Category: Landscapes

  • Serene Strength: Claire Sherman

    Serene Strength: Claire Sherman

    There is a quiet power that abides in certain landscapes that compels us to humilty.  No cell phone reception, no internet, no traffic whizzing by.  Nothing to make us believe we are the center of the universe.  Just earth and rock and water and light.  It is in these places that the earth is welcoming, yet can be strong and unyielding.  The work of New York artist, Claire Sherman captures the essence of the quiet, raw power of our natural world.

    Boulders, oil on canvas, 86×78

    Sherman’s overall cool palette, tinged occasionally with warm tones conveys the earth’s reticent beauty.  It wants us to explore and appreciate its wildness, but fears the mark our hand often leaves.

    Butte, oil on canvas, 72×84
    Ravine II, oil on canvas, 84×96

    This is still a dangerous place.  We often forget, wrapped safely in suburban cocoons, thinking we are master of all that we survey.  Yet still in many places, one wrong step and we may become prey to the earth’s power.  The artist’s linear, often jagged brushwork reminds us to tread carefully.  She is beautiful, yes, but we must never forget her untamed nature.  Try as we might to use her up, certain parts of the earth will always remain wild and inhospitable to man.

    Holes, oil on canvas, 72×60
    Trees III, oil on canvas, 78×84

    These places are for her renewing and for moments ours, but they belong to her.  That we will do well to remember.  To see more of Claire Sherman’s work, please visit her website.  Her work can be seen in person at the Kavi Gupta Gallery in Chicago.

    Featured image is Pile of Rocks, oil on canvas, 72×78.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • America The Surreal: Deborah Martin

    America The Surreal: Deborah Martin

    America is often a strange place and seems to just keep getting stranger.  Los Angeles artist Deborah Martin captures the sad desolation found across our country  in her poignant paintings.

    Aces and Spades, oil on canvas, 36×36
    Slab City Chairs, oil on canvas, 36×36

    Her use of a limited, pastel neutral palette softens the sometimes oddly grim reality of many lives in America.

    Keep Out, oil on canvas, 36×36

    Yet somehow, these aren’t dark, depressing images of life in one of the richest countries in the world.  They don’t feel critical or satirical, but rather reverent and dreamy.

    Fifty-two, oil on canvas, 36×36

    To see more of Deborah’s work, please visit her website.  If you are in the Los Angeles area, she is currently showing at The Red Arrow Gallery in Joshua Tree, CA.  I have a feeling these paintings are even more intriguing in person!

    Featured image is Yellow Camper, oil on canvas, 36×36.  All images are via the artist’s website.

  • Friday Forager Faves: Treehuggers

    Please enjoy this oldie by goodie while I spend the next two weeks camping, packing, visiting with the mom-in-law and moving from WA to OR. See you in September!

    There is nothing I love better than a day spent walking in the woods or paddling down a slow moving river.  Nature’s beauty has a way of inspiring me to want to paint, write, cook, just create.  In celebration of Earth Day, this Friday’s Forager Faves round up includes a few artists who obviously feel the same way.  These are works insprired by the wonder of the earth in which we live.  Enjoy and get outside!

    Quiet Cypress by Jim Draper

    Sweet Grass No. 7 by Lori Keith Robinson 

    Riverbank Afternoon by Debbie Martin

     

    Tree Song No. 7 Colorshow by Kristi Taylor

     

  • Friday Forager Faves: Shutterbugs

    Friday Forager Faves: Shutterbugs

    Please enjoy this oldie by goodie while I spend the next two weeks camping, packing, visiting with the mom-in-law and moving from WA to OR. See you in September!

    I can’t believe it is the end of another week already.  The time is quickly flying by as George and I prepare to make our way to the West Coast.  I plan to take LOTS of photos both on our trip and once we have arrived.  But alas, I am merely the point & shoot type.  Oh, I try to compose a nice shot or get all artsy with the angles and such, but I have a long way to go.

    I took a few photography classes in high school and college and well, let’s just say I never did quite get the hang of it.  I am mechanically challenged to say the least.   I have such respect for fine art photographers, because I know how difficult getting that perfect shot can be.  So today’s faves feature some of my favorite photogs!

     Doug Eng

     

    Amy Carmichael Smith

     

    Thomas Hager

     

    Pamela Viola

     

    Heather Blanton 

     

    Matt Sawyer

     

    Have a great weekend, Artsies!  Get out and take some cool pictures.

     

  • Friday Faves: City Slickers

    Friday Faves: City Slickers

    We are headed to Seattle this weekend, one of my favorite cities in the world, the city where George and I fell in love.  And while I was falling in love with G ( I was probably a little in love with him when we were friends in FL, but that’s a story for another time ), I was also falling in love with Seattle.  I adore visiting cool cities– the urban landscape and architecture fascinates me.  So it carries over that I would adore the art of the cityscape.

    For this Friday Fave round-up, I’d like to share some of urbanist artists whose work I’m crushing on lately:

    Hill Houses 2 by Brin Levinson
    Passing 1 by Jason Webb
    Solitary I by John Duckworth
    Loew’s Hotel, 33rd Floor, Philadelphia by Sara Yeoman
    Miyami by Darra Crosby
    Great Tortoise Hostel, Seattle by Robin Weiss
    Boulevard Windows by Sharon Dowell

    Looking forward to bringing you more from these artists soon!  In the meantime,  take a gander at their websites..

    1.  Brin Levinson

    2.  Jason Webb

    3.  John Duckworth

    4. Sarah Yeoman

    5. Darra Crosby

    6. Robin Weiss

    7. Sharon Dowell 

    Are you taking it to the city streets this weekend?  What’s your favorite city for artsy inspiration?

  • Friday Forager Faves:  Gone Campin’

    Friday Forager Faves: Gone Campin’

    Happy 4th of July weekend, Artsies!  As soon as the hubby gets off work today, we’re heading out for a little camping in the Port Townsend area ( For all my East Coast readers, that’s North of where we are in Aberdeen, PT is on the Northeastern tip of the Olympic Penisula ).  I’ve never been further North than Seattle, so I am super excited.  Anyone else doing a little holiday camping this weekend?  To get me ( and you! ) in the mood, here’s some of my favorite campy art..

    Bear Mountain by Rachel Ann Austin
    Bear Mountain by Rachel Ann Austin
    Caravel by Leah Giberson
    Chaise de Camping by Ronald Bowen
    Airstream Alice by Carrie Goller

    Have a wonderful weekend, everyone!  Mix in something artsy along with all your outdoor celebrating!

  • Friday Forager Faves

    Friday Forager Faves

    Happy Friday everyone!  If you’re in North Florida, no, that light coming through your windows is not an April Fool’s Day joke– the sun is finally shining!  If you haven’t made it to the beach yet,  here are a few of my favorite beachy pieces to get your through until then..  each one brings a little somethin’ different, dontcha think?

     

     

    1.  Oceanic 29 by Thomas Hager

    2.  Day Dreamin’ by Mary St. Germain

    3.  Spontaneous Simplicity by Theresa Daily

    4.  Seaside Reflections by Christina Foard