Rectangular Monument Abstract

“Rectangular Monument Abstract – Painting” [28th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, acrylic abstract fine art painting on A3 300g mixed media paper, 2326 x 1641 pixels.

Innumerable drafts to make “Rectangular Monument Abstract – Painting”, an artwork somewhat Rothko inspired. It began with cerulean blue then I incorporated a grey wash to soften its harsh vibrance. Very much diffusion over texture for this painting.

Interestingly this painting holds much interest to the viewer. I do not know why.

Photographed indoors due to considerable rain. Digitally balanced whilst comparing the physical painting to this image (shown above) indoors under artificial light.

“Rectangular Monument Abstract – Monochrome” [28th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, acrylic fine art digital painting from original acrylic, 2398 x 1674 pixels image.

“Rectangular Monument Abstract – Monochrome” retains the original textures in the blue painting prior to the grey wash. I will show you the earlier cerulean blue draft at the end of this article.


“Rectangular Monument Abstract – Etching” [28th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, digital artwork from original acrylic, 2326 x 1641 pixels image.

“Rectangular Monument Abstract – Etching” is appreciably named for its likeness to stone etchings. This digital piece is arty enough for me to wish to publish.

Let’s see an earlier draft for this piece in cerulean blue:

“Rectangular Monument Abstract – blue draft [unedited]” [27th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, acrylic abstract draft on A3 300g mixed media paper, 2398 x 1674 pixels.

With “Rectangular Monument Abstract – blue draft [unedited]” you can see the effect of uneven lighting. As regards the physical painting the blue appeared far too harsh off the canvas paper.

Loved the textures, disliked the colour scheme. I personally prefer the latter finalised version. The yellow ochre textures are still present. Furthermore the dappled light effect of the finissimo is better in my opinion, easier to view. The separation between colours more successful, to me anyway.

Besides, the textures are part of the painting – obscured underneath dappled light.

What is the central ‘monument’?

Nothing in particular. Just freestyle palette knife work. Afterwards I had straw or hay in mind as a similarity. True, it is rather ark-like too. It could be one of those intricate 19th Century decorated boxes perhaps.

Imagination is art.

By the way. I often visualise how my work is best displayed. For instance “Rothko x Basquiat Gold/Cerulean Blue” looked wonderful as a tile on the floor. Like the famed stars of Hollywood. I viewed it this way myself! Admiring its golden beauty.

Then for “Pressed Gold Flowers – Painting #1 & #2″ I envisage these fastened front and back inside a natural wooden frame with A3 sized sapphire crystals over each painting! Grandeur I know. Why ever not I say.

Admit it, this would look phenomenal hanging there gently turning from a ceiling with real flowers as its friends.

Imagine viewing “King James VI & I Oak Branches in Sunlight” placed neatly in a solid box. You peer through the telescopic-like window. The box is lit only by natural UV filtered sunlight at a certain time of day. You can just make out the shadowed branches in the sunlight.

You’re loving this aren’t you?

Art is life.

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Pressed Gold Flowers

“Pressed Gold Flowers – Painting #1” [25th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, gold, green, yellow ochre, phthalo blue, mild yellow and black acrylic fine art painting on A3 300g mixed media paper, 3000 x 2123 pixels.

“Pressed Gold Flowers – Painting #1” was situated on the right firmly into the pad. The reverse side of the canvas paper (like the reading of a book) was affixed to the pad on the left. I brought the left paper canvas down toward the right, pressing neatly and uniformly over the entire surface.

Then I carefully peeled the A3 paper one from the other to reveal all the textures, shapes and patternisation you see. This process was repeated individually for additional gold and to add black, red, blue, yellow ochre approximately five times from the first pressing. The painting began with gold and green paint.

Here is the duplicate Painting #2 (image immediately below) with slight differences to the original beyond cropping (above image):

“Pressed Gold Flowers – Painting #2” [25th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, gold, green, yellow ochre, phthalo blue, mild yellow and black acrylic fine art painting on A3 300g mixed media paper, 3000 x 2123 pixels.

Both physically pressed canvasses art more beautiful than these painted images can convey.

That being said the digital artworks are no less extraordinary in my opinion:

“Pressed Gold Flowers – Solarscape #2” [26th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Art, 3000 x 2123 pixels.

“Pressed Gold Flowers – Solarscape #2” – <monkey hands on head> emoji.

It should be noted each digital artwork is derived from the correctly aligned painting, exactly as you see these here. There are slight yet discernible differences between paintings #1 and #2. This is not a matter of flipping the painting around 180 degrees.

What I love about my digital Editions is their taking on depth and colour field interest. I wouldn’t be surprised if this looks something like a human female womb by the way!

Pure chance.

“Pressed Gold Flowers – Monochrome #2” [26th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Art, 3000 x 2123 pixels.

With “Pressed Gold Flowers – Monochrome #2” I emulated the exact parameter values technically with “Pressed Gold Flowers – Monochrome #1″.

These values are Red 15; Yellow 50; Green 30; Cyan 115; Blue -12 and Magenta 300 to make the balanced monochrome tones you see in both, equally. Brightness is increased 50%.

Every new digital artwork is different of course. Requiring varying parameters.

“Pressed Gold Flowers – Solarscape #1” [26th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Art, 3000 x 2123 pixels.

“Pressed Gold Flowers – Solarscape #1” – <monkey hands on head> emoji :]

“Pressed Gold Flowers – Monochrome #1” [26th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Art, 3000 x 2123 pixels.

“Pressed Gold Flowers – Monochrome #1” looks like a light is being shown through revealing the textures.

There is no brush or palette knife work in the two acrylics.

Tube painting and paper pressing only.

Please enjoy.

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Turner Abstract #1

“Turner Abstract #1” [26th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, gold, cerulean blue, white and black abstract acrylic fine art painting on A3 300g mixed media paper, 3000 x 2090 pixels.

the Butterfly Effect of inspiration.

“Turner Abstract #1 – Monochrome” [26th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, 100% Digital Artwork, 3000 x 2090 pixels.

I made “Turner Abstract #1 – Monochrome” for contrast.

These artworks are about feeling and emotion.

I am hoping this achieves a sense of mood in some way.

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Rothko x Basquiat Gold/Cerulean Blue

“Rothko x Basquiat Gold/Cerulean Blue” [22nd March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, acrylic & 24k Gold Leaf Abstract fine art painting on A3 300g mixed media paper, 4967 x 7083 pixels.

“Rothko x Basquiat Gold/Cerulean Blue” is made within 1 hour 45 minutes including Gold Leaf installation to canvas, matte finish varnish (partially to cover central canvas area for textural effect), intricate palette knife and fan brush working, paper card spreading the varnish carefully to create disrupted gold effect, make a gold seal, produce opaque and transparent overlay.

For my previous work “M Gold Eight” (also 24k Gold Leaf) I used 17 brushes (and one palette knife) due to innumerable changes I made throughout drafts. Original as yet unpublished btw.

With “Rothko x Basquiat Gold/Cerulean Blue” I used one palette knife (my favourite one from decade past oils) and one fan brush! A piece perfected from start to finish, joyful. “M Gold Eight” presented technical challenges until I was thoroughly pleased with the result.

I began “Rothko x Basquiat Gold/Cerulean Blue” entirely as a Rothko inspired piece. Whereas the canvas turned into a sort of 50/50 inspiration between Rothko and Basquiat, hence the title.

I could have made the decision to include a robot face into this one. I just didn’t feel this would be true to its Rothko intended beginning. Anyway, since Warhol and Basquiat collaborated I felt why not Rothko and Basquiat!

Yellow ochre outer rectangle. Gold rectangle. Cerulean Blue rectangular window at centre. Four 24k gold leaf squares fanned gently with paper card over matte varnish. 100% pure chance gold leaf imagery.

All four additional unique and individual digital works (shown below) took within 27 minutes to complete – Red, Monochrome, Blue and Pastel Furnace.

Love!

“Rothko x Basquiat Digital Red” [23rd March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Art from original acrylic & 24k Gold Leaf Abstract fine art painting, 3000 x 4278 pixels.

Above is “Rothko x Basquiat Digital Red”funny <monkey covers eyes> emoji.

“Rothko x Basquiat Digital Monochrome” [23rd March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Art from original acrylic & 24k Gold Leaf Abstract fine art painting, 3000 x 4278 pixels for WordPress.

“Rothko x Basquiat Digital Monochrome”thought inflection. Oooh. Aaaah.

“Rothko x Basquiat Digital Blue” [23rd March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Art from original acrylic & 24k Gold Leaf Abstract fine art painting, 3000 x 4278 pixels for WordPress.

“Rothko x Basquiat Digital Blue”peaceful. Hammock on the beach with coconut trees.

“Rothko x Basquiat Digital Pastel Furnace” [23rd March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Art from original acrylic & 24k Gold Leaf Abstract fine art painting, 3000 x 4278 pixels.

“Rothko x Basquiat Digital Pastel Furnace”hot coals with cabbage.

*LAUGH* lol.

Hopefully you do feel I have captured the Rothko and Basquiat style through this original acrylic canvas. Please happily click on the individual images for further interest. Enjoy.

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digital Variations – “M Gold Eight” Collage of Four

“M Gold Eight – Collage of Four” [20th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Artwork, 2968 x 4274 pixels image.

Firstly, do you have something to write with in readiness to read this article?

Super.

A lovely Warhol inspired Collage piece in “M Gold Eight – Collage of Four”. The ‘M’ at the top of each design is my idea to emulate the famed Basquiat crown emblem.

At the time of writing this blog article I am listening to Eric Carmen’s “Boats Against the Current”. An album and musical talent I have genuinely loved since the 1980‘s.

My youth.

Please do kindly click on the individual images on this page for a closer look at the artistic intricacies of these digital works. [Please note this online Collage is not shown in high-resolution].

“M Gold Eight – Blue/Red” [20th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Artwork, 4953 x 7064 pixels image (2000 x 2852 for WordPress).

“M Gold Eight – Blue/Red”powerful imagery.

“M Gold Eight – Goldish-Brownish/Cyan” [20th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Artwork, 4953 x 7064 pixels image (2000 x 2852 for WordPress).

“M Gold Eight – Brownish-Gold/Cyan”natural leaves with oceans & lakes.

“M Gold Eight – Black/White Sketched” [20th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Artwork, 4953 x 7083 pixels (2000 x 2860 for WordPress).

“M Gold Eight – Black/White Sketched”archaeological digs in space with stars (spoken the way Björk speaks). Poetical.

“M Gold Eight – Green/Magenta” [20th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Artwork, 4953 x 7064 pixels image (2000 x 2852 for WordPress).

“M Gold Eight – Green/Magenta”the centre of attention and passion.

“M Gold Eight – Burgundy/Bright Green” [20th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Artwork, 4953 x 7064 pixels image (2000 x 2852 for WordPress).

“M Gold Eight – Burgundy/Bright Green” is fizzy soda pop and vegetables, to me.

Whilst this did not feature in the Collage I view this equally to the complimentary digital Variations works above.

——-

What are your first thoughts as you view these digital artworks?

Write them down and keep those thoughts for all your days..

.. Ancient Days.

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“Copper Gold Silver Bronze Filaments #1”

“Copper Gold Silver Bronze Filaments #1 Original” [15th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, acrylic Abstract painting on A3 250g mixed media paper, 3000 x 2172 pixels image.

“Copper Gold Silver Bronze Filaments #1 Original” includes the effect of natural sunlight upon the canvas.

“Filaments #1 Cyan Blue” [16th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Artwork, 3000 x 2172 pixels image.

“Filaments #1 Cyan Blue” reminds me of submerged whales at the surface of the sea.

“Filaments #1 Monochrome” [16th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Artwork, 3000 x 2172 pixels image.

“Filaments #1 Monochrome” is dramatic, soft, noir.

“Filaments #1 Gold Sketched” [16th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, Digital Artwork, 3000 x 2172 pixels image.

“Filaments #1 Gold Sketched” is now one of my favourite digital artworks ever.

The strangest thing is.. its beauty is 100% pure chance from my original acrylic image.

I know. This is difficult to believe.

Interestingly the digitisation has thoroughly incorporated my raw brushstrokes into the piece whilst retaining the original texture of the filaments I painted onto the canvas.

Please enjoy.

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Nick Botting – en plein air

‘Chelsea’ by Nick Botting.

Portland Gallery is delighted to announce an upcoming exhibition of recent paintings by Nick Botting between 9th to 31st May.

Botting has been exhibiting with Portland for over 20 years and is a firm favourite with collectors.

Botting’s paintings are painting stripped back to its bones – the subject and its painter – without any pretense or artifice. These paintings are the visual reaction of an artist responding to the fleeting world around him through the medium of paint on canvas.

There is a rawness to sitting in front of a subject and making a painting about it which is grounding and immersive, and which speaks directly to anybody who is looking for a sense of reality and presence.

In his painting ‘Chelsea‘ we see interpersonal sociability with three different groups of people in close proximity. Chatting engages our attention, interests and the need to process information. Emotional support is part of the human experience.

Relaxing, consuming nourishment and recreating too.

‘Maison Bertaux, Monday Morning’ by Nick Botting.

In a good landscape painting you should be able to tell the temperature and the time of day. So goes the old art dealers’ saying, and it is one that is well worth bearing in mind with Nick Botting’s pictures of London and the English seaside.

When Botting sits in Soho on a summer morning, he paints the edge of the road wet because the street sweeper has been past and the road is still drying; he paints the handyman with a tin of paint and the worker with a sack barrow making deliveries because they were there and give an authentic narrative to the scene.

Amused by the man eating a large cream cake he includes that vignette too. These little happenings make up a particular fleeting scene that comprise a morning in Soho, and their likeness was made by an artist who takes a lot of time to sit and watch and draw the world passing by in front of him.

All these particular and precise moments entertaining us within ‘Maison Bertaux, Monday Morning’, shown above.

‘The Screen on the Green, Nightfall’ by Nick Botting.

Nick Botting paints in all seasons on beaches, in bars and restaurants, in theatres and on the streets. He draws and paints the people and places we are familiar with, and because he does it from life, the changing times are inevitably recorded too.

In his painting ‘The Screen on the Green, Nightfall’ for example (shown immediately above), we see the dramatic contrast between the old and the new London. There is the pastel glow in the sky of an early sunset broken by the neon lights of The Screen on the Green (one of the oldest cinemas in the UK having opened in 1913), while further down the street the warm interior of an Avoman shines out onto the pavement.

The scene is populated by various characters – a woman in the act of dashing across the road, a couple arm-in-arm, and a mother looking at a poster – tiny contributions to the history of things in this corner of London.

These paintings are full of small observations like these which tell us a little about our being here.

ABOUT PORTLAND GALLERY
Portland Gallery was established in 1984 and are leading dealers in modern and contemporary British Art.
Located in St James’s, the gallery is spread over two floors and plays host to 14 exhibitions a year, principally solo presentations of represented artists and estate. The gallery is operated as an Employee Ownership Trust.

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Copper Gold Boxes with Blue & Red Rectangles

“Copper Gold Boxes with Blue & Red Rectangles” [14th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, acrylic Abstract fine art painting on A3 250g mixed media paper, 3000 x 4253 pixels image.

I know, I know, they are freakishly beautiful aren’t they :]

A Rothko curator invigorated my interest to woo all Abstract fans as greatly as possible.

“Copper Gold Boxes with Blue and Red Rectangles” required very delicate finishing to the textures, careful placement of tones and definitive construction.

Seeing this acrylic artwork is believing.

Ideas.. brushed metals, copper wire textures, heat treated plasticity. Yes, artistic engineering is going on here.

Would you like some more?

Then take a look at these Digital Abstract pieces below <emoji heart eyes>.

First up is a trendy pink and purple version inspired for a famous fashion model. No names although I do hope the model herself will appreciate the personable gesture.

“Pink Purple Boxes with Pink & Black/Green/Blue Rectangles” [14th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, 100% digital artwork, 3000 x 4253 pixels image.

“Pink Purple Boxes with Pink & Black/Green/Blue Rectangles” is love, love, love.

“Gold Cyan Boxes with Dark Blue & Yellow-Gold Rectangles” [14th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, 100% digital artwork, 3000 x 4253 pixels image.

“Gold Cyan Boxes with Dark Blue & Yellow-Gold Rectangles” includes a super gold tone.

“Monochrome Boxes with Black & Grey Rectangles” [14th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, 100% digital artwork, 3000 x 4253 pixels image.

“Monochrome Boxes with Black & Grey Rectangles” is a delight for balancing light and dark.

“Cyan Blue Boxes with Cyan & Magenta Rectangles” [14th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, 100% digital artwork, 3000 x 4253 pixels image.

“Cyan Blue Boxes with Cyan & Magenta Rectangles” is one of my SolarScapes. I muted overly attentive warm colours to bring the perfect harmony to this piece.

Please click on each image for a better look.

For those interested the original acrylic painting was completed in just two moderate drafts. The first draft yesterday evening. Then the second-final draft before 0900hrs today, within an hour approximately.

The latter draft included the silver/black lines around the boxes. Plus an opaque white painted effect inside the lower larger blue rectangle and around the uppermost ‘letterbox style’ blue rectangle. This was achieved with an acrylic white paint wash.

I had already decided how to proceed with the second draft through my decision making for this work-in-progress the night before. Personally having concentrated on very fine brushworking details I am immensely happy with the results since they include these stunning digital artworks also.

Hope you enjoy.

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Gold Abstract with Pure Chance Portrait #2

“Gold Silver Bronze with Red Rectangles” [12th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, acrylic Abstract painting on A3 250g mixed media paper, 3000 x 2199 pixels image.

The canvas for “Gold Silver Bronze with Red Rectangles” overpainted random colour test brushmarks whilst making “Mashū”.

“Gold Silver Bronze with Red Rectangles” was very simple for me to produce. I am a fan of Rothko works alongside a whole genre of Abstract Expressionism painting that found much prevalence from the 1940/50’s onwards. Especially through New York.

Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock, Barnett Newman, Franz Kline, Willem de Kooning are amongst the major Abstract Expressionists of that era.

To me, personally, finding a balance between absolute minimalism in painting choices on a canvas with intricate technical detail is intellectually challenging.

Finding beauty.

Finding emotion. A connection to you as viewers of art like myself.

To me the chattering purr of raccoon kits is pure art.

Before going into further detail regarding “Gold Silver Bronze with Red Rectangles” I would like to share the unbelievable random brush mixing work for same here:

“Pure Chance Portrait #2 in Portrait” [12th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist on 80gsm lined Notepad paper, 4014 x 3654 pixels.

“Pure Chance Portrait #2” is literally just that!

100% pure chance.

Like the almost impossible portrait in Ridge Willow – Spirit of the Trees (top-centre of the landscape)! The latter portrait clearly understood as one individual person to me. I would guess anyone knowing her would agree, 100%.

The rotated image below of “Pure Chance Portrait #2” shows how I held the Notepad whilst mixing colours sitting astutely over my canvas. Top-left less deep red mixed with a greater quantity of white paint. Mid-right deep red mixed with black. Lower-left lighter greyish tones with fewer deep red tones.

Why use a paper Notepad?

I was in bed after midnight thinking about my “Gold Silver Bronze with Red Rectangles” canvas. Totally awake I needed to get to work on it. I figured that adding some deep red would look great. Working very early hours meant that ‘tomorrow’ (the same day after sleeping lol) I would have a dry canvas to continue progress with.

I wouldn’t actually need a further painting session after my past-midnight flurry! Hooray for artworks that be exactly as we wish for them to be.

After finishing the canvas I happily admired my own work for “Gold Silver Bronze with Red Rectangles”.

The pleasing effect of light. Contrasts. Depth. An archaeological idea happening whilst painting. Yes, the M is chance, it occurs quite naturally with some brush or pencil strokes really.

How I held the colour palette paper to mix paint:

“Pure Chance Portrait #2 Whilst Mixing” [12th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist on 80gsm lined Notepad paper, 4014 x 3654 pixels.

I think the pinkish-red stripes you see were made whilst the Notepad was held in a different position. I never even thought to make any particular shapes whilst mixing.

After admiring my newly completed gold canvas I picked up the Notepad and realised, unexpectedly, I had 100% made the portrait of a woman by pure chance! Equally as improbably is the fact it’s pretty much correctly positioned on the paper.

Two works of art in one sitting.

Pure joy.

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Mashū

“Mashū” [11th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, acrylic drip painting with brushstrokes on A3 250g mixed media paper, 3000 x 2212 pixels image.

“Mashū” involved an unknown quantity of drafts and hours. I first started the canvas on 4th March making changes most days afterwards. Today I worked on the canvas for the last time before deciding to publish.

With the exception of my name centrally shown in Japanese (with English style reading from left-to-right) and the borders, this piece is entirely abstract without meaning.

Mashū is rendered asマシュー

The only perceivable idea I had after the first draft was seeing something like watch movement intricacies in the background. Pure chance.

The canvas is more beautiful than the image shown in my opinion. I am a perfectionist with my art as best as I can be. The disappointment through my drafts made this canvas hard work. It makes me happy to be pleased with the final result.

Gold, silver and bronze brushstrokes shine from the canvas.

I would like to share with you four digital versions of this piece:

“Mashū in Black with Turquoise Blue” [11th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, original Digital Art, 3000 x 2139 pixels.

“Mashū in Black with Turquoise Blue” is very striking.

“Mashū in White Monochrome” [11th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, original Digital Art, 3000 x 2139 pixels.

“Mashū in White Monochrome” is black and white perfection.

“Mashū in White with Microscopic Organisms” [11th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, original Digital Art, 3000 x 2139 pixels.

“Mashū in White with Microscopic Organisms” is different enough for me to like.

“Mashū in White with High Red/Yellow Contrast” [11th March 2024] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, original Digital Art, 3000 x 2139 pixels.

“Mashū in White with High Red/Yellow Contrast” is included only to give you a sense of the shine the physical canvas has with light.

“Mashū” reminds me of some Pop Art pieces I did September 2023 in a Basquiat style. Not that this is in any way a Basquiat with his own specific and literal themes. Just that the freedom within the artistic construction has that sort of quality.

Interesting reading:

Lake Mashū (摩周湖, Mashū-ko) (Ainu: Kamuy-to) is an endorheic crater lake formed in the caldera of a potentially active volcano. It is located in Akan Mashu National Park on the island of Hokkaido, Japan. It has been called the clearest lake in the world. [courtesy of Wikipedia – Lake Mashū.

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