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Birthday still life By Gigi Rosado

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Birthday still life By Gigi Rosado

Birthday Still Life arranges the familiar objects of celebration — flowers, vessels, the suggestion of a table — into a composition that is equal parts tender and graphic. Rosado approaches still life the way she approaches everything: bold colour relationships, pencil marks that remain visibly expressive rather than hidden, a refusal to be precious. The palette is warm and slightly unexpected, the kind of arrangement that feels lived-in rather than styled. It reads as both a record of a moment and a personal statement about how colour makes us feel.

As an archival fine art print, the layered texture of pencil over colour — one of the defining qualities of Rosado's method — is captured with full fidelity on matte paper, every mark and gradient precise as the artist drew it.

Birthday Still Life arranges the familiar objects of celebration — flowers, vessels, the suggestion of a table — into a composition that is equal parts tender and graphic. Rosado approaches still life the way she approaches everything: bold colour relationships, pencil marks that remain visibly expressive rather than hidden, a refusal to be precious. The palette is warm and slightly unexpected, the kind of arrangement that feels lived-in rather than styled. It reads as both a record of a moment and a personal statement about how colour makes us feel.

As an archival fine art print, the layered texture of pencil over colour — one of the defining qualities of Rosado's method — is captured with full fidelity on matte paper, every mark and gradient precise as the artist drew it.

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From $7.41

Original: $21.18

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Birthday still life By Gigi Rosado

$21.18

$7.41

Description

Birthday Still Life arranges the familiar objects of celebration — flowers, vessels, the suggestion of a table — into a composition that is equal parts tender and graphic. Rosado approaches still life the way she approaches everything: bold colour relationships, pencil marks that remain visibly expressive rather than hidden, a refusal to be precious. The palette is warm and slightly unexpected, the kind of arrangement that feels lived-in rather than styled. It reads as both a record of a moment and a personal statement about how colour makes us feel.

As an archival fine art print, the layered texture of pencil over colour — one of the defining qualities of Rosado's method — is captured with full fidelity on matte paper, every mark and gradient precise as the artist drew it.