Discover the creation in interiors
Artwork details
- Medium : Acrylic on Canvas
- Other details : Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
- Dimensions : 23.6x27.6in
About this artwork
Blue Flowers (2025)
Acrylic and oil pastel on canvas
Series: Invent your Fairytale
The "Invent Your Fairytale" series is reminiscent of fragments from book illustrations. Her works are ambiguous, but leave room for one's own thoughts. Lines, surfaces, and colors don't tell a complete story—they provide inspiration for inventing one's own.
Blue Flowers is a delicate image. Flowing lines create a sense of calm movement, and the blue seems to… glow, as if reflected in the light.
Like a whisper in the distance,
the blue blooms so much in the light.
Between drops, sound and shine,
it invites us to dream.
A quiet, open work – light, reserved, poetic.
Acrylic and oil pastel on canvas
Series: Invent your Fairytale
The "Invent Your Fairytale" series is reminiscent of fragments from book illustrations. Her works are ambiguous, but leave room for one's own thoughts. Lines, surfaces, and colors don't tell a complete story—they provide inspiration for inventing one's own.
Blue Flowers is a delicate image. Flowing lines create a sense of calm movement, and the blue seems to… glow, as if reflected in the light.
Like a whisper in the distance,
the blue blooms so much in the light.
Between drops, sound and shine,
it invites us to dream.
A quiet, open work – light, reserved, poetic.
Toni Nohe
Germany
Credentials
- Experienced Artist
- Art Fair Participant
- Solo shows participant
- Featured in gallery curations
- Works on commission
The German-Bolivian artist Toni Nohe studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Nuremberg and the Kraków Art Academy. She works with painting, photography, and textile art. In her abstract visual language, she combines color theory with the symbolism of Andean cultures. Her works emerge from a dynamic interplay of transparency, line, and structure. She interweaves narrative and organic elements, creating spaces that facilitate harmony, joy, and reflection. She consciously uses color as a means of promoting well-being—inspired by the findings of positive psychology. Her works have been shown internationally and are included in private and public collections in Europe, North, and South America.