Music Jellyfish
| watercolor jellyfish blending music and sea life
2020, Watercolor on A5 paper
About the Artwork
Music Jellyfish is a fluid, dreamlike composition that combines organic movement with musical abstraction. The translucent watercolor layers mimic the floating rhythm of jellyfish, their tentacles vibrating like musical notes suspended in space. The artwork celebrates harmony between sound and form—an underwater symphony of color and motion. Every brushstroke reflects improvisation and intuition, giving the piece a living, breathing energy that feels both aquatic and melodic. It invites viewers to experience the visual equivalent of music.
Artwork Details
- Artist: Diana Andriot
- Series: Expromptivism
- Genre: Surreal watercolor
- Medium: Watercolor on paper
- Format: A5
- Size: 5.8 × 8.3 in (14.8 × 21 cm)
- Year: 2020
- Signed: Yes, recto
- Shipping: Ships from Estonia
Shipping
International Shipping: I ship my artworks to the UK, USA, all EU and EEC countries, and many other destinations worldwide. If you have any questions, please contact me, and I will do my best to arrange a delivery for you.
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Meet the Artist
Diana Andriot – Fine Artist & Visionary Creator Diana Andriot is a visual artist based in Tallinn, Estonia, whose work bridges realism and abstraction. A graduate of the Estonian Academy of Arts, she creates unique one-of-a-kind artworks rooted in authentic expression, from detailed portraits to abstract pointillism that captures the subconscious mind.
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Explore the Expromptivism Series
Expromptivism is a form of art rooted in improvisational drawings and paintings, born from the habit of beginning without a preconceived plan. The creative process starts with a single mark that dictates everything that follows, making the act of drawing itself the central point. Each line and hesitation is a record of a decision made in the present, emphasizing the visible hand of the artist. The resulting pieces are less about illustration and more about trusting the creative impulse and the way the hand tells the eye what to see. These works wear their making proudly, rewarding repeated looking as they turn practice into objects and improvisation into presence.