Forest Interior
By Emily Carr
A logged clearing stretches across this canvas by Emily Carr, one of Canada's most cherished painters. Tree stumps sit scattered where a forest once stood tall, and only a handful of trunks still stretch skyward against a restless, swirling sky. Warm browns and golden tones flood the scene, giving it a strange glow that feels almost alive, even though so much of the woodland has been carried away. Near the edges, a few small green saplings cling on, hinting that nature has not given up just yet.
Carr painted the wild landscapes of British Columbia throughout the early twentieth century, and her signature loose, looping brushwork gives this scene its sense of constant motion. The clouds seem to churn and the ground ripples with texture, as if the whole place were breathing. Her deep affection for the Pacific Northwest often turned to quiet grief in her later years as logging reshaped the forests she loved. This painting reads like both a farewell and a soft form of protest, showing a place suspended between loss and the slow, stubborn arrival of new life.
AI This particular version has been edited using AI technology to reveal the original painting in its entirety.