Online Gallery
2025 Adult Categories

Elaine Green
From Derby to Winnaleah
Oil on Linen
In January this year I was privileged to attend an artist’s retreat in the North-East of Tasmania, a place called Winnaleah where I worked en plein air. Although only four hours from home the colours and the features of the landscape gave the area a different feel to the west where I live. I returned home with a passion to capture that feeling. The first painting in this triptych is of the Ringarooma River near where I stayed in Derby, the second is on the way To Winnaleah, the moody sky attracted me to this scene in particular, and the last painting is of a farm in Winnaleah. I grouped these works together as I felt the three works belonged together.
Size: 51 × 120 cm
Images and dimensions of artwork have been supplied to the organiser directly from the artist. Although we have taken all care to check dimensions and image representation, The Doyles Art Awards (the Organiser) takes no responsibility for any variations to colour accuracy or size details. The sizing displayed is based on external width or height including any frame or mount, primarily for shipping purposes. If you need to view the artwork in its frame, or have the size checked for a specific hanging space, please email marketing@thedoylesaward.com.au or visit the exhibition in person.
Artworks will be shipped within 3 working days of exhibition close.
Method of shipment is through Aramex Courier Services road freight services.
We currently ship to Australian locations only. We cannot deliver to PO Boxes.
No returns, refunds or exchanges of artwork will be permitted.
The Doyles (d’Arcy Doyle Art Awards Ltd) is not liable for any products damaged or lost during handling or shipping. The Doyles Art Awards recommends purchasers arrange transit insurance specifically for artworks.
Have a question about this artwork? Email us!
Share
About Elaine Green
Rather than ‘framing Nature’, Elaine Green’s work has always resonated the 19th century Romantic notion of elevating landscape painting to a metaphysical level. It is seen as the extension of an inner sense of being, a place where Nature and Self are fused. The difference between the observer and the observed is subsumed in a boundless luminosity. “Like all artists I am constantly seeking the light,” she reflects. “The troposphere, constantly in motion, provides never-ending inspiration and challenges to capture that light and the changing moods of the environment.”