This is a museum-quality art print on thick matte or glossy paper which produce beautiful colors and rich black and white tones using archival pigment inks, designed to last for 100 years without losing its original beauty.
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"Play-Doh Sundays" constructs an impossibly dense architectural corner where strict geometry is softened by an unexpectedly bold, primary color palette. The piece is a visual argument that seeks the malleable freedom of childhood within the rigid boundaries of the built world, proving that even the most fixed structures can hold space for colorful, inventive thought.
The Architecture Inspired Collection is a photographic deconstruction of the built world; seeing structures, buildings, and public spaces not merely as objects, but as silent, monumental characters, witnesses to the unwritten history of urban life. This series continues Lev's complex, signature process of layering countless photographs, allowing multiple moments in time and memory to coexist and reimagining familiar sites like the fictional roadside stop, Service Area #1, or the nostalgic, solitary view, I Met Edward Hopper Parallel Parking, into highly charged, new realities.
These vibrant pieces focus intently on the striking geometry, the palpable sense of history, and the quiet, profound drama hidden within the irony of human life, showcasing how concrete and steel absorb the fleeting, chaotic beauty of existence itself.
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