Original Land Art works for sale

125 Original artworks, Limited Editions & Prints: Land art,[...]

125 Original artworks, Limited Editions & Prints:

Land art, also known as earth art, is created directly in the landscape by sculpting it or by building natural-material structures there. The environmental movement's beginnings and the widespread commoditization of American art in the late 1960s had an impact on ideas and works that were, to varied degrees, alienated from the art market. The movement was a development of Conceptualism and Minimalism.

The art movement's main concerns were its opposition to the commercialization of the arts and its enthusiasm for the newly emerging ecology movement. The prevalence of the anti-urban sentiment and its countervailing passion for country life coincided with the art movement. Spiritual aspirations for the Earth to serve as humanity's home were among these impulses.

A process-based method of creating art where the artist would go on excursions into the surrounding environment to either collect objects or carry out site-specific interventions quickly evolved from what had initially started as a trend in sculpture to incorporate natural materials like dirt, rocks, and plants. While some artists created temporary, limited interventions in the landscape, others used mechanical earthmoving equipment to create their earthworks. For presentation in galleries, artists frequently used photographs, films, and maps to document their earthworks. Additionally, by combining organic elements from the environment into sculptures and installations, land artists created land art in the galleries.


History of Land Art

Land art was a protest against the "ruthless commercialization" of art in America throughout the 1960s and 1970s. However, photographic documentation was frequently displayed in conventional gallery spaces. During this time, proponents of land art rejected the museum or gallery as the setting for artistic activity and created monumental landscape projects that were outside the scope of traditional transportable sculpture and the commercial art market. Minimalist and conceptual art, as well as contemporary trends like De Stijl, Cubism, minimalism, and the works of Constantin Brâncuși and Joseph Beuys, served as inspiration for Land art.

The first Land art was created at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture by Douglas Leichter and Richard Saba in 1967, according to art critic Grace Glueck's article in The New York Times. The sudden emergence of Land art in 1968 can be attributed to a generation of artists, most of whom were in their late 20s, who were responding to the year's increased political activism as well as the rapidly growing environmental and women's liberation movements.

An example of land art that served as a means of publicly identifying a group of pioneering artists was a 1968 group show named "Earthworks" held at the Dwan Gallery in New York.  "Earthworks" displayed the documentation of site-specific projects by artists such Sol LeWitt, Robert Morris, Claes Oldenburg, Dennis Oppenheim, and Stephen Kaltenbach since some of the artists in the exhibition were having trouble finding appropriate land for their site-specific work. Through maps, photos, transparencies, and drawings, the exhibition cataloged how their work was conceptualized. Ironically, despite these artists' efforts to reject conventional institutions, they frequently had to accept funding from them in order to develop their projects.

Robert Smithson perhaps was the best-known artist who works in this genre. As a response to Modernism's disengagement from social issues, his 1968 essay "The Sedimentation of the Mind: Earth Projects" offered a critical framework for the movement. The Spiral Jetty (1970), which Smithson created as a long (1500 ft) spiral-shaped jetty sticking out into Great Salt Lake in northern Utah, the United States, is his most well-known and likely most famous piece of land art. How much of the work, if any, is visible depends on the changing water levels.

The first American museum to present an exhibition of Earth art, simply titled Earth Art, was the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University in February 1969. The artworks were on view at the museum as well as all over Cornell University's Ithaca campus, providing a venue for pieces that would later continue to challenge the status of art as a commodity, particularly those installations that blurred the lines between an object's context and its surroundings.

The recession had a significant impact on Earth art financing in the middle of the 1970s. Many artists relied on sponsors to pay for pricey parcels of land so they could finish large-scale works. The movement lost one of its most significant figures when Robert Smithson died in an aircraft crash in 1973, and it ended up. Those whose reputations were built on Earth art, like De Maria, Heizer, Morris, and Andre, changed the focus of their work in order to fit institutional and gallery settings. Although conceptually unrelated to the avant-garde works of the pioneers of land art, the word "land art" has entered the mainstream of public art and is sometimes misused to describe any form of art in nature.


Land Art Key Artists

Robert Smithson (1938-1973)

The pioneering work of Robert Smithson must be included in any analysis of land art. In order to create three-dimensional sculptural compositions, he started combining various materials. This led to a series of "non-sites" works, in which sculptures made of earth and rocks that were brought back from expeditions were placed inside of galleries. These sculptures frequently included maps, bins, mirrors, glass, and neon. Smithson's earthworks Spiral Jetty (1970), Broken Circle/Spiral Hill (1971), and Amarillo Ramp (1973) are his most famous creations (1973). By completely removing art from the gallery context and integrating it into the natural terrain, he forever altered preconceived concepts of sculptural form in contemporary art.


Andy Goldsworthy (born 1956)

Andy Goldsworthy is a well-known land art sculptor and photographer who works in and with nature. His output can be classified into permanent and temporary projects. The latter are designed to vanish at the end of the life cycle and are constructed from organic and transient components. He creates a number of repetitive designs, including spirals, circles, and snaking lines, out of branches, leaves, rocks, and ice. The ephemerality at the center of these initiatives is a reflection of a fragile ecology and a continually changing natural environment.


Nancy Holt (1938-2014)

Despite being overshadowed by her famous husband, Robert Smithson, Holt created a body of work that was unique from his and had more futuristic overtones. Some of Holt's best work is hardly there when using a leave-no-trace strategy. Holt recognized the link between art and eco-activism earlier and more clearly than the other Land Artists.


Maya Lin (born 1959)

One of the most recognizable sights is Washington, D.C.'s Maya Lin-designed Vietnam Veterans Memorial. Her signature was the use of a simple, low-slung wall to follow the contours of the surrounding terrain. Her minimalist approach to public art entails adding something that appears to have been added afterwards but nevertheless fits in.

Her outdoor installations feature little, hardly perceptible swells of earth that might go unnoticed if one is not looking at them from a great height or a great distance. Her latest attention has been on indoor sculptures, which intellectually and visually evoke the rolling terrain of far-off geographic areas and preserve an implied environmental concern.


Ana Mendieta (1948-1985)

An influential figure in the development of Land Art, particularly in how the human body interacts with and returns to nature, was the Cuban feminist artist Ana Mendieta. Mendieta produced over 200 pieces using her body and the earth as the medium for her provocative sculptures. Her work is multi-layered, deeply philosophical, and related to various art traditions, including conceptualism, land art, performance and body art. Mendieta established herself as a pioneer of earth art through her photo and video series Silueta (1973–1980). In order to demonstrate the unbreakable bond between the planet and human nature, the artist sculpted her body into several landscapes for her project.


Walter De Maria (1935-2013)

In his sculptures, installations, and land works, Walter de Maria employed geometric forms to produce a succession of repetitions that explored the link between the relative and the absolute. Lighting Field (1977), his best-known piece of land art, is a grid of one-mile by one-kilometer squares that was put in a remote part of the New Mexico desert. Four hundred poles made of polished stainless steel that are over twenty feet tall and have pointed tips that define a horizontal plane - the point of attraction for lightning strikes - make up the grid. The visitor can enter the grid physically or observe it from a distance, in a series of powerful optical illusions that vary with time and space, art, landscape, and nature collide.


Michael Heizer (born 1944)

Michael Heizer has been a significant figure in the land art movement. He is renowned for his ability to construct large-scale works and explore the interplay between positive and negative space. Beginning his artistic career with a series of curved canvases he called "negative painting." In the late 1960s, he created his first negative land piece, which was “North, East, South, and West”. This project was his first attempt at large-scale earthwork, and it was made out of a collection of holes with geometric shapes that were dug in the Sierra Nevada desert.


Richard Long (born 1945)

In the late 1960s, the artist began his direct interaction with nature by using his stroll as a medium, motivated by a desire to use the landscape in new ways. Long attempted to subvert the language and aspirations of art and bring it to a more basic, intimate, and fundamental level through a sequence of repetitive gestures or protracted solo walks. His goal was to exemplify in himself the possibilities of an unadulterated conversation between man and environment. Time, space, and distance are the subjects of this groundbreaking conceptual land art project, and they are expanded to a massive scale.


Dennis Oppenheim (1938-2011)

Along with Michael Heizer, Nancy Holt, Walter De Maria, Robert Smithson, and Oppenheim, the first generation of Land artists included Oppenheim. In the 1960s, they created this brand-new genre of art using the earth itself as the medium. Oppenheim's early interventions into the natural world, in contrast to those of many of his contemporaries, took the form of removal, going back to the traditional sculptural principle of carving by, in the artist's own words, "taking away rather than adding." Geopolitical boundaries, time zones, and natural degradation are only a few examples of the social and natural systems that are referenced and highlighted in Annual Rings (1968), a site-specific work. Reproducing the map serves to demonstrate how mapping plays a part in creating unnatural and frequently violent borders between states and the river, a natural border, serves as a tool for these international borders.

Oppenheim questioned "the relative values of the ordering systems by which we live" by juxtaposing natural elements with artificial ideas such as nationhood and time zones. At the same time, earth artists like Robert Smithson and Walter de Maria were also producing site-specific Earthworks where natural environments were put in conflict with artificial interventions.


Land Artists Quotes

Robert Smithson

"The names of minerals and the minerals themselves do not differ from each other, because at the bottom of both the material and the print is the beginning of an abysmal number of fissures. Words and rocks contain a language that follows a syntax of splits and ruptures. Look at any word long enough and you will see it open up into a series of faults, into a terrain of particles each containing its own void.”


Andy Goldsworthy

“I am not a performer but occasionally I deliberately work in a public context. Some sculptures need the movement of people around them to work.”

“Even in winter an isolated patch of snow has a special quality.”


Nancy Holt

"You are a small speck in this vast space.”


Maya Lin

“Art is very tricky because it's what you do for yourself. It's much harder for me to make those works than the monuments or the architecture. ”


Ana Mendieta

"My art is grounded in the belief of one universal energy, which runs through everything: from insect to man, from man to spectre, from spectre to plant, from plant to galaxy. My works are the irrigation veins of this universal fluid. Through them ascend the ancestral sap, the original beliefs, the primordial accumulations, the unconscious thoughts that animate the world.”


Walter De Maria

"I like natural disasters and I think that they may be the highest form of art possible to experience."

"Every good work should have at least ten meanings.”


Michael Heizer

“A strong work of art really leaves people speechless. They feel a little angry because they don't understand it.”


Richard Long

“A sculpture, a map, a photograph; all the forms of my work are equal and complementary. The knowledge of my actions, in whatever form, is the art. My art is the essence of my experience, not a representation of it.”


Dennis Oppenheim

“Most of my work comes from ideas. I can usually do only a few versions of each idea. Land Art and Body Art were particularly strong concepts which allowed for a lot of permutations. But nevertheless, I found myself wanting to move onward into something else.”

Discover contemporary Artworks on Artmajeur

Contemporary art is a vibrant constellation of artistic expressions. This creative universe encompasses a wide array of mediums, from paintings, sculpture, and photography to drawing, printmaking, textile art, and digital art, each medium a star shining with its own distinct radiance. Artists use diverse supports and materials to bring their visions to life, such as canvas, wood, metal, and even innovative digital canvases for the creation of virtual masterpieces

A contemporary painting, for instance, may weave its story through the masterful strokes of acrylic or oil, while a contemporary sculpture might sing its song in the language of stone, bronze, or found objects. The photographic arts capture and manipulate light to produce striking images, while printmaking employs techniques like lithography and screen-printing to produce multiples of a single, impactful image. Textile art plays with fabrics and fibers, whereas digital art pushes the boundaries of creation with innovative technology. 

The allure of contemporary art lies in its boundary-pushing nature, its relentless quest for experimentation and its constant reflection of the evolving human experience. This boundless creativity, coupled with its strong social and personal commentary, makes every piece of contemporary art a unique emblem of its time, a mirror held up to the realities and dreams of our complex world. It whispers to us, moves us, provokes thought, and kindles a deep emotional response, stirring the soul of anyone willing to listen. It is, indeed, the language of emotions and ideas, spoken in the dialect of our era.

Photography
Cactus Photography
©2021 Ken Overman

Origins and history of contemporary art

The story of contemporary art unfolds in the mid-20th century, marked by seismic shifts in artistic expression. Post-World War II, around the 1950s and 1960s, artists began experimenting beyond traditional confines, challenging the norms of what art could be. This revolutionary epoch birthed myriad new movements and artistic forms such as abstract expressionism, pop art, and minimalism. Paintings, once confined by realism, embraced abstraction, as artists used color and form to express emotions and ideas. Notable periods like the advent of pop art in the late 1950s and early 1960s saw artworks mimicking popular culture and mass media, reflecting society’s shifting focus.

The sculptural arts, too, witnessed a metamorphosis. Sculptors started to experiment with new materials and forms, often creating artworks that interacted with the viewer and the surrounding space, fostering a sense of engagement. Drawing, a timeless practice, also evolved, with artists incorporating innovative techniques and concepts to redefine its role in contemporary art.

Photography, a relatively new medium, emerged as a powerful tool in the contemporary art landscape. Born in the 19th century, it truly came into its own in the latter half of the 20th century, blurring the lines between fine art and documentation. Printmaking, a practice dating back to ancient times, saw renewed interest and experimentation with techniques like lithography, etching, and screen printing gaining prominence.

The realm of textile art expanded dramatically, as artists began to appreciate the versatility and tactile quality of fabric and fibers. Artists began using textiles to challenge the boundaries between fine art, craft, and design. 

The dawn of digital technology in the late 20th century heralded a new age for contemporary art. Digital art emerged as artists started leveraging new technologies to create immersive, interactive experiences, often blurring the line between the virtual and the physical world.

Through these transformative periods, the essence of contemporary art has remained the same: a dynamic, evolving reflection of the times we live in, continually pushing boundaries and embracing the new, always questioning, always exploring.

Painting,  20x16 in
Eden Painting, 20x16 in
©2022 Poonam Choudhary

Evolutions of theses contemporary works in the art market

As we navigate through the 21st century, the dynamic landscape of contemporary art continues to evolve and expand, reflecting our ever-changing world. Contemporary paintings, once primarily confined to two-dimensional canvases, now embrace a multitude of forms and techniques, ranging from mixed media installations to digital creations, each piece a rich a weaving of thoughts, emotions, and narratives. Sculpture, too, has ventured far beyond traditional stone and bronze, with artists incorporating light, sound, and even motion, embodying the ephemerality and flux of the modern world.

Photography, in the hands of Contemporary Artists, has expanded its horizons, seamlessly blending with digital technology to create breathtaking imagery that challenges our perception of reality. Drawing, as well, has transcended the borders of paper, incorporating multimedia elements and exploratory techniques to redefine its role in the artistic discourse. Printmaking continues to flourish, with contemporary artists using traditional methods in innovative ways to deliver potent social and personal commentaries.

Textile art, once considered a craft, now holds a prominent place in the contemporary art world, with artists using it to explore issues of identity, tradition, and cultural heritage. Meanwhile, digital art, the newest member of the contemporary art family, has revolutionized the way we create and interact with art, presenting immersive experiences that blur the boundary between the virtual and the physical.

These diverse forms of contemporary art hold significant value in the current art market, not only due to their aesthetic appeal but also their ability to encapsulate and communicate complex ideas and emotions. Collectors, curators, and art lovers worldwide seek these works, drawn to their inherent dynamism, their innovative use of materials, and their eloquent expressions of our shared human experience. As a testimonial to our times, these contemporary artworks encapsulate the pulse of our society and the resonance of individual voices, forever etching our collective narrative into the annals of art history.

Photography
Argonne d'automne. Photography
©2016 Emmanuel Raussin

Famous Contemporary Artists

As we delve into the vibrant realm of contemporary art, we encounter an array of artists who shape this dynamic field. Each a master in their medium - painting, sculpture, photography, drawing, printmaking, textile, or digital art - they push artistic boundaries, reflecting our era and challenging perceptions. Let’s explore these remarkable contributors and their groundbreaking works.

1. Gerhard Richter - Known for his multi-faceted approach to painting, Richter challenges the boundaries of the medium, masterfully oscillating between abstract and photorealistic styles. His works, whether featuring squeegee-pulled pigments or blurred photographic images, engage in a fascinating dialogue with perception.

2. Jeff Koons - A significant figure in contemporary sculpture, Koons crafts monumental pieces that explore themes of consumerism, taste, and popular culture. His iconic balloon animals, constructed in mirror-polished stainless steel, captivate with their playful yet profound commentary.

3. Cindy Sherman - An acclaimed photographer, Sherman uses her lens to explore identity and societal roles, particularly of women. Renowned for her conceptual self-portraits, she assumes myriad characters, pushing the boundaries of photography as a medium of artistic expression.

4. David Hockney - Hockney, with his prolific output spanning six decades, is a pivotal figure in contemporary drawing. His bold use of color and playful exploration of perspective convey an intoxicating sense of joy and an unabashed celebration of life.

5. Kiki Smith - An innovative printmaker, Smith’s work explores the human condition, particularly the female body and its social and cultural connotations. Her etchings and lithographs speak to universal experiences of life, death, and transformation.

6. El Anatsui - A master of textile art, Anatsui creates stunning tapestry-like installations from discarded bottle caps and aluminum scraps. These shimmering, flexible sculptures blend traditional African aesthetic with contemporary art sensibilities, speaking to themes of consumption, waste, and the interconnectedness of our world.

7. Rafael Lozano-Hemmer - A leading figure in digital art, Lozano-Hemmer utilizes technology to create interactive installations that blend architecture and performance art. His work, often participatory in nature, explores themes of surveillance, privacy, and the relationship between people and their environments.

Painting,  16.5x11.8 in
Lift me up Painting, 16.5x11.8 in
©2022 Marina Petsali

Notable contemporary artworks

The contemporary art landscape is a dynamic patchwork of diverse expressions and groundbreaking ideas, each artwork a unique dialog with its audience. Here are a selection of some renowned contemporary artworks, spanning various media such as painting, sculpture, photography, drawing, printmaking, textile art, and digital art, that have profoundly influenced this vibrant movement.

  1. "Cloud Gate" by Anish Kapoor, 2006 - This monumental stainless steel sculpture, also known as "The Bean," mirrors and distorts the Chicago skyline and onlookers in its seamless, liquid-like surface, creating an interactive experience that blurs the line between the artwork and the viewer.

  2. "Marilyn Diptych" by Andy Warhol, 1962 - An iconic piece of pop art, this silkscreen painting features fifty images of Marilyn Monroe. Half brightly colored, half in black and white, it reflects the dichotomy of celebrity life and its influence on popular culture.

  3. "Rhein II" by Andreas Gursky, 1999 - This photographic artwork, a digitally-altered image of the Rhine River, is celebrated for its minimalist aesthetic. It strips the landscape to its bare essentials, invoking a sense of tranquility and vastness.

  4. "Black Square" by Kazimir Malevich, 1915 - A revolutionary painting in the realm of abstract art, this piece, featuring nothing more than a black square on a white field, challenges traditional notions of representation, symbolizing a new era in artistic expression.

  5. "Puppy" by Jeff Koons, 1992 - This giant sculpture, a West Highland Terrier blanketed in flowering plants, explores themes of innocence, consumer culture, and the interplay between high art and kitsch. It’s a delightful blend of traditional sculpture and garden craft.

  6. "Re-projection: Hoerengracht" by Ed and Nancy Kienholz, 1983-1988 - A room-sized tableau representing Amsterdam’s red-light district, this work combines elements of sculpture, painting, lighting, and found objects. It engages viewers in a stark commentary on commodification and objectification.

  7. "Untitled" (Your body is a battleground) by Barbara Kruger, 1989 - This photomontage, combining black-and-white photography with impactful text, explores issues of feminism, identity, and power. Its potent, confrontational message is a prime example of the power of text in contemporary visual art.

  8. "For the Love of God" by Damien Hirst, 2007 - This sculpture, a platinum cast of a human skull encrusted with 8,601 diamonds, probes themes of mortality, value, and the human fascination with luxury and decadence. It’s a compelling blend of macabre and magnificence.

  9. "Physical impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living" by Damien Hirst, 1991 - This artwork, featuring a tiger shark preserved in formaldehyde, blurs the line between traditional sculpture and biological specimen. It prompts viewers to contemplate mortality and nature’s ferocity.

  10. "One and Three Chairs" by Joseph Kosuth, 1965 - A piece of conceptual art, it presents a physical chair, a photograph of a chair, and a dictionary definition of a chair, thus exploring the relationship between language, picture, and referent in art.

These pieces, in their diversity, exemplify the rich tapestry of contemporary art, each piece a unique commentary on our world and a testament to the limitless potential of creative expression.


Most Relevant | Newest

Photography titled "Cactus" by Ken Overman, Original Artwork, Digital Photography
Cactus - Photography ©2021 by Ken Overman - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest

Ken Overman

"Cactus"

Photography | Several sizes

Available from $33.88
Painting titled "Lift me up" by Marina Petsali, Original Artwork, Oil
Lift me up - Painting, 16.5x11.8 in ©2022 by Marina Petsali - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, hot air balloon, sky, lake, forest, green, rainbow, yellow, blue, water, pink, flame, fire, trees, children, kids, nursery, air

Marina Petsali

"Lift me up"

Oil on Cardboard | 16.5x11.8 in

$508.21
Prints available
Painting titled "Brecon Stream" by Richard Lawrence, Original Artwork, Watercolor
Brecon Stream - Painting, 16x12 in ©2022 by Richard Lawrence - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, Brecon, waterfall, river, Wales

Richard Lawrence

"Brecon Stream"

Watercolor on Paper | 16x12 in

Not For Sale
Photography titled "Light Green" by Darya Insight, Original Artwork, Non Manipulated Photography
Light Green - Photography ©2020 by Darya Insight - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, forest, summer, sun, green, light, path, wood, tree, cones

Darya Insight

"Light Green"

Photography | Several sizes

Digital Arts titled "Autumn forest" by Skratek, Original Artwork, Digital Painting
Autumn forest - Digital Arts ©2021 by Skratek - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, autumn, fall, forest, colorful leaves, colors of autumn, digital painting

Skratek

"Autumn forest"

Digital Arts

Not For Sale
Painting titled "Paysage de la Sarre…" by Karl-Werner Gerstner, Original Artwork, Watercolor
Paysage de la Sarre. Saar landscape. Paisagem do Sarre - Painting, 15.8x11.8 in ©2022 by Karl-Werner Gerstner - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest

Karl-Werner Gerstner

"Paysage de la Sarre. Saar landscape. Paisagem do Sarre"

Watercolor on Paper | 15.8x11.8 in

$473.89
Digital Arts titled ""Blätter im Wind"" by Keep Magic, Original Artwork, Digital Painting Mounted on Wood Stretcher frame
"Blätter im Wind" - Digital Arts, 31.5x23.6 in ©2022 by Keep Magic - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, Blätter, Wind, Natur, Landschaft, Contemporary Art, Modern Art, Digital Art

Keep Magic

""Blätter im Wind""

Digital Arts | 31.5x23.6 in

$149.47
Photography titled "moss" by Tammy Gauthreaux, Original Artwork, Non Manipulated Photography
moss - Photography ©2019 by Tammy Gauthreaux - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, river, oregon, moss, woods, usa, nature, natural, forrest, original, photography, print, adventure, road trip, rest, relaxing, stream, water, ferns, trees, rock

Tammy Gauthreaux

"moss"

Photography | Several sizes

Available from $48.88
Photography titled "A Portal To Safety" by Ronnell Macklin, Original Artwork, Digital Photography
A Portal To Safety - Photography ©2022 by Ronnell Macklin - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, landscape, tree, portal, woods, park, snow, winter, cold, white, sunset, sky, imagine, story, magic, enchanted, dimension, art, photography, unique, favorite

Ronnell Macklin

"A Portal To Safety"

Photography | Several sizes

Available from $27.14
Painting titled "Autumn avenue" by Ludmilla Ukrow, Original Artwork, Oil
Autumn avenue - Painting, 15.8x19.7 in ©2022 by Ludmilla Ukrow - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, autumnal landscape, sunlight, fall forest, avenue of trees, yellow and orange colors, trees oil painting, autumnal colors, nature, fall trees painting, autumn forest, pathway of trees, forest oil painting

Ludmilla Ukrow

"Autumn avenue"

Oil on Canvas | 15.8x19.7 in

Not For Sale
Painting titled "Zima" by Waldemar Wojtowicz, Original Artwork, Acrylic
Zima - Painting, 11.7x8.3 in ©2021 by Waldemar Wojtowicz - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest

Waldemar Wojtowicz

"Zima"

Acrylic | 11.7x8.3 in

Not For Sale Prints from $27.14
Painting titled "Herbarium serie lea…" by Lena Vanli, Original Artwork, Oil
Herbarium serie leaf 20/20 sm 8/8in canvasboard - Painting, 7.9x7.9 in ©2021 by Lena Vanli - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, herbarium, plants, nature, green leafs, impasto, botany

Lena Vanli

"Herbarium serie leaf 20/20 sm 8/8in canvasboard"

Oil on Linen Canvas | 7.9x7.9 in

$67.54
Prints available
Painting titled "Eden" by Poonam Choudhary, Original Artwork, Acrylic
Eden - Painting, 20x16 in ©2022 by Poonam Choudhary - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest

Poonam Choudhary

"Eden"

Acrylic on Canvas | 20x16 in

$650
Prints available
Painting titled "Tropical Heaven" by Anastasia Kurganova, Original Artwork, Oil
Tropical Heaven - Painting, 5.5x7.9 in ©2022 by Anastasia Kurganova - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, ara parrot, bird, nature, landscape, forest, palm tree, green, tropical, tropics, oil painting, fine art, realism, illustration, brazil, river, wild, greenery, plant

Anastasia Kurganova

"Tropical Heaven"

Oil on Paper | 5.5x7.9 in

$264
Prints available
Drawing titled "31PA" by Ari Reinikainen, Original Artwork, Pastel
31PA - Drawing, 15.4x20.5 in ©2022 by Ari Reinikainen - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, maisema

Ari Reinikainen

"31PA"

Pastel on Paper | 15.4x20.5 in

$417.42
Painting titled "Paysage 1" by Fred Haute, Original Artwork, Oil
Paysage 1 - Painting, 15x18.1 in ©2022 by Fred Haute - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, Huile, Bois, Nature, Forêt, Prairie

Fred Haute

"Paysage 1"

Oil on Wood | 15x18.1 in

Not For Sale
Drawing titled "pines with chalks" by Gázsity Barbara, Original Artwork, Pastel
pines with chalks - Drawing, 23.4x16.5 in ©2023 by Gázsity Barbara - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest

Gázsity Barbara

"pines with chalks"

Pastel on Paper | 23.4x16.5 in

Not For Sale
Painting titled "Forest" by Rinalds Vanadzins, Original Artwork, Acrylic
Forest - Painting, 39.4x47.2 in ©2022 by Rinalds Vanadzins - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, forest, landscape, land, nature, clouds, fog

Rinalds Vanadzins

"Forest"

Acrylic on Canvas | 39.4x47.2 in

$5,557
Prints available
Painting titled "Fire 2020" by Jane Wong, Original Artwork, Watercolor
Fire 2020 - Painting, 14x20 in ©2020 by Jane Wong - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest

Jane Wong

"Fire 2020"

Watercolor on Paper | 14x20 in

$443
Photography titled "Winter in New Engla…" by Troy Wilson-Ripsom, Original Artwork, Digital Photography
Winter in New England - Photography ©2017 by Troy Wilson-Ripsom - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, New England, Winter, Forest

Troy Wilson-Ripsom

"Winter in New England"

Photography | Several sizes

Available from $28.89
Painting titled "Colorful Trees And…" by Merlyn Shepherd'S, Original Artwork, Acrylic
Colorful Trees And The Bridge - Painting, 29x37 in ©2017 by Merlyn Shepherd'S - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, Forest, forest art, landscape, merlyn shepherd arts, merlyn shepherds, acrylic on canvas, acrylic on canvas sheet, stone bridge, colorful stony bridge, colorful trees, colorful landscape, colorful nature, nature painting, water canal, water painting, colorful forest, river painting, stones in water, creek painting, multicolor painting

Merlyn Shepherd'S

"Colorful Trees And The Bridge"

Acrylic on Linen Canvas | 29x37 in

$2,635.32
Painting titled "Тропинка" by Georgii Poliakov, Original Artwork, Oil Mounted on Wood Stretcher frame
Тропинка - Painting, 23.6x15.8 in ©2021 by Georgii Poliakov - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest

Georgii Poliakov

"Тропинка"

Oil on Canvas | 23.6x15.8 in

$518.17
Photography titled "Down there" by Bradley Lashley, Original Artwork, Non Manipulated Photography
Down there - Photography ©2022 by Bradley Lashley - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest

Bradley Lashley

"Down there"

Photography | Several sizes

Available from $27.14
Photography titled "Basswood Forest For…" by Jill Annette Johnson, Original Artwork, Digital Photography
Basswood Forest For Bees 1 - Photography ©2022 by Jill Annette Johnson - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, basswood, tree, flower, bloom, yellow, spring, honey, bee, gold, green, july, summer, giclee, large, nature

Jill Annette Johnson

"Basswood Forest For Bees 1"

Photography | Several sizes

Available from $48.88
Photography titled "Argonne d'automne." by Emmanuel Raussin, Original Artwork, Digital Photography
Argonne d'automne. - Photography ©2016 by Emmanuel Raussin - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest

Emmanuel Raussin

"Argonne d'automne."

Photography | Several sizes

Available from $40.16
Painting titled "Land Clearing(last…" by Abdelrahman Shamieh, Original Artwork, Acrylic
Land Clearing(last Fall) - Painting, 39.4x63 in ©2020 by Abdelrahman Shamieh - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, Acrylic on canvas Unstretched

Abdelrahman Shamieh

"Land Clearing(last Fall)"

Acrylic on Canvas | 39.4x63 in

$5,863.88
Painting titled "Forest canvas Paint…" by Tetiana Surshko (SurshkoArt), Original Artwork, Oil
Forest canvas Painting - Painting, 27.6x19.7 in ©2017 by Tetiana Surshko (SurshkoArt) - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, textured wall art, original art work, forest painting, brush stroke, handmade artwork, botanical drawing, forest canvas, herb painting

Tetiana Surshko (SurshkoArt)

"Forest canvas Painting"

Oil on Canvas | 27.6x19.7 in

$320
Prints available
Photography titled "Sonne+Schatten im L…" by Manfred Elsässer, Original Artwork, Digital Photography
Sonne+Schatten im Laubwald - Photography ©2019 by Manfred Elsässer - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, Laubwald, Sonne, Schatten, Ruhe

Manfred Elsässer

"Sonne+Schatten im Laubwald"

Photography | Several sizes

Available from $40.05
Photography titled "green needles" by Olga Liutova-Amplatz, Original Artwork, Digital Photography
green needles - Photography ©2017 by Olga Liutova-Amplatz - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, foto art, foto, landscape, forest, fine art, natura

Olga Liutova-Amplatz

"green needles"

Photography | Several sizes

Available from $27.14
Painting titled "[Hamiast] Alive - B…" by Sharmene Yousuf (Meneartiste), Original Artwork, Oil Mounted on Wood Panel
[Hamiast] Alive - By the Golden Trees From Heaven on Earth - Painting, 24x36 in ©2022 by Sharmene Yousuf (Meneartiste) - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, alive, golden, tree, woods, fineart painting, black, white, grey, gold, Pakistani artist, painter, asia, bob ross

Sharmene Yousuf (Meneartiste)

"[Hamiast] Alive - By the Golden Trees From Heaven on Earth"

Oil on Canvas | 24x36 in

$1,666.43
Prints available
Photography titled "River adventure" by Colin Jones, Original Artwork, Digital Photography
River adventure - Photography ©2020 by Colin Jones - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, Australia, Tasmania, wilderness, nature, adventure, landscape

Colin Jones

"River adventure"

Photography | Several sizes

Available from $27.14
Painting titled "Illumination - Tree…" by Cherie Roe Dirksen, Original Artwork, Acrylic Mounted on Wood Stretcher frame
Illumination - Tree of Life - Painting, 16.5x11.4 in ©2022 by Cherie Roe Dirksen - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, tree, tree of life, forest, trees, woods, green, emerald, tree figure, woman tree, cherie roe dirksen, fantasy

Cherie Roe Dirksen

"Illumination - Tree of Life"

Acrylic on Canvas | 16.5x11.4 in

Sold
Prints from $27.14
Painting titled "The green April (2)" by Ajw, Original Artwork, Acrylic
The green April (2) - Painting, 8.3x11.7 in ©2022 by Ajw - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest

Ajw

"The green April (2)"

Acrylic on Paper | 8.3x11.7 in

$143
Prints available
Sculpture titled "Carving of a bear f…" by Alberto Thirion, Original Artwork, Wood
Carving of a bear fishing for trout - Sculpture, 9.5x3.9 in ©2017 by Alberto Thirion - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, bear, fishing, wood carving, wood, sculpture

Alberto Thirion

"Carving of a bear fishing for trout"

Sculpture - Wood | 9.5x3.9 in

$225
Painting titled "Birkenweg (II Wersi…" by Jaga Rudnicka, Original Artwork, Oil Mounted on Wood Stretcher frame
Birkenweg (II Wersion) - Painting, 45.3x29.5 in ©2021 by Jaga Rudnicka - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, Birken, Wald, Himmel, Tolles Bild

Jaga Rudnicka

"Birkenweg (II Wersion)"

Oil on Linen Canvas | 45.3x29.5 in

On Request Prints from $27.14
Painting titled "Shepherd and Sheep…" by Clement Tsang, Original Artwork, Oil
Shepherd and Sheep in Forest - Painting, 36x24 in ©2005 by Clement Tsang - Land Art, land-art-957, Forest, landscape, land, outdoor, forest, tree, green, river, shepherd, boy, drinking, sheep, goat, water, grass

Clement Tsang

"Shepherd and Sheep in Forest"

Oil on Canvas | 36x24 in

Not For Sale Prints from $43.88

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