PINK PEONIES IN THE HAZY GLOW OF THE CANADIAN WILDFIRE SMOKE

Oil painting of a pink peony stem with three buds. One is tightly closed, one is just opening, and th third of halfway opening. Two ants are crawling up the stem and a bee is hovering above the open bud.

Hazy Glow | 12x12 inch oil on ACM

When the smoke from the Canadian Wildfires first drifted into south central Pennsylvania, we thought it was just a humid, hazy day. But as the week went on, and news reports started rolling in, the skies grew hazier and hazier. It was surreal to be outside, peering at the sun, which was reduced to an eerie orange globe hanging in the sky.

But from an artists’ perspective, the light was stunning. Shifting everything it touched into a spectrum of warm colors leaning towards orange. It was beautiful.

I had been painting spring flowers and picked up a fresh pink peony bouquet, from local flower grower Spring Valley Farm PA, and it had this pink peony stem with three buds. Usually the extra buds are stripped off, but these were all well developed and ready to open. That evening, I set them up in my studio and prepared for a sunrise painting session the next day.

Nothing prepared me for the light that streamed through my studio window as the sun began to rise. It was the most gorgeous creamy, warm orange light and when it hit these peonies I was stunned.

What a change to mix up a palette full of warm colors that all leaned slightly towards orange. Mixing colors for the stems and leaves took a few adjustments to get right, but wow, how fun to explore a different range of greens.

Throughout the summer months, as the smoke drifted in and out of our area, I spent a lot of time in the garden observing. It was apparent that growth and flowering was slowed. Everything felt very still.

I tried to capture that feeling in this painting. Life was still growing and moving, but it felt as if it was in slow motion.

I was able to finish painting these pink peonies just as the wildfire smoke moved dissipated.

It was interesting to see how the warm light shifted color. Even the shadows were more interesting, leaning darker, and even more towards a cool, deep blue green.

If this painting taught me one thing, it was to slow down and observe. Who knows if wildfires will ever send smoke this way again. Spending those few months that it lingered in our area observing and taking in how it shifted the atmosphere, veiled the sun, and cast interesting colors across everything it touched was a unique experience. One I will surely remember.

I’m glad I took the opportunity to create a painting that documented that beautiful orange glow.

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