Capturing the Gaze When painting wildlife, there is always a balance to be struck between…
Wolf Howling at the Moon
Capturing the Night: The Wolf and the Moon
There is a particular kind of stillness that settles over a landscape just before a sound breaks it. In working on this piece, my interest lay not just in the figure of the wolf itself, but in the heavy, cold air surrounding it. I wanted to explore how a solitary vocalisation changes the perception of space in the dark.

The challenge with night scenes is avoiding a flat, uniform darkness. Instead of relying solely on deep blues and blacks, I chose to work with visible, energetic brushstrokes to suggest the movement of wind and cloud across the sky. The light from the moon isn’t clean; it bleeds into the atmosphere with a ring of pale yellow and green, filtering down onto the ridge and catching the coarse texture of the wolf’s coat.
The composition relies on a stark contrast between the heavy, dark mass of the distant treeline and the open, luminous sky. By placing the wolf on the rocky outcrop, the silhouette is defined by the pale light behind it, rather than being lost to the shadows. The brushwork remains deliberately loose and expressive, capturing the raw, unrefined quality of the wilderness rather than a polished, static likeness. It is an observation of a fleeting moment—one where the landscape seems to listen.
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