Monochromism proposes a contemporary movement in art centered on the sustained exploration of a single color as a complete visual and material field.
Extending the legacy of monochrome painting, it advances a practice in which reduction is not stylistic but structural, shaped by material limits, duration, and process.
Color is approached as presence rather than symbol, with variation emerging through density, texture, light, and time rather than imagery or narrative.
Authorship is restrained, interpretation remains open, and the viewer’s sustained perception completes the work.
Monochromism positions color as a site of continuity, attentiveness, and embodied experience within contemporary practice.