She appeared bathed in morning light, radiant, quiet, and inexplicably golden. Found rather than created, We Shall Name Her Goldie captures the essence of a figure both rooted in nature and touched by something ethereal. The name came easily, a placeholder for a presence that felt both familiar and unknowable. This work continues an exploration of the space between human and landscape. A fleeting moment, gently preserved in pigment, timber, and wax.
Watercolour on paper
Mounted on timber and finished with artist wax to protect the artwork
14cm x 24cm Original artwork
She appeared bathed in morning light, radiant, quiet, and inexplicably golden. Found rather than created, We Shall Name Her Goldie captures the essence of a figure both rooted in nature and touched by something ethereal. The name came easily, a placeholder for a presence that felt both familiar and unknowable. This work continues an exploration of the space between human and landscape. A fleeting moment, gently preserved in pigment, timber, and wax.
Watercolour on paper
Mounted on timber and finished with artist wax to protect the artwork
14cm x 24cm Original artwork