This particular oil painting is 24" H x 30" W x1", and it is unframed but the edges are painted with the same bluish lavender that is in the painting itself.
The wooded meadow is along Saltsburg Road, a main route through Penn Hills, a suburb in Pittsburgh, PA. I go past this scene almost daily. It brings to mind a wild space existing next to a residential development which can't be seen in the summertime. I chose these colors and this style to show how everything in nature is connected, inviting us to appreciate and participate in those connections.
Artist's Statement:
Everything in nature is connected, and even though that connection is overlooked as we go about our day-to-day activities, that magic is there, constantly creating. It can be calming, invigorating, or downright terrifying. But when we appreciate the power of that magic, marvelous things can reveal themselves.
We only need to slow down, breathe it in, feel its energy. The Earth is calling to us “Notice me, see me, I am your home”, during these times of climate change and society’s challenges. The trees, the animals, the oceans, the air, speak to us though it is up to us to listen and act. Home is, after all, meant to be our refuge so it is up to us to take care of it.
Our ancient ancestors understood the deep connection between humans and nature as profoundly magical. Appreciating how nature works is imperative to ensuring our survival into the future. I encourage you to take a walk, anywhere. Listen to the birds, the rustle of wind in the leaves, feel the softness of a flower petal, smell the fresh air after it rains, watch squirrels play in the trees.
In my paintings I look for what the Earth wants us to hear and see by searching for unseen experiences or a sense of place.
My goal is to help people bridge that gap between conscious and unconscious awareness of our connection with nature.
“Nature is not only all that is visible to the eye... it also includes the inner pictures of the soul.”-Edvard Munch
- Subject Matter: Landscape
- Created: c. 2023
- Collections: Nature, Climate Change