NUCLEAR THUNDER SKY IS CURRENTLY EXHIBITING AT THE CHANHASSEN PUBLIC LIBRARY AND AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE
This Nuclear Thunder Sky original acrylic painting is part of my Thunder Skies Series. It is 18” x 24” and is set in a black floating frame, ready to hang.
I have many interpretations in this Thunder Skies Series. You’ll hear me say it again, no doubt - I’m absolutely obsessed with the sky when a thunderstorm is imminent or just passed, and equally obsessed with painting different versions of what I have seen. The winds are so powerful, pulling spring flowers and leaves off the trees; the downpours themselves are thunderous as rain pours out of the sky seemingly in sheets of water. The landscape soaks up what it can of the water and rejects the rest in puddles. The clouds allow streaks of sunlight to touch their edges as they take their new position in the sky, moving to their next target, swiftly swirling and blowing through the sky, as if they are powered by nuclear energy. Nuclear Thunder Sky.
This Nuclear Thunder Sky original acrylic painting is part of my Thunder Skies Series. It is 18” x 24” and is set in a black floating frame, ready to hang.
I have many interpretations in this Thunder Skies Series. You’ll hear me say it again, no doubt - I’m absolutely obsessed with the sky when a thunderstorm is imminent or just passed, and equally obsessed with painting different versions of what I have seen. The winds are so powerful, pulling spring flowers and leaves off the trees; the downpours themselves are thunderous as rain pours out of the sky seemingly in sheets of water. The landscape soaks up what it can of the water and rejects the rest in puddles. The clouds allow streaks of sunlight to touch their edges as they take their new position in the sky, moving to their next target, swiftly swirling and blowing through the sky, as if they are powered by nuclear energy. Nuclear Thunder Sky.
This Nuclear Thunder Sky original acrylic painting is part of my Thunder Skies Series. It is 18” x 24” and is set in a black floating frame, ready to hang.
I have many interpretations in this Thunder Skies Series. You’ll hear me say it again, no doubt - I’m absolutely obsessed with the sky when a thunderstorm is imminent or just passed, and equally obsessed with painting different versions of what I have seen. The winds are so powerful, pulling spring flowers and leaves off the trees; the downpours themselves are thunderous as rain pours out of the sky seemingly in sheets of water. The landscape soaks up what it can of the water and rejects the rest in puddles. The clouds allow streaks of sunlight to touch their edges as they take their new position in the sky, moving to their next target, swiftly swirling and blowing through the sky, as if they are powered by nuclear energy. Nuclear Thunder Sky.