DANCE Handpulled Screenprint - Rare from Archive
DANCE Handpulled Screenprint - Rare from Archive
Oli Fowler Art
Low stock: 4 left
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The body never lies when it moves to music. This panoramic piece from the archive catches that moment when thinking stops and pure movement takes over.
DANCE exists in that rare format — too wide for standard spaces, perfect for the places other prints can't fill. Above doorways. Along hallways. That narrow wall where nothing else works. It's about the space between beats where everything flows.
This comes from the archive — one of those pieces that gets pulled out when the right person asks. Hand-pulled in the Kimpton studio using the same process that takes apart twenty years of learned technique and rebuilds it from scratch. Every pull is a controlled accident. Every impression carries the weight of the squeegee, the pressure of the moment, the slight variations that make each print alive.
The panoramic format isn't a design choice — it's the only way to capture movement that doesn't fit neat squares. Dance spills over boundaries. Bodies in motion need space to breathe on paper. This piece gives them that space.
No overthinking here. Just the celebration of letting go — the moment when self-consciousness drops away and the body finds its own rhythm. It's pure energy translated through ink and paper, caught in that wide format that mirrors how dance actually moves through space.
Details:
- Hand-pulled screenprint
- Rare from archive
- 710 x 240mm (panoramic format)
- Signed and numbered
- Sold unframed
Ships wrapped in acid-free tissue inside a sturdy tube. Arrives ready to frame, though it might sit against your wall for a while first — sometimes the best pieces need time to find their permanent home.
Care: Keep away from direct sunlight and moisture. Frame with UV-protective glass when you're ready.
This is for people who understand that not everything fits standard sizes. Who have those awkward spaces that need something different. Who know that the best movement — in art, in dance, in life — happens when you stop trying to fit the expected frame.
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