Untitled

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Framed


Details :
Size - 24 x 24 inches
Medium - Acrylic on canvas

This artwork is accompanied by an
Authenticity Certificate

ACQUIRED
Keep your artworks out of direct sunlight. Do not lean anything against the surface of a canvas. Dust your artworks with a clean, soft rag occasionally to prevent dust buildup. Don't use cleaning products or water! Hang your artworks away from very busy and possibly messy areas. Try to avoid subjecting your artworks to extreme changes in atmosphere. Avoid excessive dryness, humidity, heat or cold. Do not frame artworks on canvas under glass, because canvas needs to breathe, if it is framed under glass you may trap moisture inside the frame. Canvases experience small, subtle shifts over time due to mild atmospheric changes, so it is best to leave them without glass to allow them to flow with these slight changes.

Framed

All Kadari orders are carefully packed to provide ample protection and care to your artworks. The shipping rates are calculated based on the size and weight of the artwork and will be displayed on checkout.

The authenticity certificate will be shipped separately and will arrive a week after the delivery of the requested artwork.

Jaiprakash Chouhan

Born in Madhya Pradesh, Jaiprakash approaches painting as an inward journey, a process of listening to what lies beneath form. His abstractions are guided not by geometry, but by the temperament of color itself. “In silence, color finds its voice, and the shape it takes is the shape of my solitude.” On his canvases, color becomes thought, and form echoes emotion, unfolding with an organic rythm that feels self-directed as if the painting is discovering itself. His works hold the weight of solitude, not as stillness, but as a living space where sound, rhythm, and color converse. Traces of nature often flow throught these gestures these gestures, lines that drift, merge, and return to balance. In his practice, there is no beginning or end, only the ongoing act of becoming, where painting and being remain inseparable. For Jaiprakash, abstraction is not escape but a form of presence— a dialogue between inner experience and the visible world.

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