Spring Storm Clearing Over Mystery Glacier Acrylic on canvas, 24x36 Brian Hackworth "My artistic style is representational; I portray awe using vibrant colors and exaggerated perspectives. I painted Mystery Glacier as winter turns into spring, at the maximum depth of the seasonal snowpack. Few people visit glaciers outside of the warm summer months. But without cold wet winters, glaciers wouldn’t exist. "The beauty of the Terminus Project is to eternalize many of the quickly dying glaciers of the Olympic Range, and this view of Mystery Glacier is fleeting on a geological scale. In a number of years this glacier, along with many others, will not exist anymore. The mountains, rocks, moraines, sky and sun will remain for millennia after the glaciers melt away into the ocean. I was drawn to the thesis of this Project; capturing these remote scenes as artistic impressions, because I believe they are important for future generations. Beyond the objective images captured by photographs, art has the ability to portray the emotional importance of landscapes that we attempt to protect with National Park status. But even this designation cannot protect our wildernesses from climate change." -Brian Hackworth Meet the artist: Brian HackworthBrian grew up outside of Seattle, but left the Pacific Northwest to travel the world and experience more of our country. After five years of traveling, he returned to Seattle and began seeing the region through a fresh lens. As he began to develop his skills in alpine climbing, his art followed a similar trajectory and began to focus more on painting mountains and alpine environments; he often paints scenes from backcountry campsites and of mountains that he’s climbed.
More about Mystery GlacierThis glacier lies at the base of Mount Mystery in Deception Basin, flowing eventually into the Dosewallips River. Arrows mark the same points illustrating ice volume loss through thinning and retreat on this north-facing glacier. (See photos.) Once the glacier's meltwaters feed into the Dosewallips River, they flow south and east to join the Hood Canal near the small town of Brinnon. According to the book Gods and Goblins: A Field Guide to the Place Names of Olympic National Park's entry for Mount Mystery: "This unusual name was affixed to this peak by a U.S. Forest Service employee, G. A. Whitehead, circa 1915. Whitehead recorded his admiration for the regal appearance of the mountain, especially on foggy days, and thought the adjective 'mystery' a most fitting description of it." |
Last updated: March 31, 2023