I took up painting seriously
over 40 years ago. For a long time, I was primarily a plein air
artist and had worked that way in California, Arizona, and the
Maine coast. I eventually settled in Mendocino on what is called
the North Coast about 160 miles above San Francisco. Although
Ive spent quality time doing portraits and still lifes,
I gradually gravitated to painting seascapes, which became the
springboard for my enduring focus on the sky over the ocean.
When I first started painting,
a mentor advised me to study light. Since the sun never sits
still, to me that meant following in the path of Monet and the
impressionists by returning to the same spot two or three or
more times to catch the scene at the same time of day. After
an hour or two, the highlights and the shadows have moved.
A few years later an Arizona
gallery owner told me he was most interested in paintings of
special moments. To me, that meant effects that one
cannot return to day after day because they are one-off events.
That is the intrinsic nature of the sky over the ocean; clouds
move faster than the sun. At the beginning and the end of the
day the colors and the light are the most interesting, dramatic,
and fleeting. Thus capturing special moments involves some luckbeing
in the right place at the right time. But the more I focused
on the skies in my work, the more time I spent painting from
reference photos in the studio.
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In the Southwest I also came
across the work of Wilson Hurley, a great New Mexico artist who
painted everything, including gorgeous skies. He had been a military
pilot and flying enthusiast, so he had a particular insight into
that subject. A picture of one of his paintings has been perched
on the table next to my easel for many years.
A sunrise or sunset over the
land is a painting
of the sky with nothing but silhouettes beneath. But over the
ocean, the sky is reflected in the water, which acts as a foil
for the light above and gives an earthly context and dimension
to the heavenly delight.
I call these pictures Sea & Skyscapes.
My work tends to be on the large size because the sky is a very
big subject and demands it. The paintings also tend to be detailed,
which I feel helps to make them convincing.
In any event, whether over the
land or the sea, painting light is my passionlike a moth
attracted to a flame. This is partly the case because light,
for me, is also symbolic of a spiritual reality. Our light is
also The Lightthe source and the necessary ingredient for
our life here in the world.
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