Cluster of Oak Leaves | The Unfathomable Artist
Often I sit beneath this younger Oak tree for shade from the midsummer sunlight. 3rd version took me approximately one and a 50 percent several hours to produce.
I am very pleased with this third variation. Initial variation, unsigned, second draft, is a Digital Artwork. In terms of excellent I would be glad to contain this as a Minimal Edition print.
A new poem motivated from these Cluster Oak Leaf artworks:
“Bind on your own to the Twig,
Breathe your roots to the Fig,
Cluster Leaves to the Vine,
Sing your Way, sublime.
Dance your everyday living to Peace,
Enable beration stop,
Liberate wheated sheaf,
Fortunately fifty percent to Fulfill.
Tune your coronary heart,
To Waterfalls defeat,
Locate the Like you seek,
Whence good you shall preserve.”
– by Matt The Unfathomable Artist – Copyright © 26th July 2022.
I definitely like “Cluster of Oak Leaves in Hayfield Meadow – 1st version – Electronic Artwork Version only” [20th July 2022] and would happily make limited print editions. Personally I believe, really should I at any time do so, formal authenticated Print Editions of First Variation will turn into as beneficial as the canvas Third Model..
.. by explanation that my Very first Variation is irreparably broken. The initial and 2nd versions are equally canvas, unsigned partly-incomplete is effective. However, I would personally indicator the First Variation Constrained Print Editions.
The next version is a brief review only, I was not pleased with its proportion:
Last but not least, below is the first photograph for this sequence of artworks/scientific studies:
For photographers viewing this impression – F1.9 1/313s 3.60mm ISO 40 from my smartphone camera. Awesome depth of field, with great macro element.
Interestingly, I built the ‘lower stalk’ component of the composition for the third version (down below the leaves, mid-lowest centre in the photographic picture). In reality, the two foremost least expensive leaves you see are truly at the extremely close of its department. The branch itself is at the mid-upper-centre of the picture, vertically represented.
To my awareness this is a young Quercas Robur [English Oak], roughly some twelve to fifteen ft tall. Its tree trunk is not even to that of a mature elephant, I ought to say. Rather in contrast to its mighty James I IV Oak in nearby subject proximity, url to images of the latter, greater Oak listed here Conservation – Community Nature Reserve.