Most wall art for a modern living room gets chosen the wrong way. People pick the piece first, then try to make the wall fit. The honest move is the other direction. Start with the wall. Measure it. Look at what is already in the room. Then find the piece that earns the space, instead of one that simply fills it.
Intertwine is a textured wabi-sabi abstract oil painting, and the studio built it for exactly the kind of room where most abstract art falls flat. The canvas is wide and low, which suits a modern sofa more than a tall narrow wall would. The palette stays in soft cream, pale ochre, and a quiet green that pulls color from a linen chair without copying it. The impasto is heavier on the right side, which is where most viewers stand, and lighter on the left, which is where the room breathes.
Modern living rooms tend to have one of two problems. They are either too clean, and the empty wall becomes a missing tooth in the room, or they are too busy, and another piece of art tips the whole space into chaos. A textured abstract with a narrow palette solves both. The texture gives the eye somewhere to land in a clean room. The narrow palette keeps the piece from fighting with whatever else is on the walls. Intertwine is built for the second case. It sits between two armchairs in the studio reference photos, and the room reads as full without reading as crowded.
Wabi-sabi is a useful frame for modern wall art, because the style asks the piece to feel like it has always been there. The painting is not trying to announce itself. The brushwork is uneven in places. The edges of the canvas are unfinished on the back, which is normal for this kind of work and worth knowing before you hang it. The point is for the art to look settled. If it looks new on day one, that is a problem with the piece, not the room.
If you are hunting for wall art for a modern living room, the test is simple. Stand in the doorway. Does the empty wall pull your eye toward it for the wrong reason? A good piece answers that pull without shouting. A textured abstract in a narrow palette is one of the safer answers for modern spaces, and Intertwine is a good example of the kind of restraint that works.