It started with a simple suggestion from my wife, Michelle.

“Jeff, why don’t you paint Cincinnati?”

My first reaction was honest. Cincinnati? Isn’t that a little cliché? The skyline had already been photographed, painted, printed, and celebrated countless times, and I wasn’t sure what I could possibly add to something so familiar.

But Michelle saw something I didn’t see yet. She saw the city as a subject waiting for me, so I picked up my brush and began to paint.

Once I started, there was no going back.

Seeing Cincinnati Differently

There is a big difference between looking at the city you live in and truly seeing it.

Once I began studying Cincinnati as an artist, everything changed. I noticed the way the skyline rises beyond the Ohio River, the rhythm of the buildings, the hills that frame the city, the glow of downtown at night, and the reflections stretching across the water.

Then there was the Roebling Bridge.

Its historic stone towers, sweeping cables, remarkable structure, and unmistakable connection to Cincinnati captured my imagination immediately. It was not simply a bridge. It was architecture, history, movement, and beauty coming together in one extraordinary landmark.

Suddenly, Cincinnati no longer felt like an obvious subject. It felt limitless.

Every angle revealed something new. Every season changed the personality of the city. Every shift in light created a different mood. Cincinnati in April felt completely different from Cincinnati in December. A brilliant afternoon sky told one story, while the city at dusk told another.

A view from Devou Park offered one perspective. A view from beneath the Roebling Bridge offered another. A downtown balcony, neighborhood street, riverbank, or quiet overlook could transform the familiar skyline into something deeply personal.

The more I painted Cincinnati, the more Cincinnati gave me to paint.

When the Skyline Becomes Your Story

When I paint Cincinnati, I am not simply trying to recreate what the skyline looks like. I want to capture what it feels like.

For the people who call this place home, Cincinnati is more than its architecture. It is the view you see while crossing the river. It is the first glimpse of downtown after being away. It is a Bengals game, a Reds game, a concert, a celebration, a first date, a wedding night, or an unforgettable moment shared with someone you love.

A skyline can hold an entire lifetime of memories.

That emotional connection is what continues to inspire me. When someone asks me to paint a particular view of Cincinnati, they are rarely choosing it only because the scene is beautiful. There is usually a story behind it.

It may be the view from their first apartment, a balcony where they spent countless evenings, a neighborhood they loved, a place where something important happened, or simply the image of Cincinnati that has always felt like home.

The city becomes the setting, but the painting becomes personal.

The Power of Jeff and Colin on Canvas

As my fascination with Cincinnati grew, so did my creative collaboration with artist Colin Daugherty.

Colin and I see the canvas differently, and that is exactly what makes the partnership so powerful. I am drawn to movement, atmosphere, emotion, color, and expressive energy. Colin brings precision, structure, realism, and an incredible eye for architectural detail.

Together, those approaches create something neither of us would make alone.

My brushwork brings movement and life to the scene, while Colin’s craftsmanship gives the architecture clarity, depth, and presence. We respond to one another as the painting develops, balancing looseness with control, emotion with realism, and bold expression with intricate detail.

The finished work is not simply my interpretation of Cincinnati or Colin’s interpretation.

It is the power of two artists coming together on one canvas.

Over more than 15 years, that collaboration has allowed us to bring skylines, bridges, landmarks, landscapes, and meaningful places to life for collectors across the country. Cincinnati, however, is where so much of that story began, and it remains one of our greatest sources of inspiration.

A City That Continues to Inspire

What began with one suggestion from Michelle has grown into more than 50 original paintings inspired by Cincinnati and the Roebling Bridge.

What surprises me most is that I am still not finished.

After all these years and all these canvases, the city continues to reveal itself. There is always another perspective, another season, another reflection, or another meaningful view waiting to be discovered.

Cincinnati is historic yet constantly evolving, familiar yet surprising, beautiful from a distance and even more compelling when you begin to study its details.

It has presence, energy, character, and a story all its own. Every time I bring it to life on canvas, I have the opportunity to see it again for the first time.

The View That Changed Everything

Michelle’s original idea changed the direction of my artwork.

What I once worried might feel cliche became one of the deepest and most enduring sources of inspiration in my life as an artist.

Painting Cincinnati taught me that the subjects closest to us can sometimes be the easiest to overlook. We see them so often that we stop noticing what makes them extraordinary, until someone encourages us to look again.

I am grateful Michelle did.

Because once I truly saw Cincinnati, I could not stop painting it.

Explore the gallery below and experience Cincinnati through different views, seasons, moments, and stories.

Every painting begins with a place. What brings it to life is the story behind it.

How Cincinnati Became my Greatest Muse.

Creativity is better together. Let’s create something meaningful.