Erik Blomberg offers the following perspective on Hill’s coastal motifs: “What one must admire above all in these dazzlingly fresh canvases is the extraordinarily lively brushwork: the variation between smooth and impasto passages, the black touches that not only mark the scattered belts of seaweed but at the same time give relief to the light. It is a technique that never becomes an end in itself, but serves nature entirely, giving renewed life to the elements, to the moment when the sunlight, like a blinding flash, strikes a silver breach in the verdigris-green sea.” (Carl Fredrik Hill. His Healthy and Sick Art, 1949.) Later in life, Hill returned in memory to his short but immensely important stay in Luc-sur-Mer:
"At Luc I saw the high vault blue
So topaz-blue and yet shimmering...
In the sun shone the ebb's white banks
And seagulls flew over the beach's anchors...
In the sun shine the ebb's kisses shimmering
And the rippling on the beautiful surface glimmering
Is like diamonds in ethereal light..."
The “ethereal light” Hill mentions brings to mind Sixten Strömbom’s description of the almost otherworldly emotional intensity Hill experienced during his time in Luc-sur-Mer: “Hill now moved very rapidly towards the zenith of his creativity. […] The colourful play of light across the expanses and coastal formations forced forth the innermost impulse of his being, his longing for the greatness of simplicity and an almost ecstatically heightened sense of life.” (The History of the Artists’ Association I, 1945.)
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