There's a particular quality of light that exists in the hour after the sun has set but before the sky fully darkens. The horizon holds color longer than expected. The landscape compresses into planes. Distance becomes legible in a way it isn't during the day. That is the moment this painting holds.
That Time of Night is a new geometric abstract diptych painting, 20 x 10 inches overall, and it's a piece I keep returning to, for what it asks of the viewer and how it occupies a space.
On the Diptych Format
A diptych is made of two panels that function as a single composition, but the structure carries a built-in tension: each panel must stand independently, while together they need to create something neither could achieve alone. That friction is where the work lives. It's also a direct expression of something I think about constantly in geometric abstraction, the way constraint becomes a generative force rather than a limitation.
This abstract diptych painting is designed to operate in both modes. Installed together, the panels form a continuous horizon, a single extended field across the full 20-inch width. Installed separately, each 10 x 10inch panel becomes its own complete composition, a distinct moment within a larger continuum. How it's hung becomes part of the work.
The Vista as Subject
I've long been drawn to the idea of the mountain vista, not as scenery, but as an experience of looking. A vista asks you to take in distance, scale, and your position within it all at once. In geometric abstract painting, that translates into horizontal movement, layered planes, and gradual shifts in color across a wide field.
The diptych lends itself naturally to this kind of abstract landscape painting. The seam between the panels becomes active, a pause, a break that doesn't divide so much as it recalibrates the view, like a ridge line or a band of trees that interrupts without closing off space.
Color and Light
The palette comes directly from observation. That transition between dusk and night has its own internal logic: warmth receding, cooler blues and violets advancing, and a narrow band of light along the horizon that lingers longer than it should. I wanted this contemporary abstract painting to carry that sense of change in motion.
There's also a stillness at that hour I was trying to hold. Not emptiness, but suspension, the feeling of the world just before it settles.
For a broader look at how this work responds to a changing climate, read What Does Landscape Mean in a Changing Climate?
Displaying the Work
As a diptych, That Time of Night offers real flexibility. Together, it reads as a wide, immersive horizontal abstract painting, well suited to a long wall, above a sofa or bed, or in an entry where the full span can unfold. Separated, each panel works on its own in a more intimate setting, a study, hallway, or quieter corner. If you're unsure what scale works best for your space, my room-by-room art size guide walks through how to think about it. For living room placement specifically, the guide to hanging abstract art in a living room covers height, sofa proportions, and layout in detail. And if you're new to collecting geometric abstract art, my guide to collecting geometric abstract art walks through what to look for and how to start.
The panels can also be installed with a small gap between them, allowing the seam to open up and shift the rhythm of the piece. There isn't a fixed way to hang this original abstract painting.
On Scale
At 20 x 10 inches overall, the piece has presence without excess. The horizontal format keeps it grounded. It holds space rather than overtaking it, which is something I consider closely at this size.
This original geometric abstract diptych painting is available for collectors seeking contemporary abstract art with a strong sense of structure, light, and spatial tension. If you're interested in a similar piece in a different size or colorway, I also take custom commissions. Reach out at shiloratner@gmail.com and we can talk through what you have in mind.
