Might Even Have to Move Inside
acrylic on canvas
12X12 inches
MDCHA headquarters, Goffs,
San Bernardino County, California
2001
As I walked back to my trailer I observed this scene from a distance, and, fortunately, I had a camera around my neck.
Fear No Evil
acrylic on canvas
10X30 inches
Furnace Creek,
Death Valley, Inyo County CA
2001
This picture had its beginnings in photos taken at the arrival of the wagon train in the 2000 Death Valley 49'ers encampment. Most of the wagons now have automotive running gear, which is certainly more trouble-free and easier to maintain than the old spoked wooden wheels. But unless I want to paint them for what they are, 21st century reenactments, they are visually useless. They are feet wider, feet lower to the ground, and can't be substituted for their historical counterparts.
This wagon, driven by wagon-master Chet Sinclair, was accurate and beautiful. I loved it at sight, grandma and kid waving, banners on the side, big American flag flying out the back. But the very things which made it attractive also labeled it as a reenactment. I put the photographs aside.
Tybo I: View from the Store
acrylic on canvas
24X24 inches
Tybo, Nevada
2001
At the 2000 Death Valley Art show, a long, tall Westerner looked carefully at all my paintings, pointed to the one of the OX Cattle Company, and asked "Is that Nevada?"
I had to admit that it was California.
He persisted "Do you ever paint Nevada? Do you know where Tybo is?"
I had to admit that I didn't.
The man was owner of a mine in Amargosa Valley,and also owner of the ghost town Tybo. He encouraged me to go to Tybo when spring weather permitted, take pictures, paint, stay as long as I liked, and he would buy whatever I painted.
Tybo II: View of the Store
acrylic on canvas
24X24 inches
Tybo, Nevada
2001
Crossing the creek and looking back, yields this view of the store, one wall blown out by dynamite, but still a remarkably handsome place. The brick-arched window through which the first painting looks is second from the left.
Tybo III: First Light
acrylic on canvas
24X24 inches
Tybo, Nevada
2001
Summer morning, 4 AM. The moon is up, the sun is right behind her. And the headframe of the abandoned mine stands sentinel against the bluest of pre-dawn skies.
The Pier at Prisoners' Bay
acrylic on canvas
12X18 inches
Santa Cruz Island, CA
2001
A few subjects are strictly forbidden at the Death Valley Art Show, among them, nudes and seascapes. So the Channelkeeper Bluewater Ball gave me a yearly chance to paint subject matter I would not ordinarily do. This is the second, and I think the best, of my once-a-year seascapes. I like the sun on the fog drifting down the valley.
The Granites
acrylic on canvas triptych,
12X24 inches each canvas, 12X72 inches total
San Bernardino County, California
2001
Standing on Kelbaker Road a mile or two north of I-40, just at the southern edge of the Mojave National Preserve, and looking West. Light on the Granites changes hourly from dawn till dusk. This is mid afternoon, when atmospheric perspective turns the distant shadows vivid blue, and leaves the near ones black.