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Writing Cosmos

  • Regular price $280.00
  • Limited edition print series of 30
  • Printed onto Hahnemuhle photo rag 308gsm paper
  • Hand signed and numbered
  • Free shipping within NZ
  • Pick up is available at Art For Art Sake who can advise on framing options.

All prints must be ordered via our website.

Sizing & Borders

Each artwork is scaled to fit the selected paper size while preserving its original proportions.

A minimum 15mm white border is included for handling and framing
Due to the artwork’s proportions, border widths may vary slightly on different sides and between sizes
The full image is always visible (no cropping)

There are two options for receiving your print - by courier or collection in person in Wellington.

  • By courier, the print comes safely packaged and rolled in a sturdy tube. It ships within 5-7 business days sent via NZ Post. Delivery times depend on destination.

  • Local collection is available in Wellington at Art For Art Sake in Marion St, Te Aro. The print would come safely packaged flat with a cardboard backing. Art for Arts Sake can frame for you at a discounted rate if you wish, charged separately according to your framing requirements.
Size Guide

Don't wait, 30 item(s) left in stock!

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Local Pickup
Available at Art For Art Sake, 20 Marion St, Wellington who can advise on framing options.
Free shipping within NZ

"To live is to hold joy and sorrow in the same hands"

Writing Cosmos

In Writing Cosmos, a delicate bouquet of white cosmos flowers sits poised within a translucent blue glass vase, emerging luminously from an enveloping darkness. The composition immediately strikes a balance between fragility and resilience, between the whisper of light and the vast, absorbing blackness that surrounds it.

The cosmos flowers, painted with intricate attention to texture and tone, appear to frolic together, their soft petals overlapping and leaning, as though in gentle conversation or dance. This sense of movement imbues them with a human quality: they socialise and support one another, embodying the spirit of companionship and shared joy, even within an environment that suggests solitude or adversity. Their brightness feels almost defiant, a radiant counterpoint to the sinister darkness that looms behind them.

This juxtaposition forms the emotional heart of the painting, the idea that happiness, lightness, and friendship can endure and prevail, even when shadowed by life’s darker chapters. The darkness is not denied; rather, it serves as the necessary backdrop against which the flowers’ vitality can be seen and felt.

The blue glass vase, resembling an ink pot, introduces a subtle but profound metaphor. It becomes a vessel of potential, a reminder that life, like writing, allows for revision. Despite the challenges life pens, the body and spirit hold the power to rewrite the narrative, transforming hardship into meaning and renewal. The vase’s transparency and hue evoke both depth and fluidity, symbolising the emotional and creative currents that sustain us.

From within the vase, light radiates outward, its rays extending across the surface, like the tendrils of hope itself. This illumination does not merely dispel darkness; it acts in rebellion to it, casting its glow away from, and despite the surrounding void. The direction of the light, as much as its presence, suggests a conscious choice toward optimism and self-determination.

Finally, the varying states of the cosmos, some drooping, others upright, and a few still in bud serve as a poignant reflection of the diversity of human experience. Each flower’s posture tells a different story: fatigue, strength, anticipation. Together, they represent the unique journeys of every life, reminding the viewer that growth, decline, and becoming are all parts of the same continuum.