

Pink Tulip
Watercolor Painting
This tulip watercolor is one of my simple botanical studies, where I focus on a single flower and let the shape carry the whole composition. I wanted this piece to feel soft, clear, and self-contained, without needing any extra background or decorative elements.
What interested me most here was the structure of the tulip itself. Tulips always feel very sculptural to me — even when they are delicate, they still have a strong form. In this painting, I tried to keep that balance between softness and structure by using transparent pink and violet tones in the petals, while giving the leaves cooler blue-green color to create contrast.
I kept the composition minimal on purpose. The white background gives the flower space, and that emptiness is important to the mood of the piece. It lets the viewer stay with the tulip itself: its folds, its color shifts, and the quiet tension between the bloom and the leaves.
These smaller watercolor flower studies are a way for me to slow down and really observe one subject at a time. Even with a very simple composition, I want the painting to feel attentive, calm, and alive.






