38 inches (96.5 cm) wide by 24 inches (61 cm) high
This is the second painting I have made of the Smoky Mountains in Early Spring. I find the soft pastel shades so peaceful that I could paint these mountains again and again. In a few weeks all of these trees will be green. But during a short period in the spring the trees are in flower or sprouting new leaves, which often begin red or ochre before turning green.

A few years ago, these pillowy mounds would be punctured by dark spires sprinkled all over the mountains. The spires were Hemlock trees (Tsuga Canadensis and Tsuga caroliniana). Today all that is left of the Hemlocks in this vista are bleached skeletons. They have been killed by the woolly adelgid blight, an invasive bug from Asia. As an artist I was faced with a dilemma. I could have easily clothed these bare skeletons with the lush dark green branches or I could have left them out altogether. After all, if I had painted this scene ten years ago, the Hemlocks would have been healthy and if I would have waited a few more years from now the bare trunks will have fallen down. But in the end my respect for validity won over my desire to make a pleasing picture. This is how these mountains looked in the spring of 2013.
Spring colors require a great deal of restraint from the artist. Most colors, like orange or red straight from the tube, are too brilliant to depict the subtlety of the spring colors. They have to be muted. A better approach is to use the earth colors, so called because they are all compounds of iron oxides, like the siennas, ochres, and browns. Even these need to be muted further to depict the greying of the colors as they disappear into the mist in the distance.
Hi! What’s the price for this painting? It’s very beautiful.
Kind regards,
Alice Hiort af Ornäs
We have responded via email. Thank you for your interest!
I am also curious about the price for this painting.
We have responded via email. Thank you for your interest!