act and a quiet creation: from apparent nothingness, new structures arise — the void becomes inhabited.”

> See all Breath Meditation paperworks
> See all Breath Meditation wood panels
> Read more about this series

Sumi ink on Awagami Kitakata Washi paper, mounted on wood panel. Protected with Lascaux matte varnish.

70 × 100 × 4 cm – 2025
Signed, sealed with cinnabar paste,
title, year + catalogue number on the verso
Ready to hang
Certificate of authenticity included

Claiming The Void | Breath Meditation N°64
The Breath Meditation paintings are a direct result of an active meditation practice, where inhalations and exhalations are counted, and a mark is made after each complete breath cycle.

“The blank sheet becomes a vacuum — an absence filled with potential. This work uses sumi ink (carbon) and water, the basic elements of life. Using a pipette instead of a brush, drops sink into the un-sized paper, expand through capillary action, and form traces shaped by material and physics.

Each drop follows the rhythm of my breath along a strict grid. Space, matter, and time emerge through duration, repetition, and process.

Claiming the Void is both a meditative act and a quiet creation: from apparent nothingness, new structures arise — the void becomes inhabited.”

> See all Breath Meditation paperworks
> See all Breath Meditation wood panels
> Read more about this series