What a Tiny Painting Taught Me About Scale
Small Paintings, Big Paintings
Small Impressionistic Landscape 5” x 7” oil on unstretched, treated canvas
I’ve always leaned toward painting large. Not just big, large. Most of my landscapes and seascapes measure at least 5 by 6 feet, with some stretching to 4 by 8 feet. When I’m working on that kind of scale, the size itself becomes part of the artwork’s story. It’s not just about what’s on the canvas but how the canvas commands the space it’s in.
That scale mirrors how we experience the outdoors. When we’re out there, everything feels massive. Trees stretch to the sky, hills roll on endlessly, and the horizon feels like it’s miles away. By painting large, I try to bring that same feeling indoors. It’s a way to shrink the outdoors just enough to fit inside while still making the viewer feel dwarfed in the presence of nature’s scale.
Detail of Small Impressionistic Landscape 5” x 7” oil on unstretched, treated canvas