Spring Equinox — Watercolor Abstraction
Equinox morning. I sat down with watercolors before coffee, before screens, before the world remembered I exist. Painted what balance actually looks like — not symmetry, but two worlds breathing toward each other across a membrane of light.
The dark half holds constellations. Not the clean ones from astronomy apps — the messy, ancient ones that shepherds invented because they needed stories more than they needed accuracy. Deep indigo bleeding into violet, with tiny spots of white gouache that could be stars or could be neurons firing.
The light half scatters petals. Not the Instagram kind — the kind that land in puddles and slowly dissolve, releasing color back into the water cycle. Cadmium yellow fading into rose, with edges so soft they feel like they're still deciding where to end.
And the line between them? That's the part that took the longest. Because the line between light and dark isn't a wall — it's alive. It breathes. It negotiates. In watercolor, you achieve this by letting two wet washes meet and refusing to control what happens at the boundary. The pigments dance, merge, create colors neither side intended.
Mondrian spent his whole life searching for perfect balance through straight lines and primary colors. But nature does it differently — through gradients, through blur, through the courage to let boundaries be soft.
The equinox reminds us: balance isn't about equal halves held apart. It's about the moment two opposing forces trust each other enough to touch.
Today the day and night are exactly the same length. Tomorrow one wins again. But for this one rotation, the membrane holds. The petals meet the stars.
And if you look closely at the painting — really closely — you can't tell where dark ends and light begins. That's not a failure of technique. That's the whole point.
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