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- Symphonies of Impossible Flights
Symphonies of Impossible Flights (2026) Original Mixed-media Painting by Kloska Ovidiu
120 x 100 x 2cm (unframed) / 120 x 100cm (actual image size)
£2,556.45
Original artwork description
Symphonies of Impossible Flights
Mixed media on canvas / 120 × 100 cm / signed and dated Kloska, July 2026
Varnished to ensure long-term protection of the colors
Symphonies of Impossible Flights does not propose the image of a flight, but its memory. It portrays neither a being, nor a landscape, nor any recognizable event. Instead, it inhabits the fragile instant in which matter seems, for a fleeting moment, to discover the possibility of an order that no one has ever designed. The painting unfolds like a musical score without beginning or end, where every gesture responds to another, every transparency conceals another transparency, and every source of light appears to originate from a realm beyond what can be named.
In this work, color neither describes nor illustrates. It breathes. It approaches and withdraws like a memory unwilling to settle into a single form. Layers accumulate like sediments of a consciousness in perpetual becoming, inviting the viewer to encounter not a fixed image, but a succession of appearances. The composition resists exhaustion because each return reveals new relationships, new rhythms, and new nuclei of light.
Perhaps this is the true territory of painting: not representation, but discovery. Matter continuously generates relationships, accidents, and possibilities. Most vanish without leaving a trace. Yet, from time to time, almost against all probability, certain configurations achieve such a subtle equilibrium between light, color, transparency, rhythm, and gesture that beauty no longer appears as an aesthetic effect, but as the inevitable consequence of the relationships among them.
At that moment, the artist neither invents beauty nor imposes it upon matter. His role is closer to that of an explorer of the invisible: he creates the conditions in which these rare appearances may emerge and cultivates the sensitivity required to recognize them before they disappear. Painting thus becomes a form of collecting the improbable. What is collected are not images, but fragile configurations that reach that threshold where beauty becomes inevitable and chaos seems, for an instant, to remember its own hidden order.
Seen in this way, each work functions as a living archive. Within it coexist traces, vibrations, and fragments of worlds that have never existed outside the act of painting itself. Every detail preserves the autonomy of a small universe, and together they form a visual ecology in which nothing is repetitive and nothing is accidental. The viewer does not encounter a spectacle of chaos, but a network of relationships so dense that the image continues to reorganize itself within consciousness long after the gaze has moved on.
Ultimately, Symphonies of Impossible Flights speaks of that exceptional instant when the impossible ceases to be a limitation and becomes a form of memory. Not the memory of an event, but the memory of a possibility. A possibility that painting rescues from disappearance and preserves, much like a master jeweler who recognizes in raw matter not merely the value of the stone, but the extraordinary rarity of the configuration that time and chance have made possible.
Materials used:
mixed media painting on canvas varnished
Details:
- Mixed-media painting on Canvas
- One of a kind artwork
- Size: 120 x 100 x 2cm (unframed) / 120 x 100cm (actual image size)
- Ready to hang
- Signed on the front
- Style: Organic
- Subject: Abstract and non-figurative
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Original artwork description
Symphonies of Impossible Flights
Mixed media on canvas / 120 × 100 cm / signed and dated Kloska, July 2026
Varnished to ensure long-term protection of the colors
Symphonies of Impossible Flights does not propose the image of a flight, but its memory. It portrays neither a being, nor a landscape, nor any recognizable event. Instead, it inhabits the fragile instant in which matter seems, for a fleeting moment, to discover the possibility of an order that no one has ever designed. The painting unfolds like a musical score without beginning or end, where every gesture responds to another, every transparency conceals another transparency, and every source of light appears to originate from a realm beyond what can be named.
In this work, color neither describes nor illustrates. It breathes. It approaches and withdraws like a memory unwilling to settle into a single form. Layers accumulate like sediments of a consciousness in perpetual becoming, inviting the viewer to encounter not a fixed image, but a succession of appearances. The composition resists exhaustion because each return reveals new relationships, new rhythms, and new nuclei of light.
Perhaps this is the true territory of painting: not representation, but discovery. Matter continuously generates relationships, accidents, and possibilities. Most vanish without leaving a trace. Yet, from time to time, almost against all probability, certain configurations achieve such a subtle equilibrium between light, color, transparency, rhythm, and gesture that beauty no longer appears as an aesthetic effect, but as the inevitable consequence of the relationships among them.
At that moment, the artist neither invents beauty nor imposes it upon matter. His role is closer to that of an explorer of the invisible: he creates the conditions in which these rare appearances may emerge and cultivates the sensitivity required to recognize them before they disappear. Painting thus becomes a form of collecting the improbable. What is collected are not images, but fragile configurations that reach that threshold where beauty becomes inevitable and chaos seems, for an instant, to remember its own hidden order.
Seen in this way, each work functions as a living archive. Within it coexist traces, vibrations, and fragments of worlds that have never existed outside the act of painting itself. Every detail preserves the autonomy of a small universe, and together they form a visual ecology in which nothing is repetitive and nothing is accidental. The viewer does not encounter a spectacle of chaos, but a network of relationships so dense that the image continues to reorganize itself within consciousness long after the gaze has moved on.
Ultimately, Symphonies of Impossible Flights speaks of that exceptional instant when the impossible ceases to be a limitation and becomes a form of memory. Not the memory of an event, but the memory of a possibility. A possibility that painting rescues from disappearance and preserves, much like a master jeweler who recognizes in raw matter not merely the value of the stone, but the extraordinary rarity of the configuration that time and chance have made possible.
Materials used:
mixed media painting on canvas varnished
Details:
- Mixed-media painting on Canvas
- One of a kind artwork
- Size: 120 x 100 x 2cm (unframed) / 120 x 100cm (actual image size)
- Ready to hang
- Signed on the front
- Style: Organic
- Subject: Abstract and non-figurative













