ROSS PENHALL

Ross Penhall's paintings explore the quiet dialogue between nature and human intervention, transforming cultivated landscapes into compositions of remarkable clarity and balance. Gardens, rolling hills, sculpted trees, and coastal scenery are distilled into simplified forms and rhythmic patterns, where light, color, and geometry create an atmosphere that feels both familiar and quietly surreal. Through subtle exaggeration and careful orchestration, Penhall reveals the enduring beauty found in landscapes shaped by both natural forces and human hands.
Drawing inspiration from artists including Georgia O'Keeffe, Grant Wood, Edward Hopper, Wayne Thiebaud, and Canada's Group of Seven, Penhall has developed a distinctive visual language rooted in observation while embracing abstraction. His paintings flatten and refine the landscape into harmonious arrangements of shape and color, inviting viewers to consider not only the structure of the land, but also its continual transformation through time, light, and cultivation.
Born in West Vancouver, British Columbia, Penhall studied at Capilano College and continued his education at Emily Carr College of Art. Since 1995, he has exhibited extensively throughout Canada and the United States, including solo exhibitions at the West Vancouver Museum and longstanding presentations with Caldwell Snyder Gallery. His work is represented in numerous private, corporate, and public collections, including the University of British Columbia, the West Vancouver Museum & Archives, Vancouver General Hospital, and St. Paul's Hospital.

























