There are some pieces of art that wow for a season, then feel tired. You rarely find a Buddha motif in that category with it, debatably, representing stillness, balance, and craft rather than fad. And from a practical viewpoint, it happens to sit well placed in minimalist offices, layered Indian interiors, and some contemporary global spaces.
A space can be beautifully furnished and still feel mentally “loud,” especially when every surface competes for attention. That’s where a single, well-chosen artwork helps, because it introduces a visual hierarchy that your brain can settle into. Indian abstraction is unusually effective here: it carries heritage through rhythm, texture, and chromatic restraint, while staying adaptable to evolving tastes.