The Artful Green paints in a single attempt. No revisions. No corrections. What appears in the moment remains.
This approach rejects the endless adjustment that once defined the artist’s process. Instead, each painting is treated as a lived event - something closer to a moment experienced than an object produced.
In the studio, The Artful Green does not try to make paintings or pursue perfection. The act of painting becomes a way of living briefly and attentively inside time itself. The resulting works are traces of that moment: gestures that exist because they happened.
These marks belong to the same human impulse that led ancient hands to press pigment onto cave walls. They are not declarations of importance or mastery - simply evidence of presence.
The artist does not consider the work precious or themselves exceptional. Painting is not a performance for the outside world but a necessary part of life. Though works may occasionally be purchased, they are not conceived as commodities, and commissions are rarely accepted.
The practice exists outside expectation, obligation, or artistic convention - an ongoing act of marking time.
