Atmospheric Oil Paintings by Martin Wittfooth Illuminate Nature’s Timeless Cycles

In large-scale, elaborate oil paintings of powerful, glowing creatures, Martin Wittfooth explores the timeless cycles and forces of nature in a celebration of the sublime. Known for his enigmatic and atmospheric depictions of wild animals in dystopian settings, the artist blends traditional European painting techniques with critical contemporary concerns surrounding the human impact on the environment.

Wittfooth’s new solo exhibition, Deus Ex Terra at Corey Helford Gallery, features 19 new oil paintings on canvas, linen, or wood panels. Some take the form of tondos 18 to 24 inches in diameter, while others assume vast proportions, like “Duel,” a diptych that spans 12 feet wide. The stallion also appears as a regular embodiment of elemental forces, like in “Aspect of Fire” or “Aspect of Air,” in which silhouettes of powerful horses made of molten rock or clouds of steam rear up into towering positions.

an oil painting by Martin Wittfooth of a horse covered in fungi
“Aspect of Earth,” oil on panel, 48 x 36 inches

The show’s title, Deux Ex Terra, loosely translates to “god out of the earth.” It’s a nod to the ancient Greek and Roman phrase deux ex machina, which describes a dramatic or literary device in which a character or a “god” is introduced into the plot to solve a seemingly insolvable conflict. During a play, the character would be introduced via a crane, hence the “machine.” Wittfooth flips this notion back to nature and the elemental forces of the earth—weather, orbits, the seasons, life, water—to explore cyclical, self-sustaining rhythms.

“The Hermetic maxim, ‘As above, so below; As within, so without,’ has echoed through centuries of philosophical, mystical, and artistic inquiry,” the gallery says. “In Deus ex Terra, this principle serves as a guiding thread, illuminating the ways nature repeats its patterns across scale and time: in the branching of rivers and the veins of leaves, in the spiral of galaxies and the coiling of shells, in the cyclical turning of seasons and the rhythms of breath and heartbeat.”

In earlier work, Wittfooth concentrated on the strained relationship between humans and nature, with its effects revealed in the form of piles of plastic or shorn tree trunks. In his current work, he reflects on the instinctive and enduring facets of nature—the “ancient rhythms that prevail despite our human tumult,” the gallery says. “In a time of deep cultural and ecological upheaval, these paintings offer an invitation to acknowledge, to remember, and perhaps to heal.”

Deus Ex Terra opens tomorrow and continues through October 4 in Los Angeles. Explore more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

an oil painting by Martin Wittfooth of a horse made of molten rock
“Aspect of Fire,” oil on panel, 48 x 36 inches
a round oil painting by Martin Wittfooth of a jellyfish and coral
“Parallelism 5 (Jellyfish 1),” oil on wood, 24 inches diameter
an oil painting by Martin Wittfooth of a horse walking through a forest, covered in moss and flowers
“Aspect of Spring,” oil on canvas, 56 x 58 inches
a long, horizontal oil painting by Martin Wittfooth of two dueling rams with a sun in the center and spring on one side, winter on the other
“Duel,” oil on panel, diptych, 36 x 144 inches
an oil painting by Martin Wittfooth of a snowy wolf standing on top of an iceberg with a cave in it
“Aspect of Winter,” oil on canvas, 50 x 57 inches
a round oil painting by Martin Wittfooth of a snail on a fern
“Parallelism 4 (Snail),” oil on wood, 18 inches diameter
an oil painting by Martin Wittfooth of a horse-shaped cloud of steam rising from a mountain
“Aspect of Air,” oil on panel, 48 x 36 inches
an oil painting by Martin Wittfooth of an elk with large branches for antlers and a body covered in leaves
“Aspect of Autumn, “oil on canvas, 46 x 64 inches

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