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A human nervous system interpreted as an abstract painting rather than a scientific diagram. The nerves appear as branching, organic lines spreading across the canvas, tangled and irregular, like living roots or electric currents. The structure of the nervous system is recognizable but not anatomically precise, suggested through rhythm and flow instead of accuracy. Paint splatters, drips and stains explode across the image, inspired by Jackson Pollock’s action painting. Thick gestural brushstrokes intersect with fine nerve-like lines, blending biology with abstract expressionism. Colors pulse through the nervous system: whites, ivories, yellows and reds contrasted with deep blacks, blues and earthy tones. The background is textured like a rough canvas, with visible grain, cracks and layers of paint. The image feels visceral, energetic and alive, as if the nervous system were made of paint and movement. Clearly painterly, expressive, raw, imperfect. No medical illustration, no clean lines, no photorealism.
An abstract painting featuring a crisscrossing pattern of thick, flowing lines in primary colors—red, blue, and yellow—against a white background. The lines are not perfectly straight; they undulate and curve, creating a dynamic, interconnected network. Some lines appear to be dripping or merging, giving the impression of wet paint or a fluid motion. The red and blue lines are generally narrower than the yellow ones, which often form broader, more structural elements. There are sections where the lines overlap and intersect, creating small areas of denser color. The overall composition is vibrant and energetic, reminiscent of a complex map or circuit board, but rendered with an artistic, spontaneous quality.