You might say this art is tree-mendous!
Forests and trees have been featured in stories, fairytales, settings for plays. Artists are inspired by the world around them. Let's explore trees and forests through the eyes of artists.
Contemporary artist Trenton Doyle Hancock created a forest of fabric trees as the scenery for the Austin Ballet Company. For a short time, this same tree mural was later installed at our Contemporary Art Museum in St. Louis.
Trenton creates large tangled forests and gnarled tree artworks filled with line and pattern. This massive tree, almost is like a maze that Trenton wants you to find your way out of the puzzle. The word Legends wraps around the tree sending a message of power and hope.
During the first Spring of the pandemic, like most people who were staying home, English artist David Hockney looked to his surroundings and garden for inspiration.
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Piet Mondrian – Horizontal Tree, 1911
Brazilian photographer and filmmaker Vitor Schietti waits patiently to capture a photo of a light filled tree.
These sculptural trees look like they were cut down from the forest. They are actual branches, roots and the bark of real trees.
Ai Weiwei gathered tree parts from his homeland of China. The pieces and parts of different trees are reconstructed to create one tree. What does reconstructed mean? In China parts of a tree are sold at markets as a decorative item to be displayed in the home.
Korean artist Lee Gil Rae uses nature as his source of inspiration to craft intricate tree-form sculptures from steel and copper. He says his art is in response to deforestation and environment.
Avenue of Schloss Kammer Park (1912) by Gustav Klimt |
Will you create art inspired by nature?
Will trees inspire your work?