Monday, November 25, 2013

On Drawing

To draw is to look, examining the structure of appearances.
A drawing of a tree shows, not a tree, but a tree-being-looked-at.
Whereas the sight of a tree is registered almost instantaneously,
the examination of the sight of a tree (a tree-being-looked-at) 
not only takes minutes or hours instead of a fraction of a second, 
it also involves, derives from, and refers back to, 
much previous experience of looking,
Within the instant of the sight of a tree is established a life-experience. 
This is how the act of drawing refuses the process of disappearances
 and proposes the simultaneity of a multitude of moments.

Berger On Drawing - John Berger

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

COUNTING TREES, drawings and a poem




Four Trees - upon a solitary Acre
(poem 742)
by Emily Dickinson

Four Trees - upon a solitary Acre
Without Design
Or Order, or Apparent Action - 
Maintain -

The Sun - upon a Morning meets them - 
The Wind -
No nearer Neighbor - have they - 
but God -

The Acre gives them - Place - 
They - Him - Attention of Passer by - 
Of Shadow, or of Squirrel, haply - 
Or Boy - 

What Deed is Theirs unto the General Nature - 
What Plan
They severally - retard - or further - 
Unknown - 
 


Monday, August 26, 2013

TWO MONTHS LATER after a busy summer!

LOOKING AFTER TREES
Tomorrow is the last day of this exhibition at The Art Center in Grand Junction, CO.
You can view the online catalogue at


 VIEW OF THE SAN JUANS from MILLER MESA
"When you go out to paint try to forget what objects you have before you, a tree, a house, a field or whatever.
Merely think, here is a little streak of blue, here and oblong of pink, here a streak of yellow, and paint it just as it looks to you. The exact color and shape, until it gives you your own naive impression of the scene before you."
Claude Monet 

 LONE CONE - Hand Colored Woodblock Print
www.twelveviewsoflonecone.blogspot.com
A VERY busy summer! Thank you to all our friends who welcomed us back to the USA.
We have decided not to return to Spain for work, but will continue to visit and learn more about that fascinating country!
I will stay here in Colorado and continue to paint this landscape and these trees. Also teaching and exhibiting my work. TWELVE VIEWS OF LONE CONE,  the woodblock prints will be exhibited in October at Stronghouse Studios, Telluride Arts.
Please check the above website for the latest information.


Friday, June 14, 2013

EPILOGUE ONE - Cantabria


 The remains of Santa Juliana are in the Colegiata, a Romanesque church and Benedictine Monastery in Santillana Del Mar in Cantabria. The cloister is ringed by columns, each with a different sculptural design on the top. The Celtic influence is strong in northern Spain.







 As I reflect on the past seven months I spent in Spain and try to find meaning in what I experienced
I will post items that I continue to think about. I am trying to come up with a focus for my next year's work there in a new city on the coast of the Bay of Biscay!




Friday, May 31, 2013

CLAUSTROS, COLUMNAS Y TRONCOS







Leaving Spain in a couple of days to go back to the US.
A germ of an idea in is the photos above. 
After all that I have seen these past seven months here I keep coming back to certain images.
Will keep writing and thinking and see what happens next!

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Primavera, Parque Del Ebro


It's a late spring in northern Spain. Just like in Colorado, at altitude in the Rocky Mountains,
it's changeable from winter to summer like weather in the same week. Last week gave me some beautiful days in the Parque Del Ebro along the river to go out to draw and paint.
The scene above shows the variety of trees one finds here: palms, beeches, cypresses and here and there and old olive or fruit tree like the apple I drew here.
What drew my attention to this tree is the curious way it was growing all alone surrounded by a circle of pine trees. The contrast of the blossoms with the dark needles of the pines was stunning.




Judging from the trunk, it looks to be well over a hundred years old. The thoughtful gardeners who planted the pines were considerate to leave the apple and create such a nice space for it!