Acrylic paintings are like good wine - first you see the color, then you inhale the aroma, taste it. Quality wines have a pleasant aftertaste, astringency, complex bouquet.
It's the same with acrylic - it doesn't hit the forehead, but gradually unfolds. First you see the color, then the texture, then the midtones. And when communicating with art for a longer time, find in it images that are close to you.
And then it becomes closer to you. But still not entirely clear. Because in a different light, you will see new images that will delight and surprise you.
Salvador Dali called rosé wines a wine of joy. They evoke the feeling of a summer morning. Oh, this delicious taste! They can be grasped by the senses, but not by the mind - more intuitively than intellectual pleasure. The rosé varieties are not overly complex, but they are gracefully pleasing to the eye and light-heartedly refreshing.