Butterfly 4
Artist: Rosana Auqué
Year: 2025
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Dimensions: 20 20 inches
Price: USD $1,500
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Butterfly 4: A Study in Collective Freedom
Butterfly 4 belongs to Rosana Auqué’s butterfly collection, a body of work that emerged alongside her iconic balloon motif. If the balloon suggests ascent and inner expansion, the butterfly introduces a different dimension of freedom: one that is rhythmic, organic, and shared.
In this painting, freedom is not solitary. It multiplies.
The surface becomes a field of movement where repetition does not create uniformity, but harmony. Each butterfly exists individually, yet it also participates in a larger visual choreography. Together, they form a living pattern — an atmosphere rather than a simple image.
The square format (20 x 20 inches) intensifies this sense of containment and expansion. The butterflies do not escape the canvas; instead, they transform it into a space of balance between structure and spontaneity. Acrylic allows for precision in color while preserving a certain lightness in the gesture, reinforcing the sense that these forms are suspended rather than fixed.
Butterfly 4 is not about the literal representation of nature. It is about the emotional architecture created when multiple fragile beings move together without collision — when color, form, and space find equilibrium.
The Butterfly as Symbol in Rosana Auqué’s Work
In Rosana Auqué’s visual language, symbols evolve rather than repeat. The butterfly entered her practice as a companion to the balloon — another sign of lightness, but one rooted in transformation rather than ascent.
Where the balloon evokes childhood, air, and sky, the butterfly carries memory, metamorphosis, and return. It speaks of fragility that survives. Of beauty that is not static but transitional.
In Butterfly 4, the repetition of wings creates a visual pulse. The eye travels across the surface, discovering subtle variations in shape and chromatic intensity. The composition invites contemplation rather than urgency.
There is a quiet search for harmony in this work — harmony between shape and color, between fullness and emptiness, between individual identity and collective presence. This search defines the series.
Pattern, Harmony, and Visual Rhythm
Rosana Auqué has long been interested in how repetition generates meaning. In Butterfly 4, the pattern is not decorative; it is structural. The accumulation of butterflies produces a field of resonance, almost musical in its cadence.
The painting explores how multiple elements can coexist without hierarchy. No single butterfly dominates the composition. Instead, they contribute to a unified surface where movement is implied rather than narrated.
The result is a work that feels both intimate and expansive. It can be read closely — focusing on brushwork and color transitions — or from a distance, where the pattern becomes atmospheric.
Color and Emotional Atmosphere
Color in Butterfly 4 functions as more than visual pleasure. It establishes emotional tone.
The palette suggests lightness without becoming naive. It balances vibrancy with softness. Acrylic, with its clarity and layering capacity, allows Rosana Auqué to build chromatic relationships that feel luminous rather than heavy.
The butterflies seem suspended in an open field, neither grounded nor escaping. This suspended state reflects the artist’s ongoing exploration of freedom — not as rupture, but as equilibrium.
Artwork Details
Title: Butterfly 4
Artist: Rosana Auqué
Year: 2025
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Dimensions: 20 x 20 inches
Price: USD $1,500
Availability: Available
This painting is part of Rosana Auqué’s evolving exploration of symbolic forms that reflect emotional states and contemporary notions of beauty and liberation.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Butterfly 4 represent?
Butterfly 4 represents collective freedom and harmony through repetition. The multiple butterflies create a visual pattern that reflects balance between individuality and shared presence.
Is Butterfly 4 part of a series?
Yes. It belongs to Rosana Auqué’s butterfly collection, developed alongside her balloon works as another symbol of transformation and lightness.
What materials were used in Butterfly 4?
The work is created using acrylic on canvas, allowing for precise color layering and luminous surfaces.
Is Butterfly 4 available for acquisition?
Yes. As of 2025, the artwork is available.