Art that flows from intuition, challenges perception, and invites inner exploration

This exhibition is a departure from form—a plunge into the subconscious. Jus Gana’s Free Your Mind is a meditative journey of line and flow, created from a single dot and guided by intuition. Jim Francis’s Tibetan Buddha Goddess, appearing again here, takes on new meaning as a spiritual symbol within a conceptual frame. These works ask not what you see, but what you feel—and how stillness can be found in motion.

Free Your Mind by Jus Gana

Purchased in Solihull, the artist’s hometown, Free Your Mind is not a painting that offers answers—it asks questions. What is this? Where am I? Where do I go? How do I get there? The canvas feels like a maze of thought, a visual echo of the moments when clarity slips just out of reach and we’re left navigating the unknown. The lines twist and loop, both chaotic and deliberate, like pathways that almost—but never quite—connect. There’s no map here, no legend. Just movement. Just possibility. It’s as if the artist has captured the architecture of uncertainty, inviting us to wander through it with open eyes and a quiet mind.

The Buddha by Jim Francis

Positioned in my front hallway, this object d'art becomes more than décor—it’s a guardian of calm, a visual mantra that welcomes guests into a space of reflection and grace. The figure of the Buddha Goddess, rendered by Jim Francis, radiates a serene stillness that feels both sacred and accessible. Her gaze, posture, and aura suggest not just divinity, but compassion and safety, when you enter my house.