
Seeing the Forest for the Trees
Located in Colorado Springs, CO
Original Oil Painting signed by the Artist in the lower left corner.
21st Century and Contemporary Realist Paintings
Oil
2024
"Spring forest"
Located in Edinburgh, GB
This painting was inspired by a walk through a dense forest. The cool, damp air, the harmony of the carpet of flowers awakening from the snow, the sense of intimacy and pure magic. A...
Canvas, Oil

"Walk in the Woods - Verdant Green" Landscape Oil Painting
Located in Westport, CT
This large traditional statement landscape painting by Molly Doe Wensberg features a cool palette and a loose, impressionistic style, capturing a scene withi...
Canvas, Oil
"Into the Green Forest" Abstracted Landscape Painting
By Ken Elliott
Located in Westport, CT
Luminous and dreamlike, Into the Green Forest by Ken Elliott invites the viewer into a serene woodland world awash in light and layered color. In this large-scale oil painting, Ellio...
Canvas, Oil
Forest Meditations, Original Painting
By Candice Eisenfeld
Located in San Francisco, CA
Artist Comments
Artist Candice Eisenfeld draws inspiration from the silhouetted trees of the rainforests of Northern Georgia. "One early morning as the fog was clearing, a hawk guided me through the mountains," shares Candice. "The hawk led me through ethereal, meditative places with overwhelming beauty." She took photographs of her journey and painted her experiences of the adventure. "The bottom image depicts the rough, beginning of the journey and the scene portrays the ending. The rough, orange texture denotes the bark of the trees."
About the Artist
As an American exploring issues of identity, artist Candice Eisenfeld paints through the lens of the first American art movement, the Hudson River School. Rather than depicting a specific locale, Candice’s artwork evokes a sense of place. These "inner landscapes" are invented, and often reference photographs taken during travels in southern Appalachia and the Blue Ridge and Smokey Mountains. Whether real or imagined, her paintings are influenced by the Dutch Masters, Tonalists, and Chinese painting. Produced on a single wooden panel, the ethereal landscapes are often joined with segments of aqueous color fields which act as commentary for the landscapes, like the chorus in a Greek play. The crisp, hard edges separating the landscapes from the color fields command a sense of order in an otherwise fluid and painterly surface. With two or three sections of the panel competing for attention, the painting creates multiple focal points. Candice's art has been displayed in embassies in Namibia and Belarus, held in the collections of Norwest Bank and Northwest...
Acrylic