About the Artist -ELIAS HART
The force behind the work, Elias Hart creates pieces that explore modern living through bold geometry, symbolic forms and expressive colour. Balancing structure with personality, each piece brings curiosity, confidence and conversation into a space.
Elias Hart didn't set out to paint people in the traditional sense. He became fascinated by the spaces they created around themselves. The buildings they admired, the objects they collected, the colours they lived with and the details that quietly revealed who they were. Over time, those observations became a visual language built on composition, symbolism and balance.
His work sits somewhere between contemporary illustration and modern design, where every shape serves a purpose and every object contributes to the story. Faces become collections of ideas rather than portraits. Flowers, moons, staircases, vessels and geometric forms appear throughout the work, inviting viewers to look beyond what they recognise and discover something more personal.
There is a quiet confidence running through every composition. Bold colour is balanced with structured form, allowing each element room to breathe while remaining connected to the whole. The work feels playful without becoming chaotic and sophisticated without becoming distant. Every piece is created to live comfortably within beautifully considered spaces while offering something new each time it is viewed.
Elias believes the strongest artwork leaves room for interpretation. A doorway may suggest possibility to one person and memory to another. A flower may simply be beautiful or become the centre of an entirely different story. Rather than providing answers, the work encourages curiosity, inviting each viewer to bring their own experiences into the conversation.
The process remains thoughtful from beginning to end. Compositions are refined, colours adjusted and relationships between forms explored until everything feels balanced. The goal has never been complexity for its own sake, but to create work that people enjoy living with. Pieces that continue revealing themselves over time and become as much a part of a home as the stories created within it.
A CONVERSATION WITH ELIAS HART
Interviewer: Your work often sits somewhere between art and design. Is that intentional?
Elias: Completely. I've never understood why the two should be separated. The best interiors feel curated, not decorated. I think artwork should be part of that conversation from the very beginning.
Interviewer: Your compositions feel carefully balanced. Do you plan everything?
Elias: I plan enough to leave room for surprise. Structure creates freedom. Once the foundation feels right, I can experiment without the piece losing its direction.
Interviewer: Certain symbols appear again and again. Doors, moons, flowers and geometric forms. Why?
Elias: They're familiar enough to recognise, but open enough to mean different things. I like symbols that belong just as much to the viewer as they do to me. The meaning changes depending on who's looking.
Interviewer: You seem drawn to modern architecture and interiors.
Elias: They're full of intention. Every line, every material and every proportion has been considered. I approach a composition in much the same way. Everything should feel like it belongs exactly where it is.
Interviewer: Your work is bold, but it never feels overwhelming.
Elias: Restraint matters. If everything shouts, nothing gets heard. I want colour to feel confident rather than loud. The strongest compositions know when to leave space.
Interviewer: What makes a composition successful?
Elias: When your eye keeps moving without you realising it. A good composition guides you through the piece, then quietly invites you back again. If you notice something new every time you look, it's done its job.
Interviewer: What role should art play in a home?
Elias: It should belong there. Not because it matches the furniture, but because it reflects the people who live with it. Great artwork becomes part of a home's identity over time.
Interviewer: Do you think people overcomplicate art?
Elias: Constantly. You don't need to know the history, the movement or the theory. If something keeps drawing you back, that's enough. Curiosity is a far better guide than expertise.
Interviewer: What keeps you creating?
Elias: The belief that there's always another composition waiting to be discovered. Different shapes. Different balance. Different conversations. That's what keeps it interesting.
Exclusive Elias Hart Limited Edition Prints - Coming Soon to Landson Studios.
Want first access? Members of the Collectors Circle receive exclusive previews, priority purchasing and the opportunity to secure new releases before they're available to the public.
