About
Kimberly Blackstock’s “And It Felt Like We Could Fly” opens into a luminous garden-like scene filled with movement, softness, and dimensional texture. The artwork has the feeling of looking through flowering branches into a glowing expanse of light, with hundreds of raised forms drifting across the surface like petals, pollen, berries, and tiny moments of color caught in the air.
A sweeping branch reaches in from the upper left, surrounded by soft washes of pale green, blush pink, cream, and misty blue. Along the lower edge, clusters of yellow, green, plum, rose, and earthy tones create the feeling of a blooming field, while a denser burst of pink and deep red forms gathers on the right. The open center gives the composition an airy sense of space, making the artwork feel expansive and almost weightless. Raised poured acrylic forms create dimensional texture, while resin adds a smooth reflective finish to the surrounding painted surface. Blackstock’s glossy dimensional surface brings the scene to life up close, balancing a dreamy painted atmosphere with tactile, sculptural detail.
• One-of-a-kind artwork measuring 40 inches high and 60 inches wide
• Created with acrylic paint, pouring medium, and resin on wood panel
• Raised poured acrylic forms create a dimensional, tactile surface
• Resin is applied to the surrounding painted areas, creating a smooth reflective finish
The sides are painted and it does not require framing. It is wired and ready to hang. This painting is signed on the bottom edge and the back. Free local Los Angeles area delivery. Affordable Continental U.S. and global shipping are also available. A certificate of authenticity issued by the art gallery is included.
Kimberly Blackstock is best known for her distinctive “pools of paint” pieces, which transform color into tactile, dimensional compositions. Her work often combines traditional painting techniques with glossy poured elements, creating surfaces that feel vibrant, layered, and full of movement. In “And It Felt Like We Could Fly,” her process gives the landscape a sense of lift and wonder, turning a flowering passage into something that feels bright, open, and full of possibility.