Citadel of the Impaler

Acrylic on canvas, 2025

Buy it?

In Citadel of the Impaler, Rob Medley conjures a fortress not merely of stone, but of myth and memory. The viewer is cast low at the foot of a craggy ascent, gazing up at a brooding castle silhouetted against a moon like a frozen scream. One can almost hear the silence—dense, expectant, steeped in a centuries-long vigil.

Citadel of the Impaler

The titular citadel rises in jagged defiance, its walls mottled with age and shadow, its turrets jagged as broken teeth. The artist’s palette is chillingly deliberate: icy blues slice through the mountainside like veins of regret, while sickled trees—white and withered—stand like ghost-priests in eternal obeisance. This is no romantic ruin. It endures.

Above, the sky is alive with supernatural unrest. Vaporous tendrils coil in violet and steel, converging around a spectral moon that does not illuminate so much as infect. Its radiance is unnatural—a cold sun that sees but does not warm. The single lit window in the keep becomes a focal point of almost unbearable tension. Who watches from it? Who remembers?

Medley’s work does not simply depict a haunted castle—it becomes one. With every brushstroke, Citadel of the Impaler whispers of old tyrannies, of devotion twisted into fear, and of power that survives by becoming legend.