Cormorants and the Cranberry Isles

SOLD
Cormorants and the Cranberry Isles
Robert Pollien
oil on linen, 16x14"

Morning, Frenchman Bay

$2,400
Morning, Frenchman Bay
Robert Pollien
oil on linen, 12x12"

October, Champlain Mountain

$2,200
October, Champlain Mountain
Robert Pollien
oil on panel, 12x12"

Spring, Beech Cliff Trail

$2,200
Spring, Beech Cliff Trail
Robert Pollien
oil on panel, 12x12"

Cloudy Morning, Little Hunters Beach

$2,200
Cloudy Morning, Little Hunters Beach
Robert Pollien
oil on panel, 12x12"

Morning Fog

$2,600
Morning Fog
Robert Pollien
oil on panel, 12x16"

Winter, Eagle Lake

$2,600
Winter, Eagle Lake
Robert Pollien
oil on panel, 12x16"

Winter, Great Head

$5,200
Winter, Great Head
Robert Pollien
oil on panel, 18x24"

Herring Gull

$5,200
Herring Gull
Robert Pollien
oil on panel, 24x18"

Echo Lake

$2,400
Echo Lake
Robert Pollien
oil on panel, 12x12"

Sand Beach

$2,800
Sand Beach
Robert Pollien
oil on linen, 13x13"

Jordan Pond

$2,800
Jordan Pond
Robert Pollien
oil on panel, 12x16"


Bio

Robert Pollien (b. 1960) is a graduate of Trinity College and the University of Pennsylvania. He also attended Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. A long time resident of Mount Desert Island, painting at the water's edge is central to his practice as an artist. He has served twice as Artist in Residence at Acadia National Park at the invitation of the National Park Service. 

Pollien paints in the spirit of turning to nature. He uses subtle value shifts to capture tide pools, granite outcroppings, and forest edges in changing seasons and shifting weather. He often paints in the soft diffused light of early morning fog, overcast skies, or twilight, enabling his compositions to simplify into refined tonal relationships. These stylistic choices lend both an abstraction and a spiritual mood to his landscapes. In making closely observed images of the island landscape, he demonstrates a deep appreciation of this place.

 "The lover of nature is he whose inward and outward senses are truly adjusted to each other; who has retained the spirit of infancy even into the era of manhood." (Ralph Waldo Emerson)