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36 x 48 in
Acrylic on canvas

 

Positioned at the threshold between storm and illumination, the horse turns slightly away, its gaze directed inward rather than outward. The sky carries a sense of movement and instability, yet the figure itself remains contained, holding a tension between external turbulence and internal stillness.

 

Light breaks through the clouds in a concentrated beam, touching the surface without fully resolving the atmosphere. It suggests not clarity, but interruption — a moment in which perception shifts without becoming fixed.

 

The idea of escape unfolds here not as action, but as a state of awareness. Rather than a physical departure, it suggests a movement inward — a quiet refusal to be fully defined by what surrounds it. The horse becomes both witness and agent of this shift, holding a space where restraint begins to transform.

 

In this sense, escape is not rupture, but reorientation — a turning toward an internal landscape where tension does not disappear, but loosens its hold, allowing a different kind of freedom to emerge.

"The Great Escape" - SOLD

$6,000.00Price
  • 36 x 48 in
    Acrylic on canvas

    Positioned at the threshold between storm and illumination, the horse turns slightly away, its gaze directed inward rather than outward. The sky carries a sense of movement and instability, yet the figure itself remains contained, holding a tension between external turbulence and internal stillness.

    Light breaks through the clouds in a concentrated beam, touching the surface without fully resolving the atmosphere. It suggests not clarity, but interruption — a moment in which perception shifts without becoming fixed.

    The idea of escape unfolds here not as action, but as a state of awareness. Rather than a physical departure, it suggests a movement inward — a quiet refusal to be fully defined by what surrounds it. The horse becomes both witness and agent of this shift, holding a space where restraint begins to transform.

    In this sense, escape is not rupture, but reorientation — a turning toward an internal landscape where tension does not disappear, but loosens its hold, allowing a different kind of freedom to emerge.

© 2035 by Kasia Kaznocha

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