This triptych, inspired by the legend of Tahquitz from the Palm Springs desert, explores the mischievous dance between myth and modernity. Across three bold panels, the piece fuses ancient desert lore with the geometry of wind turbines, suggesting both reverence and rebellion in the face of nature and technology. A vivid palette of crimson, ochre, violet, and teal evokes the shifting desert sky at dusk—an eternal backdrop for the fleeting march of progress.
The top panel pulses with restless energy, its abstract planes hinting at turbulence and transformation. In the center, two angular turbines slice upward through layered blocks of color—beacons of human innovation or desert interlopers, depending on one’s perspective.
The bottom panel quiets the chaos, grounding the viewer with horizontal bands of saturated color, like sedimentary echoes of time. Together, the three panels create a visual narrative of power, disruption, and legacy—one where wind becomes both spirit and signal, and where the viewer is asked to consider what forces are truly at play in the landscapes we alter.
#12 Cait Jewell 2024. Turbine Triptych.
TRIPTYCH (3 PAINTINGS TO COMPLETE WHOLE)
12A 24" X 36" X 1.78" 5.5 POUNDS
12B 36" X 36" X 1.78" 10 POUNDS
12C 24" X 36" X 1.78" 5.5 POUNDSRECOMMENDED SPACING 4 - 6 INCHES. TOTAL HEIGHT 92"
21 POUNDS. COLD WAX ON BIRCH BOARD.