There’s a myth that meaningful art collecting starts with a five-figure budget. Curated Originals Under $500 collection proves that emotional depth, cultural storytelling, and serious craftsmanship don’t need a big number attached they need a good eye. Here are all ten originals from the edit, grouped by the moods they bring into a room, plus styling notes to help you find (or start) your own gallery wall.
Tender & Human: Portraits That Hold a Feeling
Some paintings don’t just decorate a wall they sit with you. Abhishek Saini’s “Punch” opens the collection with exactly that energy: a heartwarming figurative scene of two primates rendered in bold, contrasting color that turns a tender relationship into a genuinely emotional moment. Beside it, Carolina Piedrahita’s “La paz ante mis ojos” makes the theme literal two clasped hands built from layered, sculptural MDF and vivid acrylic; connection rendered almost architecturally. And just to lighten the emotional weight, Elena Parau’s “Cumbia Submarina” slips in a note of pure joy: a mermaid adrift in sparkling azure water, trailed by shimmering gold and red-striped fish tenderness with a wink. Hang all three somewhere you pass daily a hallway or stairwell, so their warmth catches you off guard each time.
Styling tip: Figurative works this expressive don’t need a crowded wall. Give each piece of breathing room and let a neutral mat or frame keep the focus on the brushwork.
Nature, Slowed Down
If your space needs a moment of calm, start with Elena Parau’s “Estar en paz” an expressive impasto sheep portrait built from thick, tactile strokes that radiate warmth and simplicity. It’s proof that “peaceful” doesn’t have to mean predictable.
Then let Sovon Manna’s “Be a Tree” take you further into the wild, with vivid blue foliage and wandering butterflies conjuring a sense of quiet wonder. And for texture lovers, Tania Collazos’ “Río violeta” is the standout of the entire collection for a shimmering landscape in gold, copper, and violet resin that reads less like a painting and more like a captured memory of a sunset over water.
Styling tip: Resin and impasto work catch light differently throughout the day. Place them where natural light shifts near a window, not directly under a downlight, so the texture stays alive.
Colour, Culture, and Community: Stories from India
A significant thread running through this edit is a celebration of Indian contemporary narrative vivid, layered, and unapologetically specific. Chetan Katigar’s “Musical Night” captures five women musicians immersed in harmony, a joyful ode to femininity and cultural heritage. Chinmoy Pandit’s “Banaras Ghat Series”channels the spiritual energy of Varanasi through bold texture and luminous color the kind of painting that anchors a whole room. And Karishma Wadhwa’s “Lalima” turns abstraction inward, exploring belonging and the meaning of home.
Styling tip: These three works share a warm, saturated palette even though their subjects differ. Grouped together on one wall, they create an instant, cohesive gallery moment — no color-matching required.
Quiet Minimalism & Nostalgia
Not every space wants color and movement. For collectors drawn to restraint, Pradeep Unni’s “Echoes of the Past” offers photorealistic nostalgia in the form of a vintage radio rendered with striking, timeless presence, the kind of piece that rewards a second and third look.
Styling tip: Let a minimalist or photorealistic piece stand alone. It’s doing quiet, precise work doesn’t compete with it.
Why it’s worth starting here
Every piece in this edit ties back to Elisium Art’s core mission: bridging master artists from India, Colombia, and Mexico with collectors who want more than “safe beige” decor. Each purchase supports the artist directly, arrives with a Certificate of Authenticity.
Written by
Manasvi Vislot
Manasvi Vislot is an India based creative storyteller at Elisium Art. She blends global art trends with strategic digital insights, crafting content that connects readers with the evolving world of contemporary, digital, and cultural art. With her refined eye for aesthetics and a passion for making art accessible, Manasvi creates narratives that highlight the artists, ideas, and innovations shaping today’s creative landscape.


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