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Artwork details
- Medium : Oil on Canvas
- Other details : Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
- Dimensions : 15.7x19.7in
About this artwork
“Endless Spring at the Edge of a Dream” was born from a longing to hold onto the fleeting freshness of spring — that tender balance between awakening and fading, between memory and imagination.
In this painting, flowers seem to dissolve into colors, as if they exist halfway between the real and the dreamlike. The soft turquoise and pale yellows suggest the breath of morning air, while the rich pinks and violets whisper of emotions that cannot quite… be named.
It is not only about flowers — it is about a feeling of renewal that never truly ends, even when the season passes. The textured brushstrokes echo the rhythm of life and time, layering moments of joy, fragility, and hope.
This piece is a celebration of inner spring — that quiet, eternal place within us where beauty keeps blooming despite everything.
In this painting, flowers seem to dissolve into colors, as if they exist halfway between the real and the dreamlike. The soft turquoise and pale yellows suggest the breath of morning air, while the rich pinks and violets whisper of emotions that cannot quite… be named.
It is not only about flowers — it is about a feeling of renewal that never truly ends, even when the season passes. The textured brushstrokes echo the rhythm of life and time, layering moments of joy, fragility, and hope.
This piece is a celebration of inner spring — that quiet, eternal place within us where beauty keeps blooming despite everything.
Mariam Dashtoyan
Armenia
Credentials
- Group shows participant
- Works on commission
« The picture selects the viewer. »
Mariam Dashtoyan is an artist based in Armenia whose paintings have been exhibited nationally, as well as in Cyprus and England. Through her bold abstractions, she concentrates on emotions, emphasizing the inner worlds of people and the world that surrounds her. In her artistic process, Dashtoyan most often employs oils on large-scaled canvases with brushes and palette knives.