One of one — original by Lei-Kol
Gray Day
$1,199.00
This smaller but amazing painting by Lei Kol was inspired by the famous gum wall called the market theater gum wall in pike place market in Seattle.
“It's quiet and grounded — like a rainy day you don't want to end.”
Inspired by a rainy afternoon at Pike Place Market in Seattle — the gum wall, the gray sky, the wet pavement. Lei-Kol built layers of gray, silver, and muted pink that feel like damp concrete and low cloud cover. A love letter to the Pacific Northwest.
Who it's for: Buyers who love tonal, understated work — minimalists, PNW natives, and anyone furnishing a calm, sophisticated space.
Best Rooms for This Piece
Materials & Details
- •Heavy texture
- •Acrylic
- •24 x 36 x 0.75 inches
- •The surface is smooth in places and rough in others — like concrete that's been worn smooth by rain. Subtle ridges catch side-light and reveal depth that isn't visible head-on.
- •Painted on sides — no framing required
- •Signed certificate of authenticity included
Color Palette
Free shipping anywhere in the USA. International shipping available — call 1-630-536-6091 or email info@leikolart.com for a quote.
Pay with
PayPal accepted. Call or email to purchase.
One of one
This is the only version. No prints, no reproductions, no editions. When it sells, it's gone.
Heavy-texture surface
Layered acrylic builds real dimension you can feel from the side and see from across the room.
Artist-direct
You're buying from the artist's studio. No gallery markup, no auction fees, no middlemen.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Gray Day actually gray?+
Mostly, yes — but there are undertones of silver, muted pink, and warm white woven through. It reads as gray from a distance and reveals its complexity up close.
What wall colors does Gray Day work with?+
Almost anything — it's a true neutral. Pairs beautifully with white, cream, charcoal, navy, or even a soft blush wall.
Is Gray Day inspired by Seattle?+
Yes — specifically the gum wall at Pike Place Market and the gray, rainy atmosphere of the Pacific Northwest. The palette is Seattle in a painting.




