Every piece in this gallery has already begun a second life with its collector. These works trace the evolution of S. A. Peteron's vision--paintings born of Wasatch sunrises, canyon winds, and late-night studio quiet. Though they've left the studio, their stories continue to unfold in living rooms, offices, and private sanctuaries around the world. Let this archive be an invitation to feel the pulse of landscapes that will always belong to the wild.
A tree rises against circles of turquoise and gold while crimson stripes streak the sky. Painted during a solitary afternoon in logan Canyon, the piece celebrates the collision of natural growth and human rhythm. S. A. calls it "a memory of how sound feels in the forest--unexpectedly bright."
Pink-violet peaks cut upward beneath a halo of intricate linework. Created after a pre-dawn hike in the Wasatch, it captures the hush before sunrise when mountain air feels infinite and every pattern seems possible.
A sprawling triptych of interlocking planes and snowy crests. Sarah began this work after a storm swept through the Salt Lake Valley, using overlapping bands of green and sand to echo shifting weather fronts and layered histories of the land.
Close-up clouds and earthy slopes meet a sudden flash of bright ochre. Here S. A. Peterson isolates a single mountaisde moment--wind moving across ridges--into pure color and gesture.
A warm, glowing portrait of evening alpenglow. Rich oranges and muted blues honor the fleeting minute when the Wasatch Range burns with copper light, a daily miracle they call their "silent applause."
An early favorite, this dynamic composition slices alpine scenery into prismatic shards. It reflects the way memory refracts time: one hike, a thousand impressions.
Diagonal ribbons of emerald, chartreuse, and rose climb toward a mountain crown, Painted during the first thaw of spring, it is both a love letter to Utah's awakening landscape and a meditation on how affection reshapes what we notice.
These are examples of some of S. A. Peterson's sold portfolio. This is not all of their sold pieces, but a snapshot of their work.