Selkie’s Secret

Acrylic painting of a selkie woman standing in bright blue surf beside a seal, with a Viking ship behind her and swirling mist or sea spirit forms in the sky.

Sometimes I paint things and forget to post them. This was completed in 2025.

A woman of the sea stands between revelation and concealment, her presence half offered, half withdrawn, as though the tide itself had shaped her from memory and foam. In Selkie’s Secret, I wanted the old northern folklore to remain intact, the sense that the sea keeps its own counsel, and that what emerges from it is never fully ours to name. The selkie belongs to that ancient border where longing, danger, beauty, and loss all wear the same face.

The Viking ship in the distance gives the scene its second heartbeat. It suggests pursuit, witness, or perhaps only passage, humanity moving across waters that were ancient before oar or sail ever touched them. Against that hard timber and mortal purpose stands the softer mystery of the seal-woman, bound to the shore, to the surf, and to the secret life beneath appearances. The image became, for me, less about narrative in the ordinary sense and more about the ache of legend itself, the feeling that some truths arrive only in glimpses, then recede.

Color carried much of the work. I wanted the blues to feel living and luminous, a sea that was beautiful without becoming tame. The misted forms and curling atmosphere at the left edge were meant to suggest that the world of myth is never entirely absent, it only waits for the right light, the right loneliness, the right silence. The painting leans into that threshold, where folklore is neither illustration nor ornament, but presence.

Selkie’s Secret is an offering to maritime myth, to northern stories, and to the old conviction that the sea remembers more than we do. 20×24″ acrylic on canvas.

A mythical scene depicting a figure with flowing hair standing on rocky shore, wearing a brown outfit, as a Viking ship sails in turbulent waters behind her, accompanied by a seal in the foreground.

Dawn of Love

An acrylic painting depicting devotion and connection rendered with warmth and narrative depth

Lunar Museum of Vanished Earth – Gallery 7: “Recovered Devotions”Curator’s Commentary, Dr. Elara Vey, 2189 Recovered from a half-submerged vault on the Florida shelf, this early-21st-century acrylic by Rob Medley is one of the most intact narrative canvases to survive Earth’s collapse. Titled Dawn of Love, the work was stabilized in lunar vacuum before restoration, … Read more

Citadel of the Impaler

Acrylic on canvas, 2025

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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.

The Awakening Reef

A vibrant underwater scene with diverse marine life including fish, a clownfish, a lionfish, and stingrays swimming around a sunken ship. Bright corals and plants frame the scene under a luminous blue ocean surface.

In The Awakening Reef, Rob Medley once again demonstrates his mastery of light and color, presenting an underwater world brimming with vitality and renewal. This piece reflects Medley’s signature style, inspired by the works of Vermeer and his own long-standing fascination with natural light in complex settings. The painting features the ruins of a sunken ship overtaken by thriving coral reefs and diverse marine life, capturing a narrative of new life emerging from decay. Known for avoiding the use of black in his paintings, Medley instead employs vibrant contrasts and a radiant central glow, guiding viewers to the heart of his underwater scene. This focus on light echoes the themes found in his earlier works, such as Christmas Magic, where light defines both the atmosphere and the story.

The intricate details in The Awakening Reef bring to mind the scientific precision of Ernst Haeckel, whose studies of marine biology inspired both artists and scientists alike. Yet, Medley’s impressionistic approach adds an emotional depth, creating a dreamlike quality that sets his work apart. The clownfish darting amidst glowing bubbles and the delicate forms of a lionfish and seahorse evoke the spirit of exploration found in Christian Riese Lassen’s fantastical marine landscapes. Meanwhile, the vivid coral structures, rendered in bold orange and pink hues, pulsate with energy, reminding viewers of Medley’s ability to balance chaos and harmony—a skill seen in pieces like Spice Conspiracy and Peace on Earth.

This painting also highlights Medley’s recurring theme of renewal, seen throughout his body of work. Just as Home for the Holidays presents a snail’s journey of hope amidst the cold winter tones of Santa’s glove, The Awakening Reef invites viewers to reflect on nature’s ability to regenerate in even the most desolate spaces. The artist’s attention to detail, from the rippling light on the ocean floor to the textured coral forms, immerses us in the quiet magic of underwater life. With this piece, Medley has not only expanded his exploration of natural themes but also offered a poignant reminder of the resilience and beauty of the world beneath the waves. To learn more about Medley’s evolving portfolio, visit RobMedley.com.