Convergence

A medieval castle sits in afternoon light, suspended between history and something older

I did not set out to paint a ghost story. I set out to paint a castle.
Somewhere in the process, the painting decided what it wanted to be, which is something any painter who has spent serious time at the easel will recognize. You plan one thing and the canvas negotiates. Convergence is the result of that negotiation.


The castle came first. I have always been drawn to medieval architecture, to the logic of towers and curtain walls, to the way a fortress sits upon its hill with the particular confidence of something built to last. I wanted that warmth of late afternoon stone, that ochre and sienna glow that makes old masonry look almost alive. I wanted it to feel prosperous. Safe. Untroubled….That feeling of false safety is where the painting’s real subject announced itself.

Convergence


The ghost came next, rising from the lower left, from the water. She was always going to be there. I cannot entirely explain her except to say that certain paintings require a witness, and she is that witness, patient, translucent, unhurried. She has been waiting longer than the castle has stood.


The storm was already building in the upper right. The mountains there carry that particular grey-blue of approaching weather, and the clouds push down toward the valley with no great urgency, which makes them more ominous rather than less. Urgency can be outrun. That slow, indifferent gathering cannot.


Between the ghost and the storm, the castle sits in its afternoon light, entirely unaware. The blue sky above it still looks like an ordinary day. That is the heart of the matter.
The swans were the last element to fully resolve, and I am most pleased with them. The large bird in the foreground demanded honesty, the exact orange-red of the bill, the weight of the body on the water. Swans have carried enormous symbolic weight across European tradition for a very long time, and I wanted these birds to earn their place in that company rather than merely decorate the foreground. They are witnesses too, though of a different order than the ghost. They are simply living their lives, indifferent to the drama gathering above them, which strikes me as true to how the world actually works.


My partner named the painting. She looked at it and said convergence, and that was the end of the matter. She saw immediately what I had been working toward, the ghost, the storm, and the castle all moving toward the same moment of reckoning along their separate paths. The regent in that tower, whoever he may be, has a buried past. The painting knows this even if he does not.


If I’m asked what tradition this work belongs to. I would say it belongs to the tradition of moral landscape, the idea, running from the Northern European painters through the Romantics, that the natural world is not merely scenery. It reflects. It remembers. It converges.

Whispers of the Wild

The vibrant painting, Whispers of the Wild, showcases a serene landscape featuring a blue lake encircled by lush evergreen trees. The sky is filled with swirling clouds that add dynamic movement, while a branch adorned with green needles extends from the top left corner, perfectly framing the peaceful scene.
Whispers of the Wild

“Whispers of the Wild” is a captivating landscape painting that invites the viewer into a serene, yet spirited natural realm. The artist has skillfully harnessed the interplay of light and texture to create a living tapestry that feels both wild and intimate. At the forefront, meticulously detailed pine trees anchor the composition, their rich greens standing proud against the tranquil blues of the lake.

Above, the sky is an enchanting dance of color and motion, with bold strokes of white and blue swirling in a cosmic rhythm that breathes energy into the scene. The dynamism of the heavens contrasts with the stillness of the water below, which reflects the sky’s majesty in a quieter, more contemplative tone.

The light in this painting is a character of its own—ethereal and shifting, it graces the treetops and glimmers on the water’s surface with a delicate touch. The directionality of the light weaves through the foliage and reflects off the lake, infusing the landscape with a sense of morning’s first light breaking the embrace of dawn.

“Whispers of the Wild” stands as a testament to the beauty of the natural world, rendered with a passion that is palpable in every brushstroke. The artist’s choice to forgo the final refinement of lighting allows the piece to retain a raw, authentic energy that is both refreshing and invigorating. This work is not just a visual experience but an emotional journey, offering a glimpse into the untamed heart of nature.

Unique Feature

A unique feature of the work is that there are metallics used in the composition that give an added ‘glow’ effect to the light, as if the dawn is really there. The colors shimmer on the lake and hint of their presence in the trees and clouds.

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