Reflections on a landscape

Storm in November, American River Parkway, Mixed media on canvas, Plein Air

Storm in November, American River Parkway, Mixed media on canvas, Plein Air

My work does not always mark a particular season or place as much as these paintings reflect my personal views on making art. The landscape provides a story line in which to weave colors and shapes across the paper.

As a landscape painter, I am documenting a location and exploration of materials, but more importantly, I am exploring and reacting to my ever-present need to “keep my hand moving.” I like the surfaces, textures, and colors that come fromm the end of a bush or the broken end of a pastel stick. I am most myself when I have an artist’s tool in my hand and I can demonstrate what I envision a feeling to be through a landscape of color. When I am asked “What do you paint?’ I often answer that I create landscapes, but it is much more than a place I am rendering – I am documenting and inner landscape, or a journal of my days as an artist and a teacher. Instead of the language of sound, I use color. Instead of the rhythm of words, I use shape. All you want to know about me is written in the strokes of these paintings.I like to create Pastel paintings in such a way that the movement of the water or the silhouette of a tree is abstracted into colors and shapes not always seen by the camera lens or even the human eye.

Pastel painting can be a smoothly rendered reality, but it is the broken color that holds the light, the energy, and vitality of a place for me. I often work with Pastels because this medium is the most consistent, convenient, and easily handled material I know. Raw, pure colors, without the mixture of turpentine, or the use of a brush, are directly applied to a textured surface. This makes the material a natural expression of the hand and heart. Slowly, the process and the craft melt together in a non-linear, meditative experience, as the colors are applied one on top to the other.

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