Like most children of my era I was intrigued by The Wizard of Oz during its annual presentation on
our TV screen. This adventure provided the ultimate daydream for a young artist whose imagination
yearned to “follow the Yellow Brick Road”.
To recreate my passion for Oz in visual form, I utilized my imagination to journey beyond what had
been created for the original movie. As is the case with my Disney paintings, each Oz painting will
be an attempt to capture the essence of the entire movie in a single emotionally charged image.
In the first Oz painting we see Dorothy and friends as they view the fabled Emerald City for the
first time. The familiar cast of characters is here – Dorothy, Cowardly Lion, Tin Man, Scarecrow --
as well as the Wicked Witch of the West, scary Winged Monkeys, and of course the Munchkins.
We can even see Glinda the Good Witch floating in her transparent sphere of light, as though to
bless the journey of the travelers.
I envision this painting as the first piece in what I will refer to as the “Oz Octet”, a collection of
eight epic paintings intended to celebrate great moments from this classic film. The eight paintings
in this collection will present a monumental challenge to my abilities as a story teller and
picture maker. Yet like my Disney collection, I expect this collection to flourish as collectors
discover that each painting builds upon the next. Dorothy Discovers the Emerald City is a
panorama of the great places from the film. Though while watching the movie none of us can be
entirely sure where the Wicked Witch’s Castle is located in relation to the Emerald City, I have
placed it distinctly in the foreground suggesting a barren land that must be traversed to encounter
the delights beyond. Like The Wizard of OzTM film, my painting presents the raw emotions of myth
and daydream as they collide with wondrous imagination.
For those collectors who are ready to engage my Oz collection, rest assured that Dorothy Discovers
the Emerald City is the starting point of an epic adventure in a land “over the rainbow”.
-Thomas Kinkade |
- 12" x 18"
- 18" x 27"
- 24" x 36"
- 28" x 42"
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