Everywhere is Colour
It is common to say that colour is everywhere. The phrase describes a world filled with colours, as though colour were something spread across surfaces, applied to objects, or added to environments. In that sense, colour becomes a quality things possess. “Everywhere is colour” proposes something different. It shifts the emphasis from presence to condition. It suggests that colour is not simply found in the world, but that the world is formed through it.
Colour is not an attribute placed on top of reality, but part of what reality consists of. This distinction changes how colour is understood. If colour is everywhere, it can still be treated as optional, decorative, or secondary. If everywhere is colour, colour becomes fundamental. It is no longer an addition, but a premise. It is already active before choice, before composition, before style. From this perspective, there is no neutral starting point. No blank surface, no empty backdrop, no absence from which colour later appears. Even restraint is chromatic. Even reduction operates within colour. To work with colour, then, is not to introduce it, but to recognise, organise, and take responsibility for what is already present.
For Blēo, “everywhere is colour” articulates this position. It defines colour as a condition rather than an effect, and frames every surface, object, and decision as part of an ongoing chromatic reality. The statement is not expressive, but structural. It is not about what colour looks like, but about what colour is.