✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
HomeStore

Flaming Sunflower Glass Wall Art

Flaming Sunflower Glass Wall Art

A 1984-Big-Brother surveillance stands in vertical cinematic format — a giant white-and-black eye stares out of concentric red-and-black target rings, three black rats scurry along the curved horizons, and a lone silhouetted man walks down a black-and-white "1984" road into the distance against a pure red ground.

The composition reads as Orwellian dystopia poster: the all-seeing eye dominates the frame like a totalitarian sun, the typographic 1984 doubles as concrete street ahead, and the rats scuttle across the rings as quiet historical-witness. The piece sits between Saul-Bass graphic-design poster canon and contemporary book-cover political-illustration.

Tempered glass amplifies the scarlet ground and pushes the white eye into reflective punch that paper print cannot match. Hung in a designer literary-cafe reception, a writer's-retreat study, a book-club lounge or a creative-agency office, this 1984 surveillance cinematography brings Orwellian-dystopia drama and graphic-design sophistication into a residential wall.

Select Size
From $159.90
Flaming Sunflower Glass Wall Art
$159.90
Product image 1
Product image 2
Product image 3
Product image 4
Product image 5
Product image 6
Product image 7
Product image 8
Product image 9

Description

A 1984-Big-Brother surveillance stands in vertical cinematic format — a giant white-and-black eye stares out of concentric red-and-black target rings, three black rats scurry along the curved horizons, and a lone silhouetted man walks down a black-and-white "1984" road into the distance against a pure red ground.

The composition reads as Orwellian dystopia poster: the all-seeing eye dominates the frame like a totalitarian sun, the typographic 1984 doubles as concrete street ahead, and the rats scuttle across the rings as quiet historical-witness. The piece sits between Saul-Bass graphic-design poster canon and contemporary book-cover political-illustration.

Tempered glass amplifies the scarlet ground and pushes the white eye into reflective punch that paper print cannot match. Hung in a designer literary-cafe reception, a writer's-retreat study, a book-club lounge or a creative-agency office, this 1984 surveillance cinematography brings Orwellian-dystopia drama and graphic-design sophistication into a residential wall.