Gardener Play
$5,400.00
Oil on canvas
24″ x 36″ (61 cm. x 91.5 cm.)
2023, Sacramento CA
This work will be shipped in a rigid box/crate. It can be easily framed upon receiving.
About Artwork
This oil painting was made in Sacramento at 2022-2023.
Please find additional description on the artwork page.
Artwork Specs
- Medium: Oil
- Material: Canvas
- Size: 24″ x 36″ (61 cm. x 91.5 cm.)
- Shipped in a rigid box
- Prints are available
A nude man, a hat like a costume, and flowers that refuse to behave.
Frequently Asked Questions
In Gardener Play, the bouquet isn’t a polite accessory—it’s a whole painted weather system. Large blossoms crowd the left half of the canvas in thick, tangled strokes; leaves and petals stack until they feel almost architectural. The figure stands beside them, upright and muscular, his skin built from hot reds and corals that cut sharply against a saturated blue background. On the right, a dark tabletop and a small jar of flowers add a quieter echo.
The painting works beautifully in rooms with changing light. Warm light intensifies the reds in the torso and pulls out the cream notes in the blossoms; cooler light makes the blues deepen and the figure’s cooler streaks come forward. It holds attention from across the room, then pays you back when you step close: you can read the decisions in the paint.
This piece is sensual without being loud. It’s about proximity—how ornament can press in, how a body can stay calm inside that pressure, how play can still have teeth.


Paint does the flirting. The flowers are built from heavy, churning strokes; the figure is scraped and layered, so skin looks like it’s made from color decisions rather than “flesh tones.” His torso is built from thousands of tiny, shifting strokes—near-pointillist in touch—where the shadows run hot and the lit planes turn cool, a night-minded color logic the artist favors for many years.



What reads as “play” isn’t just the subject—it’s the handling. The flowers are worked with thick, turbulent paint that rewards close viewing; petals and leaves blur into each other, almost edible in their density. The body, by contrast, is built from scraped layers and directional strokes, so it feels constructed, not idealized.










