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Hiking down from the Harding Ice Field, the ice field that feeds the glaciers that continue carving out the Kenai Fjords, on my recent trip to Alaska.

Hiking down from the Harding Ice Field, the ice field that feeds the glaciers that continue carving out the Kenai Fjords, on my recent trip to Alaska.

 

Keepers of the Fjords

SOLD

30” x 40”

Oil and acrylic on panel

I visited Alaska in July of 2021. As a lover of raw landscape, I was eager to experience the “last great frontier” for myself after years of exploring it only through pictures and stories. It did not disappoint; the vastness of landscape in this part of the world shakes you to your core. The subjects of “Keepers of the Fjords”, the spinal rocky features that poke abrubptly out of the ocean in the Kenai Fjord region, were especially captivating as they reminded me of the stalagmite-like limestone formations in Vietnam’s Ha Long Bay. Seated at the mouth of some of the fjord inlets, they are all that remain of the land that used to stand there, glaciers carving out the area around them, replacing that space with water. They seem to stand guard at these fjordal mouths, protecting the calmer waters behind them and also telling the story of the precious glaciers that recede more each year.

”Keepers of the Fjords” is part of an exhibition at the Hancock Gallery on view from October 14, 2021 - January 15, 2022.