Skip to main content
Customizable
Interlude No. 7 : Original Watercolor Painting | Paintings by Elizabeth Becker. Item composed of paper compatible with minimalism and contemporary style
Trade Member Offer Available
Customize this piece
Interlude No. 7 : Original Watercolor Painting | Paintings by Elizabeth Becker. Item composed of paper compatible with minimalism and contemporary style
Interlude No. 7 : Original Watercolor Painting | Paintings by Elizabeth Becker. Item composed of paper compatible with minimalism and contemporary style
Interlude No. 7 : Original Watercolor Painting | Paintings by Elizabeth Becker. Item composed of paper compatible with minimalism and contemporary style

Created and Sold by Elizabeth Becker

Elizabeth Becker

Interlude No. 7 : Original Watercolor Painting

Free Shipping

Price $280

In Stock Now

Shipping: 1-5 days
$0 Shipping in the US, ask the creator about international shipping.
Estimated Arrival: January 3, 2025

Handmade

Woman Owned

Made In USA

Made To Order

DimensionsWeight
16H x 20W x 0.1D in
40.64H x 50.8W x 0.25D cm

Original watercolor painting on 140 lb Arches cold pressed paper

16" x 20"
Unframed

Signed on front

Item Interlude No. 7 : Original Watercolor Painting
Created by Elizabeth Becker
As seen in Creator's Studio, Carlisle, PA
Have more questions about this item?
Elizabeth Becker
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2023
Expressive and Intuitive Watercolor Paintings

I work in watercolor, a ‘living’ medium, whose spontaneity and immediacy teaches me to let go, become present in the moment and embrace imperfections. Emotional release, intuition and expressive experimentation are important to my process. Working loosely and viscerally, I relinquish control, allowing the paint to have a life of its own as colors bleed together and slowly bloom.

I am inspired by the human condition and my spiritual connection with nature. My paintings tend to blur the lines between representation and abstraction, as I hope to capture the elusive, transcendent essence of my subjects. I believe the use of abstraction gets us closer to the way things truly are, not just how they appear.