A Landscape Painter:
The images in this show are primarily landscape paintings created
in pastel. 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 form 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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