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The Gardener
In the quiet of the resurrection morning, Mary Magdalene mistook Jesus for a gardener.
Perhaps she wasn’t entirely wrong.
From the first pages of scripture to the last, God is revealed as one who cultivates life, tends what He loves, and brings beauty from barren places. The Gardener reflects this enduring work of restoration. Vibrant blooms emerge through layers of green, their softened forms suggesting a garden alive with movement, growth, and promise.
Part of The Garden collection, this original painting explores the sacred relationship between creation and its Creator. The blurred flowers invite viewers to look beyond the surface and consider the unseen work taking place beneath every season of growth. What appears wild is being tended. What appears ordinary is filled with purpose.
Through color, abundance, and movement, The Gardener celebrates the God who continues to cultivate beauty, hope, and new life in both creation and the human heart.
11”x15” original acrylic and pastel on canvas.
In the quiet of the resurrection morning, Mary Magdalene mistook Jesus for a gardener.
Perhaps she wasn’t entirely wrong.
From the first pages of scripture to the last, God is revealed as one who cultivates life, tends what He loves, and brings beauty from barren places. The Gardener reflects this enduring work of restoration. Vibrant blooms emerge through layers of green, their softened forms suggesting a garden alive with movement, growth, and promise.
Part of The Garden collection, this original painting explores the sacred relationship between creation and its Creator. The blurred flowers invite viewers to look beyond the surface and consider the unseen work taking place beneath every season of growth. What appears wild is being tended. What appears ordinary is filled with purpose.
Through color, abundance, and movement, The Gardener celebrates the God who continues to cultivate beauty, hope, and new life in both creation and the human heart.
11”x15” original acrylic and pastel on canvas.