Main Navigation

  1. Ryan Louder
  2. All Artworks
  3. Learning To Ride A Bike

Learning To Ride A Bike (2020) Original Acrylic Painting by Ryan Louder

40.64 x 30.48 x 0.51cm (unframed)

108 Artist Reviews

£375Sold

Signal Rating: 7/10 — Significant
Classification: Hypnagogic

This painting by Ryan Louder is part of a body of work shaped by his neurological condition — Narcolepsy with REM Intrusion Hallucinations, clinically confirmed via MSLT at Guy's Hospital, London. The work contains hypnagogic imagery — embedded secondary images, phantom figures, and forms emerging from within the scene.

Neuroaesthetic markers identified: Strongly hypnagogic in temporal and spatial construction: the scene is lit by an impossible teal-turquoise sky that has no meteorological equivalent — the entire landscape is bathed in sleep-light; figures are desaturated towards silhouette while remaining semi-legible, matching the partial resolution of faces and forms in hypnagogic imagery; the bicycle-learning scenario has the quality of a recurring vivid dream-memory — physically specific but emotionally ambiguous; the mother figure reaching toward the child has elongated arm proportion; the road and water-body behind the figures are the same chromatic temperature, collapsing depth; white wheel of the bicycle is hyperbolically bright relative to all other elements

These markers are not deliberate artistic techniques but direct visual recordings of what REM intrusion hallucinations look like. The imagery emerges from neurological experience, not metaphor. Ryan has painted over 2,000 works, with over 1,000 originals sold. Each painting in this collection has been subjected to neuroaesthetic forensic analysis to identify and catalogue the perceptual phenomena present.

Materials used:

Acrylic paint

Details:

Tags:

#children#painting of#happy painting#children playing#joyous#happy paintings#kids playing#children painting#children having#painting about#joyous painting
14 day money back guaranteeFree returns

14 day money back guaranteeLearn more

4.9

Overall Rating

Based on 108 reviews
5 stars
104
4 stars
2
3 stars
2
2 stars
0
1 stars
0

Signal Rating: 7/10 — Significant
Classification: Hypnagogic

This painting by Ryan Louder is part of a body of work shaped by his neurological condition — Narcolepsy with REM Intrusion Hallucinations, clinically confirmed via MSLT at Guy's Hospital, London. The work contains hypnagogic imagery — embedded secondary images, phantom figures, and forms emerging from within the scene.

Neuroaesthetic markers identified: Strongly hypnagogic in temporal and spatial construction: the scene is lit by an impossible teal-turquoise sky that has no meteorological equivalent — the entire landscape is bathed in sleep-light; figures are desaturated towards silhouette while remaining semi-legible, matching the partial resolution of faces and forms in hypnagogic imagery; the bicycle-learning scenario has the quality of a recurring vivid dream-memory — physically specific but emotionally ambiguous; the mother figure reaching toward the child has elongated arm proportion; the road and water-body behind the figures are the same chromatic temperature, collapsing depth; white wheel of the bicycle is hyperbolically bright relative to all other elements

These markers are not deliberate artistic techniques but direct visual recordings of what REM intrusion hallucinations look like. The imagery emerges from neurological experience, not metaphor. Ryan has painted over 2,000 works, with over 1,000 originals sold. Each painting in this collection has been subjected to neuroaesthetic forensic analysis to identify and catalogue the perceptual phenomena present.

Materials used:

Acrylic paint

Details:

Tags:

#children#painting of#happy painting#children playing#joyous#happy paintings#kids playing#children painting#children having#painting about#joyous painting
Visit Ryan  Louder shop

Ryan Louder

Star fullStar fullStar fullStar fullStar full (108)

Location United Kingdom

About
I am a London based artist My artwork derives inspiration from the vivid and often surreal experiences of rapid eye movement (REM) intrusions, which are characteristic of a neurological condition... Read more

View all