Description
Drawn in the manner of an old meteorological chart, an everyday kitchen — its iron stove, its scarred wooden table, a lone chair by a cloth-draped bistro round — softens at the margins and dissolves into swirling ribbons of warm orange and rose, threaded with dotted air-currents and crowned by two delicate compass roses. It is the impossible diagram of a moment everyone knows and no one can name: the half-second when a scent tips over into recollection, rendered with the cool precision of an instrument and the tenderness of the thing it measures.
The faded washes, fine engraved lines and quiet pastel weather invite a long, unhurried gaze, the kind that rewards repeated looking. In a study, a reading corner or a calm bedroom, it offers a small daily meditation on memory and the senses — domestic and dreaming at once, intimate enough to live with and strange enough to keep wondering about.
From the Untranslatable – An Atlas of Nameless States collection:
Picture a fictional archive devoted to everything we feel but cannot quite say. Each plate sets out to record a state for which no language has a word — the half-second before a smell becomes a memory, the quiet patience of a bridge, the day a language loses its last speaker — and captures it, against all logic, through the wrong instrument entirely. A scent arrives as a diagram, a grieving room as a thermal scan, the hiss of static as a gilded medieval page. The collision of impossible subject and mismatched method is the heart of it: every image holds two truths that refuse to resolve, and in that friction the wonder lives.
Bound together like specimen plates from a single imaginary collection — faint borders, the hush of paper that has waited — the eight works hang as one despite their wildly different styles. To live with them is to keep a small museum of the almost-real on your wall, art that rewards the long second look and gently unsettles every habit of the eye. For the curious, the contrarian, and anyone weary of the expected, this is a quiet companion that keeps speaking long after the first glance.
Key Features
- Material: High-definition Lambda Print — true silver-halide photographic exposure (Fuji Crystal DP II for colour, Ilford for black & white) on premium acrylic glass, glossy finish for exceptional depth and clarity.
- Finish: Face-mounted under 2 mm premium acrylic glass — Diasec technique.
- Backing: 3 mm alu Dibond composite panel.
- Style: Surrealism
- Edition: Unlimited.
- Mounting: Recessed aluminium subframe — ready to hang (invisible wall mounting, 25 mm offset).
- Longevity: 50–75 years archival conservation.
Purpose
The collection sets out to give image and dignity to the nameless — the fleeting, the unrecordable, the states that slip between words — by documenting each one in a deliberately unlikely manner, so that surprise itself becomes the subject and the familiar is made strange and luminous again.
Audience
- Curious, contrarian collectors drawn to work that is genuinely, intelligently strange
- Conceptual-art and design lovers who relish a layered image with a second life
- First-time buyers seeking a real conversation piece with intellectual depth
- Designers furnishing libraries, studies, studios and characterful interiors
Interior Decorator’s Advice
- Hang the set as a grid or salon wall so the shared archival treatment unifies the eight styles into a single statement
- Give each plate a calm, uncluttered wall and even, gallery-style light so the fine detail and aged-paper texture read fully
- Pair with warm wood, brass and book-lined shelves, letting the museum-specimen feeling lead
- A single plate also holds its own above a desk or reading chair as a quiet, intriguing focal point





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