Towards the Horizon
scalariccardodesignscalariccardodesign constructs environmental narratives through a lens of nostalgic geometry, blending the warm hues of the 1970s with a stark vision of survival. This piece captures a solitary bear at the edge of a fragmented landscape, searching for a home within a world of shifting shapes and vibrant gradients.

Towards the Horizon
scalariccardodesign constructs environmental narratives through a lens of nostalgic geometry, blending the warm hues of the 1970s with a stark vision of survival. This piece captures a solitary bear at the edge of a fragmented landscape, searching for a home within a world of shifting shapes and vibrant gradients.
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Art Analysis
A nostalgic search for a future home
Part of the BIODIVERSITY collection, this illustration addresses the urgency of climate change by juxtaposing the aesthetic warmth of the past with a speculative look at the future. A bear, rendered in sharp, geometric lines, gazes toward a distant horizon, its posture suggesting a quiet search for a new habitat as the world changes. The artist utilizes a specific 1970s color palette, grounding the urgent environmental message in a familiar, retro-inspired warmth that contrasts with the uncertainty of the subject's journey.
The composition relies on a sophisticated interplay of triangles and shaded planes to create a sense of three-dimensional depth within a flat space. These geometric forms build a landscape that feels both solid and fleeting, reflecting the fragility of the natural world. By using minimalist shapes to represent complex ecological struggles, the work invites a focused contemplation on the beauty of simplicity and the weight of a species looking for a place to belong.
The use of muted, pastel rainbows evokes a vintage summer aesthetic that prioritizes warmth and nostalgia.
The artist uses sharp angles and precise shapes to construct the form of the goldfinch, moving away from realism toward a structured abstraction.
The work places the subject within a broader ecological framework, subtly referencing the human impact on natural habitats.
The artist uses overlapping shapes and dynamic shadows to build a sense of physical depth within a digital plane.
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