A Zen-inspired sumi-e unicursal brushstroke that gently evokes the silhouette of a sleeping cat.



A single brushstroke, almost nothing… and yet the mind completes the rest.
This Zen-inspired sumi-e line only hints at the presence of a sleeping cat, but the brain instinctively searches for form, balance, memory, and meaning within the void. A curve becomes a back, a pause becomes a head, an empty space becomes silence itself.
Minimal drawing works because perception is never passive. We do not simply “see” the world; we continuously reconstruct it from fragments. A few essential marks are enough for the imagination to awaken and project life into absence. The unfinished image invites the viewer to participate in its creation.
This is one of the quiet powers of strict minimalism: removing detail does not always diminish reality — sometimes it amplifies it. In sumi-e, what is omitted matters as much as what is painted. The void is not empty; it breathes. Perhaps that is why a simple unicursal stroke can feel strangely alive.
Art begins precisely there: at the threshold where perception, imagination, and silence meet.
