Forest Haze and Clarity
Forest Haze and Clarity

Forest Haze and Clarity

Giclee Print (ID: A142215)
Designed by Ken Elliott
$300–$790
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In this oil, the artist made an early effort to create a piece with a more "organic" feel. There is a lot more openness to the composition in way the trees are spaced and there is more depth compared to his other works like this.

Elliott loves these forest "slices" and the endless possibilities they provide him. This particular oil began with him putting in a variety of colors to work out later. There wasn't a color plan, only the start of a painting with a loose arrangement of trees.

After the second session in the studio and a couple of days of not seeing the oil, the artist was very surprised to find that the oil had come together very nicely. It was far beyond a start. The painting was very well-developed and was almost finished. It was as if someone had been painting on it in the night when he wasn't around... a studio rarity.

Elliott left the raw look, not going for polish. The far background needed more work. The light behind the trees was crisp in some places and hazy in others, giving him a choice of how to go forward. After some deliberation, the haze won out, creating more depth and a very nice counterpoint to the clarity of the foreground.
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Ken Elliott

Ken Elliott

"Making giclees gives me an opportunity to revisit and improve upon my original works."

Ken Elliot's involvement in the art business has spanned over 40 years. He began as a picture framer, worked alongside an art restorer, and became an art dealer before beginning to draw and paint about 25 years ago. In his career, he's been fortunate to have seen remarkably good works of art and met some of the best painters in the field.

Elliot's focus is the landscape and its rich store of ideas and inspiration. He is compelled to work from the trees, skies, lakes, and streams in their endless variations. He doesn't try to recreate nature (even Monet said he never got it right) or attempt storytelling. Instead, his works are simplifications and exaggerations of nature. There was a time when he felt the tyranny of the landscape; that is, he felt limited by making pictures of a place. Now, instead of making pictures, he is free to make paintings—art that comes from nature but is far more reliant on the strategies of making good art objects.

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