Hills Ablaze
$45.00
"Hills Ablaze" is painted on an 8x10" Canvas with Acrylic paint, in Landscape orientation.
The colors used in this painting include shades of turquoise, teal, deep blue, grey, fuchsia, violet, mocha, toast brown, sage green, turquoise green, yellow earth, pink, lavender and beige.
This work is available as Fine Art Giclee Reproductions on Paper or Canvas.
More often than not, when I attempt to create something resembling one of my earlier works, I end up with something completely unique. This was my effort to make a smaller version of "Earthy Hills."
To me, this one has a totally different feeling. There are more and finer brush strokes in this one, and less of a rolling feeling to the land. The sky is also more sedate. The sun feels more stationary.
I was not particularly thrilled with the results of this small landscape, as it felt too busy, but I find that my preferences do not always predict the popularity of my works. There are folks who prefer this one.
This is fun for me. What one person loves, another person passes on. What the other person doesn't really notice, another person finds intriguing.
Compare "Hills Ablaze" and "Earthy Hills," and then tell me your opinion.
The colors used in this painting include shades of turquoise, teal, deep blue, grey, fuchsia, violet, mocha, toast brown, sage green, turquoise green, yellow earth, pink, lavender and beige.
This work is available as Fine Art Giclee Reproductions on Paper or Canvas.
More often than not, when I attempt to create something resembling one of my earlier works, I end up with something completely unique. This was my effort to make a smaller version of "Earthy Hills."
To me, this one has a totally different feeling. There are more and finer brush strokes in this one, and less of a rolling feeling to the land. The sky is also more sedate. The sun feels more stationary.
I was not particularly thrilled with the results of this small landscape, as it felt too busy, but I find that my preferences do not always predict the popularity of my works. There are folks who prefer this one.
This is fun for me. What one person loves, another person passes on. What the other person doesn't really notice, another person finds intriguing.
Compare "Hills Ablaze" and "Earthy Hills," and then tell me your opinion.