Ad infinitum 36"x72"
Richard Koscher
Ad infinitum
Oil on Canvas
36"x72"inch (91 x183cm)
I started painting "Ad infinitum" back in New York in the Summer of 2020. It translates into "again and again in the same way; forever". It signifies the eternal social emotional connection, which all human beings abide by. We love and hate, we lust and envy, we grieve and hurt, we forgive and understand, we forget and we deny, we lose and still we try. Acknowledging what we don't know, admitting when we've messed up, allowing vulnerability, and saying "I'm sorry" releases us from the prison of perfection seeking or as Carl Bard once said "Although no one can go back and make a brand new start, anyone can start from now and make a brand new ending."
Oil on rolled Canvas (not stretched)
36"x72"inch (91 x183cm)
Unframed
Note: Ships from San Francisco
Richard Koscher
Ad infinitum
Oil on Canvas
36"x72"inch (91 x183cm)
I started painting "Ad infinitum" back in New York in the Summer of 2020. It translates into "again and again in the same way; forever". It signifies the eternal social emotional connection, which all human beings abide by. We love and hate, we lust and envy, we grieve and hurt, we forgive and understand, we forget and we deny, we lose and still we try. Acknowledging what we don't know, admitting when we've messed up, allowing vulnerability, and saying "I'm sorry" releases us from the prison of perfection seeking or as Carl Bard once said "Although no one can go back and make a brand new start, anyone can start from now and make a brand new ending."
Oil on rolled Canvas (not stretched)
36"x72"inch (91 x183cm)
Unframed
Note: Ships from San Francisco
Richard Koscher
Ad infinitum
Oil on Canvas
36"x72"inch (91 x183cm)
I started painting "Ad infinitum" back in New York in the Summer of 2020. It translates into "again and again in the same way; forever". It signifies the eternal social emotional connection, which all human beings abide by. We love and hate, we lust and envy, we grieve and hurt, we forgive and understand, we forget and we deny, we lose and still we try. Acknowledging what we don't know, admitting when we've messed up, allowing vulnerability, and saying "I'm sorry" releases us from the prison of perfection seeking or as Carl Bard once said "Although no one can go back and make a brand new start, anyone can start from now and make a brand new ending."
Oil on rolled Canvas (not stretched)
36"x72"inch (91 x183cm)
Unframed
Note: Ships from San Francisco