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San Clemente Plein Air

san_onofre

So, on Friday (June 19th) I will be leaving the daily grind to be a gypsy artist for a week. I will take my newly gesso-ed birch panels with me to San Onofre Beach where it will be my outpost for the week. San Clemente hosts a week long Plein Air competition and I will be taking the entire week to get some sun and painting done. I always look forward to my little trips about once a year… usually alone. It is a necessary thing for me to be in solitude. Distance from the stuff of daily life has a way of giving a new perspective. Interestingly, Saturday evening will be Summer Solstice. I do not necessarily “celebrate” this, but it offers a reminder that seasons do change and life goes on even after drastic life changes happen to us. There are these threshold moments in our lives that we can look back on and see where everything became different. We can not prepare for everything that lies in the path of our future, but we can know that the trail that we have been on so far has brought us to where we are now.

My artist friend Michael Pearce has a spool of shoelace material.  Stitched into the lace is the word “Solitude” which is a word that I cherish. It is idealistic of me to think that I can have solitude in the chaos of my life, but I try to be reminded of its value. In the book “The Way of the Heart” Henri Nouwen has an entire chapter talking of the importance of solitude in our busy lives. It is a way to spiritually re-charge. It is infact the first step on a path that he describes as the way of the heart. (the next steps are silence and prayer) Of solitude he says “Solitude is the furnace of transformation.” He goes on to say in another book “In solitude we discover that life is not a possession to be defended, but a gift to be shared.” It is there, in solitude that I do recharge my gift. I am able to go back to the daily life of family, work, community and share the gift of life. I am truly looking forward to filling up with grace and the suns vitamin D boost as I paint along the coast next week.

Below Deck

Below Deck (16 x 20 – on canvas) – 1.5.2003 $650

The amazing thing about living here in So Cal is the weather. Today it was over 80 degrees and we went to the beach again. Tomorrow will be in the upper 80’s and it is the first week of January!

This was an interesting painting adventure. It began about a month ago and was started from a photograph. There was a really intense sunset that I photographed, and I wanted to paint it. Then when I started to put the brush to the canvas, I got “stuck”. It just did not work for me. I hated the strong contrast that was captured in the photo, but I wanted to make something more like what I saw when I was there. So today, I once again packed up the family and took them on site to capture the scene plein air. The truly hardest part was there was NO light from me to see my palette or canvas. The sun was so bright in my eyes that when I looked at the scene to see what to paint, I was blinded and then I could not see much on the canvas. I knew where the colors were, and I just mixed them from the location on the palette. I used a lot of white and since I was painting over the previous painting, there was already a dark “ground” or under painting that comes through. This painting was over in less than two hours, and the kids were ready for cold showers.