BeachLimited edition print Paper Print
by Ryan Louder
£75.00
From an edition of 120
Size 22.86 x 30.48 cm (unframed)
Original artwork description
Signal Rating: 8/10 — Strong
Classification: Hallucinatory
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 hallucinatory imagery — geometric form constants, phosphene-like patterns, and perceptual structures consistent with REM intrusion.
Neuroaesthetic markers identified: Klüver form constants; boundary dissolution; figure-ground collapse
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.
A young woman stands frontally on a beach, occupying the centre from roughly knee-height upward. She wears a white sleeveless top and a dark green skirt, and holds a small red object — a ball or fruit — at waist level with both hands. Her face is rendered in heightened pink tones, the features present but slightly flattened, with the eyes carrying a quality of inward attention rather than outward engagement. Behind her, a horizontal band of cobalt blue marks the sea, and above it a pale teal and white sky. The figure is painted with some solidity, but the face's pinkness is too saturated for naturalism, and the background resolves only as flat colour zones rather than observed space.
Materials used:
Oil, Canvas Board
Details:
- Oil painting on Canvas
- One of a kind artwork
- Size: 25.4 x 30.48 x 0.76cm (unframed)
- Ready to hang
- Signed on the back
- Style: Expressive and gestural
- Subject: People and portraits
Tags:
#female figure#colour zones#green skirt#beach figure#red object#inward expression#cobalt sea#pink flesh#frontal pose14 day money back guaranteeLearn more
Original artwork description
Signal Rating: 8/10 — Strong
Classification: Hallucinatory
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 hallucinatory imagery — geometric form constants, phosphene-like patterns, and perceptual structures consistent with REM intrusion.
Neuroaesthetic markers identified: Klüver form constants; boundary dissolution; figure-ground collapse
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.
A young woman stands frontally on a beach, occupying the centre from roughly knee-height upward. She wears a white sleeveless top and a dark green skirt, and holds a small red object — a ball or fruit — at waist level with both hands. Her face is rendered in heightened pink tones, the features present but slightly flattened, with the eyes carrying a quality of inward attention rather than outward engagement. Behind her, a horizontal band of cobalt blue marks the sea, and above it a pale teal and white sky. The figure is painted with some solidity, but the face's pinkness is too saturated for naturalism, and the background resolves only as flat colour zones rather than observed space.
Materials used:
Oil, Canvas Board
Details:
- Oil painting on Canvas
- One of a kind artwork
- Size: 25.4 x 30.48 x 0.76cm (unframed)
- Ready to hang
- Signed on the back
- Style: Expressive and gestural
- Subject: People and portraits
Tags:
#female figure#colour zones#green skirt#beach figure#red object#inward expression#cobalt sea#pink flesh#frontal pose

