Seen Through Green

$300.00

Seen Through Green

Wildlife Painting | Black Panther in Jungle | Botanical Animal Art

16 × 20” Acrylics on Stretched Canvas Original Painting by Jane L Sayers Free shipping Certificate of Authenticity Ready to hang

Some presences are felt before they are fully seen—held within shadow, revealed slowly through layers of light and leaf. Seen Through Green captures that moment of recognition, where a black panther emerges from dense foliage with quiet intensity.

The composition is built through contrast, with deep, dark tones of the figure set against vivid, layered greens. The eyes draw focus first, steady and alert, while the rest of the form remains partially concealed, allowing the scene to unfold gradually. The surrounding leaves create movement and depth, framing the subject without fully revealing it.

Painterly brushwork keeps the surface rich and atmospheric, with shifting tones that blur the line between figure and environment. The result is a sense of presence rather than full disclosure—something both hidden and unmistakably there.

Rooted in observation and tension, this piece reflects the quiet exchange between viewer and subject—where seeing and being seen exist in the same moment.

Seen Through Green

Wildlife Painting | Black Panther in Jungle | Botanical Animal Art

16 × 20” Acrylics on Stretched Canvas Original Painting by Jane L Sayers Free shipping Certificate of Authenticity Ready to hang

Some presences are felt before they are fully seen—held within shadow, revealed slowly through layers of light and leaf. Seen Through Green captures that moment of recognition, where a black panther emerges from dense foliage with quiet intensity.

The composition is built through contrast, with deep, dark tones of the figure set against vivid, layered greens. The eyes draw focus first, steady and alert, while the rest of the form remains partially concealed, allowing the scene to unfold gradually. The surrounding leaves create movement and depth, framing the subject without fully revealing it.

Painterly brushwork keeps the surface rich and atmospheric, with shifting tones that blur the line between figure and environment. The result is a sense of presence rather than full disclosure—something both hidden and unmistakably there.

Rooted in observation and tension, this piece reflects the quiet exchange between viewer and subject—where seeing and being seen exist in the same moment.