We are not surfers. We just stopped to watch for a moment and couldn't leave. The wave at Raglan on New Zealand's west coast is said to be the longest left break in the world, and once you start watching, you understand why. We lost track of time entirely. We started recognizing the surfers by the way they moved, the choices they made on the wave. Cheering quietly. Staying for just one more.
This painting has that same quality, forms rolling into each other, one leading to the next, no obvious place to stop looking.
Acrylic on birch panel | 16 × 16 inches
Mounted in a contemporary, natural oak tray frame (17 ¼ x 17 ¼ inches framed)
Free local pickup in Port Moody, BC.
We are not surfers. We just stopped to watch for a moment and couldn't leave. The wave at Raglan on New Zealand's west coast is said to be the longest left break in the world, and once you start watching, you understand why. We lost track of time entirely. We started recognizing the surfers by the way they moved, the choices they made on the wave. Cheering quietly. Staying for just one more.
This painting has that same quality, forms rolling into each other, one leading to the next, no obvious place to stop looking.
Acrylic on birch panel | 16 × 16 inches
Mounted in a contemporary, natural oak tray frame (17 ¼ x 17 ¼ inches framed)
Free local pickup in Port Moody, BC.