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Erin Hanson, like many artists over the years, creates artwork in a varied palette. Each Hanson piece focuses on a particular landscape, viewed at a specific time of day. Often, these paintings focus on the play of light and shadow in natural spaces. The work can be as stark as the backlit oaks in her Crystal Light series or softer, as in a view of central California on a summer’s day.
Pictured: Crystal Arbor
Pictured: Hills and Clouds
View the pieces above. Each uses a distinct palette and showcases a different subject. Each piece may evoke a complex emotion, but it is hard to nail down what is causing that emotion.
Here’s where we begin to think about art and its influence on mood.
Try this thought experiment:
What happens when you view pieces that are different in the subject but use a similar palette?
Pictured: Saguaro Dusk
Pictured: Cypress Pines
Both of the above pieces use a dusky palette, dominated by blues and purples.
How do the above pieces make you feel? Does each piece evoke a different emotion, or do they both put you in a particular mood?
What if we have a brighter palette?
Pictured: Hop Valley Wash
Pictured: Sunflowers on Red II
These pieces, though two entirely different subjects, are dominated by red. Do they evoke similar emotions or energy just because of a similar palette?
You have likely heard of studies that tell you how colors are supposed to make you feel. Red should make you feel energized - or was it angry? Green should make you feel calm - or was it envious? Color psychology can be incredibly confusing, and it is frankly wildly inaccurate.
Colors do influence your mood. But the idea that specific colors make every single human being on the planet feel a particular way is simply not accurate.
In color studies, scientists have found that color may influence an individual's mood, but that influence is based on what they associate the color with. For example, purple may make a person feel angry, while red makes them happy. When questioned, it may come up that a dearly beloved team or university uses red, while the opposing team uses purple.
Additionally, the subject of art does have an influence on how a piece makes one feel.
A red rock landscape may bring one joy, while a violent image in that same red color would bring about fear or sadness.
So, the prevailing theory is that using one color or another alone does not dictate the mood.
However, one color can remind a person of a particular scene or circumstance that then changes their mood.
This leads us back to art. Artists of all kinds use color to express themselves. But, they also use shape and subject to communicate emotion and elevate the viewer.
Even the most abstract art, art that appears to be pure color, is still using a subject, shape, and more to change your mood and guide the viewer to some new thought.
Consider the abstract style called “color field painting,” developed by Mark Rothko. In this work, color is the subject itself. However, these works are not just one solid color or a swatch from a color wheel. They are a dedicated study of colors, showcasing the colors with complementary, tertiary, or secondary colors and inviting the viewer to delve into the beauty of color.
This type of painting is as close as one can get to an artist’s interpretation of color - and even this stark view of color evokes different emotions in different viewers.
This is why many artists, including Erin Hanson, choose something more concrete as their subject.
In the case of Hanson, she mainly paints landscapes. You will find the occasional still-life work in her gallery, but the vast majority of paintings are landscapes.
The reason for this is, in Hanson’s words: “I am trying to get my viewers to open their eyes and see their world a little differently. I want people to look at the San Gabriel mountains when they are stuck in their car during 5pm traffic, and see the amazing range of purples that appear when the sun starts setting and the brilliant oranges and sherbet colors in the highlights.”
To accomplish this, Hanson uses a limited color palette, utilizing her long, sweeping brushstrokes to impart energy into her paintings.
Every painter and painting style uses color to elevate and communicate. But most also use a subject and a method to add to that communication or bring a message to the fore. For this reason, viewing art is more than just a method of changing one’s mood. It is also a way to uplift the mind and soul and inspire even more beauty in the world.
Would you like to explore the colors, textures, and beauty of Erin Hanson’s artwork?
Click here to explore her gallery.
About Erin
ERIN HANSON has been painting in oils since she was 8 years old. As a teenager, she apprenticed at a mural studio where she worked on 40-foot-long paintings while selling art commissions on the side. After being told it was too hard to make a living as an artist, she got her degree in Bioengineering from UC Berkeley. Afterward, Erin became a rock climber at Red Rock Canyon, Nevada. Inspired by the colorful scenery she was climbing, she decided to return to her love of painting and create one new painting every week.
She has stuck to that decision, becoming one of the most prolific artists in history, with over 3,000 oil paintings sold to eager collectors. Erin Hanson’s style is known as "Open Impressionism" and is taught in art schools worldwide. With millions of followers, Hanson has become an iconic, driving force in the rebirth of impressionism, inspiring thousands of other artists to pick up the brush.