HomeStore

Weather The Storm VII

Product image 1

Weather The Storm VII

Jack Davis’s original painting Weather the Storm VII (9" x 12") captures the quiet potency of an overcast sea meeting an infinite sky. With remarkable restraint and a deft hand, Davis renders this pared-back seascape in soft tonal gradients—muted blues and greys giving way to pale ivory and delicate ochre in the clouded sky. The simplicity of the horizon line anchors the work, acting as both a visual and emotional threshold between stillness and anticipation.

Despite its minimal composition, the piece brims with atmosphere. The textured brushwork builds layers of cloud, allowing the viewer to feel the suspended tension of the weather—a storm threatening, or perhaps just passed. The light that breaks through the clouds is subtle yet powerful, suggestive of hope in the face of nature’s immense and changeable presence.

Living in the remote coastal town of St. Just in Cornwall, Davis paints not from memory or photography but in direct response to the elements around him. His work is guided by intuition and the rhythms of the land and sea. As a tutor at the Newlyn School of Art and recipient of the Threadneedle Prize, Davis has become a leading figure in contemporary landscape painting, celebrated for his emotional honesty and elemental power.

$473.88

Original: $1,353.93

-65%
Weather The Storm VII

$1,353.93

$473.88

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Jack Davis’s original painting Weather the Storm VII (9" x 12") captures the quiet potency of an overcast sea meeting an infinite sky. With remarkable restraint and a deft hand, Davis renders this pared-back seascape in soft tonal gradients—muted blues and greys giving way to pale ivory and delicate ochre in the clouded sky. The simplicity of the horizon line anchors the work, acting as both a visual and emotional threshold between stillness and anticipation.

Despite its minimal composition, the piece brims with atmosphere. The textured brushwork builds layers of cloud, allowing the viewer to feel the suspended tension of the weather—a storm threatening, or perhaps just passed. The light that breaks through the clouds is subtle yet powerful, suggestive of hope in the face of nature’s immense and changeable presence.

Living in the remote coastal town of St. Just in Cornwall, Davis paints not from memory or photography but in direct response to the elements around him. His work is guided by intuition and the rhythms of the land and sea. As a tutor at the Newlyn School of Art and recipient of the Threadneedle Prize, Davis has become a leading figure in contemporary landscape painting, celebrated for his emotional honesty and elemental power.