Teejay: correct, of course! Woodland Encounter, by Bev Doolittle, my favorite artist. She commented about the painting, "I wanted to see how many rules I could break. For example, we habitually see the forground of a picture first, then the middleground, and finally the background. I wanted to reverse the process, to get the viewer to see the background first and the foreground last.
"To do so I decided to place a bright object, a target for the eye, in the very center. Of course, you're not supposed to center things, so as long as I was breaking that rule, I decided to take it a step further. With the fox in the middle, I divided the painting in half. I centered an Indian in the left half of the painting and put the other Indian in the exact center of the right half. The next step was to choose a landscape that was distracting enough to make it fun for the viewer. I chose a landscape in the Rockies, where the trees look two-dimensional, almost like wallpaper."
I own three of Bev's signed prints, "Music in the Wind", "When the Wind had Wings", and "No Respect". As time goes on I'll own several more. Her work is breathtaking.
My current image icon to the left of my posts is a Bev Doolittle painting, too. It's called, "Escape by a Hare".
Ah, love! could you and I with Him conspire
To grasp this sorry scheme of things entire,
Would not we shatter it to bits--and then
Re-mould it nearer to the heart's desire!