WINTER MEDICINE AT -7°

 

                                                                                                                WINTER MEDICINE AT -7°

I’d been searching through the dark, wet, grey winter of 2019 and couldn’t find it.  My search continued through the entire month of January, 2020.  Still it wasn’t to be found.  My spirits were as dark and grey as the season.  The artist within just couldn’t stir.  The fire had gone out.  Some would call it “painter’s block”.  I’m certain my lack of artistic energy would be better diagnosed as “SAD” or “Seasonal Affective Disorder”.  I just couldn’t find it within to paint.  I longed for the light that I paint, but this record long winter of rain and drudge denied that light.  No matter how I tried, I couldn’t stir the spirit.

Then, at coffee one rainy morning, my friend Tom Hierck changed all that.  He’d been out to Lloydminster, Alberta on business and he’d come back with some photographs of the cold, still winter he’d experienced while there.  As soon as I saw his photograph of the old cabin in the steel blue snowy field, the bright light of that Alberta winter acted as a spark to my artistic energy.  It was the light that did it.  I’d been craving that light, and I’d paint that light.  It would be my first painting of 2020.

Even though, he told me, the temperature that day had been -7°, that simple, still scene was truly medicinal to me.  As I painted over the next two weeks, that exercise of “painting the light” healed my spirit.  No longer was I lacking the creativity of the artist.  In fact, I found myself compelled to paint.  Already I was composing my next painting even as I created this piece.  That winter scene of a cold Alberta fence line and solitary cabin in the crystal, sparkling snow had truly been a powerful tonic.  It launched me into 2020 such that by mid-February, when I finished the piece, I was full of the positive, creative energy so necessary to me as an artist.

Painting that bright Alberta winter’s light, from me, truly was “Winter Medicine at -7°

Pricing

My images predominantly sell as limited edition prints (either serigraph or giclée). As such, there is a wide range of pricing, too wide to list within this website. I’ll explain.

My original paintings, those that are still available for sale, range in price from $4,000.00 and up. In most cases though I have limited edition prints available of my images. Needless to say, they are far less expensive than the original paintings. If you are interested in a particular original painting, please contact me at your earliest convenience at info@edhillart.com

If it’s a limited edition print you’re interested in, let me explain. Because of modern day technologies, the image you are interested in can be giclée printed on either paper or canvas. The canvas images can be rolled up and shipped in a simple tube, or they can be stretched on a frame and shipped that way. So too, these images can be reproduced custom made to your wishes. In other words I can create a print in the size you desire, either to fill a small space, or to fill an entire wall. I’ve included below a photograph of a client’s dining room with two of my prints reproduced in a larger format.

You will see that some of my pieces shown on this web site, those lithograph reproductions and art cards, do have fixed prices. The rest of my images, however, can be priced only when I know specifically what you, the client, want. As such, if you are interested in a particular image, please contact me, Ed Hill, directly at info@edhillart.com

Once your order has been determined, you’ll be able to make payment through PayPal provided herein.

Please contact for more information

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