Singing the Blues

from $45.00

“Singing the Blues” is an 18×24 original mixed media painting featuring a stately blue heron rendered in layered brushwork, soft organic textures, and touches of salvaged blue glass gathered from University Lake at LSU. Gentle greens, misty neutrals, and expressive splashes of blue create a serene yet poignant atmosphere.


Singing the Blues features a stately blue heron brought to life with bits of blue glass salvaged from University Lake at LSU. This piece expresses the irony of the beauty of our local wildlife—and the unexpected poetic relationship with pollution. Sometimes the blues really do sing.

As Release #10 in the Don’t Trash Me Series, this piece is both a celebration of Louisiana wildlife and a reminder of our responsibility to protect it.

Perfect for collectors who appreciate nature-inspired abstract realism, environmentally conscious art, and work that blends beauty with meaning.

Size:

“Singing the Blues” is an 18×24 original mixed media painting featuring a stately blue heron rendered in layered brushwork, soft organic textures, and touches of salvaged blue glass gathered from University Lake at LSU. Gentle greens, misty neutrals, and expressive splashes of blue create a serene yet poignant atmosphere.


Singing the Blues features a stately blue heron brought to life with bits of blue glass salvaged from University Lake at LSU. This piece expresses the irony of the beauty of our local wildlife—and the unexpected poetic relationship with pollution. Sometimes the blues really do sing.

As Release #10 in the Don’t Trash Me Series, this piece is both a celebration of Louisiana wildlife and a reminder of our responsibility to protect it.

Perfect for collectors who appreciate nature-inspired abstract realism, environmentally conscious art, and work that blends beauty with meaning.

Singing the Blues features a stately blue heron brought to life with bits of blue glass salvaged from University Lake at LSU. This piece expresses the irony of the the beauty of our local wildlife—and the unexpected poetic relationship with pollution. Sometimes the blues really do sing.