
Mountains by Dan Hobday
Mountains is a meditation in form and stillness. Hobday reduces the drama of an expansive landscape to its barest elements — layered peaks, open sky, a palette of quiet earthen tones — and in doing so creates something more resonant than realism could allow. The Japandi influence is clear: the painting breathes, holds space, and invites long looking. Every mark is considered, every absence intentional.
This canvas print is produced in our Berlin studio on a finely woven surface that lends Hobday's mountain forms genuine warmth and tactile depth. The texture draws out the painting's quiet weight, giving each layered peak and open sky a presence that feels considered and calm — exactly as the work demands.
Mountains is a meditation in form and stillness. Hobday reduces the drama of an expansive landscape to its barest elements — layered peaks, open sky, a palette of quiet earthen tones — and in doing so creates something more resonant than realism could allow. The Japandi influence is clear: the painting breathes, holds space, and invites long looking. Every mark is considered, every absence intentional.
This canvas print is produced in our Berlin studio on a finely woven surface that lends Hobday's mountain forms genuine warmth and tactile depth. The texture draws out the painting's quiet weight, giving each layered peak and open sky a presence that feels considered and calm — exactly as the work demands.
Original: $53.50
-65%$53.50
$18.72Description
Mountains is a meditation in form and stillness. Hobday reduces the drama of an expansive landscape to its barest elements — layered peaks, open sky, a palette of quiet earthen tones — and in doing so creates something more resonant than realism could allow. The Japandi influence is clear: the painting breathes, holds space, and invites long looking. Every mark is considered, every absence intentional.
This canvas print is produced in our Berlin studio on a finely woven surface that lends Hobday's mountain forms genuine warmth and tactile depth. The texture draws out the painting's quiet weight, giving each layered peak and open sky a presence that feels considered and calm — exactly as the work demands.























