OK Computer — leahnadeau Skip to content
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Small Worlds Collection is now LIVE (click here)

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OK Computer

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Original price $850.00
Original price $850.00 - Original price $850.00
Original price $850.00
Current price $575.00
$575.00 - $575.00
Current price $575.00

This is an acrylic and oil pastel painting on gallery-wrapped canvas, it's 28 inches tall by 22 inches wide. 

The last photo on the listing is the color palette of the main colors in this painting in hopes of eliminating color discrepancies on screen. 

Meaning: 

“OK Computer” is my favorite Radiohead album. I love streaming this album on rainy days, and here in Seattle it’s rainy all winter long, so this album has been played many times.

Thom Yorke has been quoted as explaining the meaning behind OK Computer: “a commentary on the overpowering sense of alienation that results from living in an increasingly self-indulgent and technologically-dependent society.”

As a Millennial, I feel like I got a unique experience growing up. I knew life without technology briefly, before it completely took over. I remember days where I never reached for a phone or computer, and today I can’t really imagine going all day without technology to entertain me.

Shipping: Each painting is professionally packed to ensure its safe arrival. All paintings come ready to hang on your wall unless otherwise noted, signed on the front, dated on the back, and come with a certificate of authenticity for your records.  

About The Artist

I'm Leah Nadeau, and I make abstract acrylic paintings shaped by a deep love of architecture, a film school education that taught me to see the world differently, and synesthesia, which means music looks like colors in my head. Each piece is an original, made slowly, one at a time, built to anchor a room and quietly change how it feels to be in it.

Rooted in Mid-Century Modern Design and themes of resilience and joy, my work becomes the focal point around which collectors build entire spaces.

Featured in Atomic Ranch Magazine, exhibited at the famous Modernism Week in Palm Springs, and works permanently installed at the Henry Ford Health Cancer Institute in Detroit, Michigan.