Free Delivery Australia Wide.

7 Day Satisfaction Guarantee

  • Spring Final
  • Modern Classic Black Interior With Capitone Brown Leather Chester Sofa, Floor Lamp, Coffee Table, Carpet, Wood Floor, Mouldings. 3d Render Interior Mock Up.
  • Nature Lover's Bright Bedroom Interior With A Wall Art Of Flower
  • Interior Of Modern Living Room With Sofa 3d Rendering

Additional Information

Spring Reverie by Kathryn Fenton is a surrealist landscape painted in reverence to our environment with the focus on restoration and maintaining these beautiful landscapes.

I often weave this theme into my work these days as I feel an urgency to highlight what we will lose if we keep on this path of overpopulation, industrialisation and corporate greed.

The work is painted in oils in the luscious blues and pinks of the Rococo Era to act as a healing presence within the subject matter.

I use the symbolism of spring flowers and the restorative, hopeful optimism they encapsulate.  Painted larger than life, they represent man’s insignificance to the role nature plays in our existence, in other words, we need nature more than it needs us.

The classical figures symbolise mythical Greek deities, guardians and nurturers of the natural world depicted in this painting overseeing the arrival of spring in exuberance and revelry.

 

 

Spring Reverie SOLD

Kathryn Fenton

AUD$1,800
Size: 100w x 100h x 4d cms
View in my room

×
Powered by

Oil on canvas

Ready to hang

Sold

Add to Wishlist
Add to Wishlist
Sold By: Kathryn Fenton

Love this

7 day returns guaranteed
Free Shipping Returns and refunds

Additional Information

Spring Reverie by Kathryn Fenton is a surrealist landscape painted in reverence to our environment with the focus on restoration and maintaining these beautiful landscapes.

I often weave this theme into my work these days as I feel an urgency to highlight what we will lose if we keep on this path of overpopulation, industrialisation and corporate greed.

The work is painted in oils in the luscious blues and pinks of the Rococo Era to act as a healing presence within the subject matter.

I use the symbolism of spring flowers and the restorative, hopeful optimism they encapsulate.  Painted larger than life, they represent man’s insignificance to the role nature plays in our existence, in other words, we need nature more than it needs us.

The classical figures symbolise mythical Greek deities, guardians and nurturers of the natural world depicted in this painting overseeing the arrival of spring in exuberance and revelry.