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Grounded in Nature, Defined by Form: What My Artistic Philosophy Means for Collectors

Between Two Forms, blue and white geometric abstract diptych painting by Shilo Ratner, 10 x 20 inches, acrylic on canvas

What "Grounded in Nature. Defined by Form." Means in My Work

"Grounded in Nature. Defined by Form." isn't just a tagline. It's the underlying structure behind my geometric abstract paintings. It reflects how I translate landscape, observation, and natural systems into precise compositions built from shape, edge, and color. Once you understand that framework, the work shifts, from something you see to something you can read.

For collectors, that distinction matters. It's the difference between acquiring a piece that looks right and acquiring one you can articulate, live with, and return to over time. If you're new to collecting geometric abstract art, start with my complete guide to collecting geometric abstract art. For a broader look at the ideas behind the work, including minimalism, color, and influence, visit Artist Philosophy: Minimalist Landscape Art. This post builds on those foundations, focusing on what the work means in practice.

Grounded in Nature

My work begins outside the studio. Not with a camera or a plan, but with observation: walking a trail, standing near the water, watching light shift at the end of the day.

What stays with me isn't detail. It's structure: the weight of a mountain against the sky, the way color flattens or deepens as light changes, the pull of a horizon line.

These moments don't translate directly into imagery. They stay with me as fragments, spatial, atmospheric, sometimes barely visual. What I bring back into the studio isn't a landscape. It's a memory of structure.

That's what grounds the work. It comes from something lived, not invented. You can feel that in a piece like Sand Dune, where the composition holds the weight and stillness of a coastal landscape without depicting one. For more on how that translation works, see Geometric Coastal Art: Translating Coastal Landscapes into Abstract Paintings.

For collectors, this matters. The work has a source. It isn't decorative abstraction generated from aesthetic preference alone. There's a lived referent behind every composition, and that gives the work a kind of gravity that holds up over time.

Defined by Form

Once I'm in the studio, everything shifts. The process becomes about decisions: edges, alignment, proportion, tension between shapes. I work with clean lines and interlocking planes, building compositions that hold together with clarity and intention.

Form is not an afterthought. It's the framework.

Every line has a role. Every color is placed for structure, not decoration. Every edge is either reinforcing stability or pushing against it.

I'm interested in how constraint creates possibility. By limiting the language, geometry, repetition, controlled palettes, I can push deeper into variation, balance, and rhythm. That's visible in a work like Between Two Forms, where two panels hold a conversation across a shared axis.

For collectors, this level of formal intention makes the work legible without being fixed. It doesn't require decoding, yet it continues to unfold, revealing new relationships over time, through shifting light, seasons, and movement within a space.

Where They Meet

The tension between nature and form is what drives the work forward. Nature is expansive, unpredictable, and constantly shifting. Form is controlled, deliberate, and exact.

I'm not trying to resolve that tension. I want it to remain visible.

A painting may reference a mountain or a body of water, but it isn't about describing it. It's about building a structure that holds the same sense of orientation, weight, and movement, without relying on representation. That's where the work lives: between recognition and construction.

For a broader look at how this work responds to a changing climate, read What Does Landscape Mean in a Changing Climate?

That balance is also what allows the work to live comfortably in a range of interiors and collector contexts. The geometry creates clarity and structure, while its roots in the natural world keep it grounded and human. The result is work that holds its presence over time, without needing explanation. If you're considering placement, the guide to hanging abstract art in a living room walks through scale, positioning, and what works best in different spaces.

A Practice Built to Last

This approach has remained consistent across more than a decade of studio practice. It has deepened through life changes, continued study, and ongoing exhibition, including the Annual Contemporary Art Survey at The Lincoln Center in Fort Collins, CO, and the solo exhibition Hidden Depth at Bryant Street Gallery.

That consistency matters for collectors. It means a single piece isn't isolated, it belongs to a larger body of work with a clear direction and point of view you can return to over time.

From the Studio

View available original paintings and works on paper in the geometric mountain paintings collection.

If you're considering a piece or a commission, contact me directly to talk through your space. The complete guide to commissioning an original painting is available if you'd like more detail.

— Shilo

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