- US dollars
Shadows
- 36 x 47 in
$4,800
Shadows moves like a quiet memory through the Norwegian landscape—an abstract reflection of darkness and light shifting across terrain shaped by weather, time, and the soft erosion of seasons. The painting gathers its atmosphere in layered veils of muted purples, earthen greens, and deep, restless reds, all anchored by a diffused glow of yellow that seems to rise from within, as though sunlight were pushing through fog at the edge of dawn. The surface appears worn, touched by wind and rain, carrying the textures of moss-covered stone, thawing ground, and the vague silhouettes of distant hills obscured by mist. In this work, shadows are not mere absences of light but presences unto themselves—fluid forms that hold traces of movement, memory, and unseen depth. They shift across the canvas like the long evening shadows cast by mountains in late autumn, or the dark reflections trembling in a forest pond when the sky begins to dim. The central interplay of brightness and muted color suggests nature in transition, that quiet threshold between day and night, between the seen and the suggested. Shadows becomes a meditation on how darkness shapes perception—how it softens the world, reveals what daylight conceals, and invites contemplation rather than clarity. It is a painting that breathes with the rhythm of Norwegian seasons: the hushed stillness of winter twilight, the lingering glow of summer nights, and the complex layers of shadow that speak of a landscape both ancient and alive.
- US dollars
$4,800
Evening
- 48 x 36 in
- US dollars
$4,900
- US dollars
$4,900
Harbor
- 36 x 48 in
- US dollars
$4,900
The composition feels both grounded and drifting. The textured surfaces suggest salt-worn wood, scraped paint, and surfaces shaped by tides—materials that have lived through seasons of wind, rain, and time. These forms flicker in and out of clarity, echoing the way harbors hold stories: arrivals and departures, grounded structures and drifting vessels, the known and the uncharted. Despite the industrial undertone, Harbor remains deeply connected to Norwegian nature. The interplay of warm and cool tones echoes autumn light on water, the muted palette of winter mornings, and the shimmer of summer haze settling over a quiet bay. There is a sense of waiting here—of stillness just before movement, of tides preparing to shift. Harbor becomes a meditation on thresholds: between land and sea, shadow and illumination, the solidity of the harbor and the openness beyond it. It invites viewers into a place both intimate and vast, where the landscape carries its own quiet pulse and the horizon remains endlessly open.
- US dollars