Thursday, June 15, 2023

Summer in the Mountains

 

 


Since I first saw it decades ago, I've loved this painting – "Kindred Spirits" by 19th century American landscape artist Asher B. DurandWithout knowing its whole story, I felt that it extended a vast invitation – to explore a beautiful new world, in company with simpatico companions.

 

I've rarely painted landscapes although I regularly sketched outdoors in our old days of hiking, camping, paddling – and I have dozens of old sketchbooks to show for it.  As I begin to weed them out, I find memory fragments like this:

 


The note reads: "Hwy 99 – N. of Horseshoe Bay – waiting for the tow truck – COLD! – Jan 25/97"

 

These old sketches contributed to a convergence that sets my program for Summer 2023.  As I was working on my personal Remembrance of Things Past, I happened to pull out of a cluttered corner the lovely old mirror my mother bought as a framed painting in those olden days.  The mirror that then replaced the painting in the frame has gone ghostly with age so I papered it over for this shot:

 

 

Simultaneously, I'm receiving almost daily promotions for pricey art workshops at popular summer destinations -- sponsored by organizations that are busily reinventing themselves post-COVID.  

 

 

There's a long history to artists working in the Adirondacks – many of them, like Asher B. Durand, were formal or informal members of the Hudson River School.  As I followed internet trails, I came across dozens from the 19th and early 20th centuries – some of them well known, some almost forgotten.

 



Reflecting (ahem!) on my mother's mirror, I once asked her what the lovely frame held when she bought it from the antique dealer.  "Oh, some old thing," she said dismissively, "but I saw the frame would be perfect for a mirror."   Even then, as an inexperienced teenager, I wished I might have seen its original state.  Just imagine!

 

Well, this led me to my summer project called Filling the Empty Frame.  Are you ready?  Here's the plan:  Every two weeks, I'll choose a "vintage" artist and one of the paintings he made in the Adirondacks.  (Sorry.  They are all "he/him" – because Georgia O'Keeffe is just too spectacular for my purposes).  First, to continue my fascination with portraits, I'll produce that artist's portrait with a method chosen from this wild and wonderful book.  (You can read here about the book's origin in the author-artist's international project)

 

 

Next, I'll match the artist's painting to a photo or drawing I've previously made of a similar landscape. Then, maybe or maybe not in a similar style, I'll produce a landscape to the frame's size.  Ready?

 

Our first subject is Sanford Robinson Gifford.  "Never heard of him" – but he was an admired artist in his day and was among the group of New York City notables who founded the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1870.

 

 

His connection to The Met suggests a conservative selection from "Portrait Revolution"...nothing too wacky yet.  I tried to loosen up a bit as in this sample from the book (on the right side, the largest of the lot) but otherwise played it pretty straight.

 


Moving right along with the work-in-progress.

 

 

And here's the final, "Framed – Sanford Robinson Gifford, 2023."

 



Now, here's Gifford's painting with a title confirming its connection to our theme, "A Twilight in the Adirondacks."

 



 A photo from Vancouver's nearby Trout Lake has a vague similarity.

 

 
 
But this view faces east – so I decided to borrow a radiant sunrise captured at the end of my block.

 


Here's an early stage.

 


And the grand finale, "A Trout Lake Sunrise" – Empty Frame series, copyright 2023.

 


On the basis of colour alone, I don't think my mother would have described this as "some old thing."  Maybe a better candidate for her description would be my scraped-back palette, awaiting the next go.

 



As I kick off this series, let Georgia O'Keeffe's words be the guide:--

"Whether you succeed or not is irrelevant; there is no such thing.  Making your unknown known is the important thing -- and keeping the unknown always before you."

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 


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