
We had been on the road for awhile, having left northern California. We pulled off 70E at a rest stop and we happened by surprise upon this blaze of Utah autumn hues while hiking around a rocky outcropping. A vendor was selling tacky leather crafts while Sangha and I took pleasure in visiting with the weary east bound travelers. Then off we went, crossing the rain soaked terrain.
It's summers last hurrah, when colors go darker, deeper, more delicious entirely. As here, in the raisin hued mud. The mountains are as intriguing in texture as a Braque collage. As rich in red wine hues as a Caravaggio. Yet its a stunning tour-de-force joining as one. A radiantly conceived landscape, both jubilant and restful, like an abstract painting mingled hues of charcoal, mocha and golden taupe chart the land. It tells the tale of transformation, of change wrought deep within the earth.
As the rain poured, I could see a mountain transforming before my eyes! Rock and water mixed to form a soup mixture and it roared down the mountain with such force- I know by tomorrow the mountain will have transformed tremendously. And the lightning! What a bonus. Like the lime in my Corona, its all the little extras that make life interesting. On our approach to Grand Junction, Colorado, I was thinking to myself, Henny Penny might have been right about the sky falling. I knew skies like this existed in Van Gogh's paintings, but I didn't know they were for real. Swirls dark and light mingled together above the searching lightning rods. It was like some higher power above stirring, sending feelers down to connect with the earth.
At last, Sangha and I arrived Winter Park. It was more beautiful than I had imagined. Imagine moroccan tiles patterned with vivid squares woven in intricate geometrics that glow in a tamarind soft sage and hibiscus. Its like a deep sultry purr... one glorious spill of color. Like tongues of a flame, a thicket of leaves in hues of pumpkin, burgundy and deep red, are exuberantly welcoming autumn. Deep in the back country, the late-day sun slanted into a hidden ravine. The cascading stream shone as golden as the precious flakes and nuggets hidden in the river's sands.
After the PAPA orientation, I went up to the cabin to settle down for the night. And I watched in awe as the full September moon rose- a vermilion sphere in the coloring sky.
On my first day of the workshop, I spent the afternoon studying with George Strickland. He did a nice little demo- a real jewel. He worked methodically and kept a dialogue with the 15 or so of us. He likes to call neutrals, "greys". And he provided a good explanation of why a "grey" is not "carbon black" mixed with "titanium white". Joseph Mendez uses the term, "color neutral", same difference. I think I prefer the term "color neutral". There is something of the language that can affect the way I approach painting. It helps me to remember that there are neutrals in nature, but there is always color in those neutrals.
I turn on the gas fireplace to warm my chilled feet. I've been rained on twice earlier in the day. Do you know that feeling of having your back warmed- just inches from the fire? Its as comforting as a bowl of oatmeal and cream on a storm tossed evening. Do you know that feeling of settling down with your favorite dog-eared book? Well, I feel the same feeling when I'm lugging around my weathered easel looking for the next subject. That easel casts the same kind of spell- it's been on endless trips, blustering days and cozy sun baths. Infused with the color of turning trees, pumpkin patches, and full-bodied merlot, here the start of autumn takes a form one can really cozy up to.
Early morning that next day, cool droplets of dew fell from a leaf outside my window- a liquid shape- like the crescent moon. (I just think it was beautiful.) Several painters came to my cabin after painting all day, including George S., John Budicin and Ken Auster. It seemed that I had the best accommodations with having a dog on the grounds. I suppose that Snow Mountain Ranch prefers to keep dogs away from the central hub. So I was placed in a cabin at the end of a long spiraling road. Quite a distance from where the rest of the group were staying. They were sharing rooms in one of the lodges on grounds. Of course, everyone brought beer, wine and vodka, to boot. Dappled light, laughter ringing and a silky pour of merlot glinted velvet in the light. A sweet afternoon interlude with a few new friends, in the floaty atmosphere. This place is exotic- like the 100th viewing of Casablanca for an agoraphobic.
The "Marketing Discussion" among the PAPA group was long, but well worth the bags under my eyes the following morning. I learned about a few more national painting groups that I hadn't heard of, one being "North West Rendezvous". Ned Mueller, John Budicin and Matt Smith belong to this group. A familiar name came up from time to time, Clyde Aspevig, another painter that I've yet to meet. Ralph Oberg had glorifying things to say about him. George S. was eloquent stating that "art is an extremely jealous mistress and it needs your entire focus." Smith and Oberg talked about their 15 year old friendship and their infamous road trip to Canada where they painted from morning 'til night, before the spot light had struck plein air painting in America. I learned about those that inspired these plein air pioneers of today, such as Michael Lynch and Ray Vinella whom Budicin studied with. (See an article about Ray Vinella: The Contours of Content, by Peggi Ridgway.) And Carl Rungius, a wildlife artist has inspired Jean Le Gassick over the years. And Sergei Bongard made the spot light, through Gay Faulkenberry. Sergei is someone I wish I could have known among others, but he left behind great work for me to study and learn from.
I'm not one to show much patriotism, but here I've wrapped myself in down-home pride from dawns early light to days end. One red rose, big as a showman's boutonniere, might be good enough for some, But,... when I call up my inner diva, I accept nothing less than a lime in my Corona. Oops, lost my train of thought.
The autumn-lit leaves seem to be trembling. As if spun from a hodgepodge of blooms spied behind an old farmhouse, here is fragrant globe thistle mingling with stalks of green wheat, white tiny rice flowers and their own special charm. I breathe in the crisp autumn air of wood smoke and listen to the rustle of aspen leaves underfoot. For so warm is the quality of the afternoon light and so cool the strong verticals of the sentinel trees, that simply to gaze at this evocative backlit scene awakens all my senses. To paint it...?
Think pumpkin bright leaves and caramel hued fields. New green apples, wood smoke and bales of yellow hay. I had the opportunity to paint with Gay Faulkenberry during the last two days of the workshop. Her stance in front of her easel reminded me of Camille Przewodek. They work with a similar kind of passion and intense fervor. I was very much inspired by how sensitively she painted- and how carefully she arranged and positioned her still-life objects. And as she painted the field of hay bales under the stormy clouds of mid-morning, I was so moved that I bought the painting before it left the easel.
Those that I didn't have the opportunity to paint with among the group were, Ken Auster, Ned Mueller, John Budicin, Ralph Oberg and Matt Smith. But I observed them painting demos and received valuable criticism from some. And I'm grateful for having had the opportunity to be among the many that had the chance to steal a week of their time.
By the end of the workshop, my slightly tired fading denims were slipping away for a well-deserved rest in peace. Sangha and I enjoyed our drive back home. Sipping espresso every chance I got, and soaking in the beauty of the autumn leaves.
Comments section is temporarily closed.
It was springtime of 2003 when my dog and I had started off on an extended two week long adventure. We headed south on the 101, the local rock station had faded in and out as I dipped and turned down the twisting route dotted with majestic oaks and rolling hills, I had memories of my rebel biker days: the wind rushing through my hair, the belly-drop surge of adrenaline as I leaned into the turns, the clack of the playing cards in the spokes of my schwinn.
There is an excitement that can only come from a much anticipated trip finally being realized. Traveling the back roads, I notice a remarkable common thread, an enduring symbol of America that says life can be simple if you let it. In front yards, from my buffeted home in northern California to the desert ruins in Southern Arizona, the weathered picket fences help me feel like I've arrived.
Don't let anyone tell you that there's no productivity in inertia. Sometimes the most unstructured warm-weather days can elicit the best of times. Maybe a long overdue girl’s weekend at the cabin, a stroll through the flaming glow of California poppies, or quality time with my dog on a secluded Catalina lake.
There's an almost perfect lull: the summer sports nuts haven't arrived yet. My dog and I have the lake all to ourselves for long, hushed meanders. The sun traces an arc across the sky, and we wander paths suffused with the first colors of the season in blissful solitude.
Crossing on route 60, great shadows of clouds stampede the hills like ghostly buffalo. When they reached the road, I was tempted to match the speed of my truck to that of the shadows ahead. The "John Wayne" room at the Legends West in Wickenburg and endless pastures of majestic horses were waiting. I knew that my 5 days in Wickenburg would not be any less than pleasurable with having had the opportunity, once again, to paint the landscapes while being instructed by a few of the members of the Plein Air Painters of America. At the Glories of the Sonoran Desert Workshop, there must have been 35-45 painters invading this little town nestled in the desert. Landscapes of cacti and rocky peaks yield to pure sky and a play of gentle clouds above an emerald carpet of undulating thickets of sage. The changes in elevation, the sudden curves and jagged horizon have an exciting yet soothing effect on the eye and spirit.
To really see the landscapes of Wickenburg, you really should go slow and on foot. We painted at the Vulture Mine, and as the colors in the sky changed from early morning to late afternoon, I was awed by the way the sun cut through shifting clouds to spotlight and scatter deeply hued shadows over the rocky landscape. By day two, I had seen enough jaw-dropping scenery to send me into cardiac arrest.
On a list of essentials, espresso and chocolate rank somewhere close behind food and shelter. So, I was delighted to have found the "Pony Espresso" downtown - but even more delighted to have stayed at Legends West with my golden retriever among the eclectic variety of cowboy paraphernalia while being tutored by some of America's finest plein air painters of today.
Comments section is temporarily closed.
Printed in January's Issue of Plein Air Magazine.

During the 18th Annual Plein-Air Painters of America Workshop & Exhibition in the turn-of-the-century impressionist art colony of Old Lyme CT, 100 eager students embraced the seaside wind chill and intermittent rain and sunshine to paint among a few of the most recognized plein air painters in the nation. The instructors were Kenn Backhaus, Gay Faulkenberry, Louise Demore, Joseph Mendez, Ralph Oberg, Joseph Paquet, Ron Rencher, Brian Stewart, George Strickland, Linda Tippetts and Skip Whitcomb.
We're in a land of patterns and contrasts, with trees of saffron, terra cotta and gold dust. With deep tones of copper and canary yellow against lapis lazuli skies, the cool October light and warm shadows reinterpreted the blues of the Connecticut River. This was the second consecutive year that PAPA visited Old Lyme. This year our group decided to come a month later to experience the fall foliage. We were deep in America's own Givery at the most beautiful time of year, participating in a workshop with the highest caliber of plein air painting instruction.
Each instructor- with 10-15 students- had a designated painting spot for the week. The designations sent students to local homeowners' properties, to farms, marinas and nearby towns of Noank, Essex, East Haddam, Mystic, Guilford and Clinton.
The workshop's opening day brought a westerly breeze that dropped the early-morning temperature to somewhere around forty degrees. A handful of other students and I set up our easels behind the Goodspeed Opera House in East Haddam.
Our instructor for the day, Ray Roberts- a plein air painter with an obsessive passion for finding the beautiful shapes in nature, assembled simple shapes like mosaics while demonstrating and lecturing about the fundamental truths of composing and executing a great painting. "When approaching the scene, it's all about patterns, light and dark patterns." Roberts explained. "There are infinite patterns in any given scene."
The following day, a whole new group of students worked at Lobster Landing in Clinton. George Strickland, our instructor and the current president of PAPA, explained to us that he focuses on what compels him to paint a particular scene. "I feel it's important for all of us to find that out." Strickland also stresses the importance of finding our own voices.
One day, the entire group visited historic Mystic Seaport. The instructors painted for three hours; then the students participated in a mass paint-out as the instructors offered critiques and advice. It was a perfect sunny afternoon of painting among the old sailing vessels and the nostalgic setting of the seaport museum.
Ralph Oberg spent a day at Griswold Point on the distinguished Connecticut Griswold family compound. The rains had come, but the wet weather was intermittent, so we toughed it out. Oberg quoted the late Russian impressionist, Sergei Bongard, "Paint the trees before the leaves and the dog before the fleas" and stressed that a good composition must be simple and strong.
Our rain soaked day was rewarded by a private preview showing of Plein Air Color & Light, an exhibition and sale of paintings by signature members of PAPA and dinner at the Hideaway Restaurant & Pub, the designated nightly hot spot among many of us for good conversation and drink with a few new friends.
On a cool crisp morning on Tiffany Farm, Kenn Backhaus demonstrated painting a cluster of barns receding into the fog. Backhaus explained, "When physics and poetry are combined in a painting, it makes a great work of art." By physics, he meant drawing, perspective, and value sense. Poetry he defined as the ethereal quality that occurs from being “in the zone” while painting. It quickly became another challenging day as the rain began to pour after lunch, but we stayed to work on our afternoon studies.
A raffle & mixer followed the workshop at the Florence Griswold Museum. Our paintings were set up for viewing by the rest of the group, and we enjoyed wine, hors d'oeuvres and banter. As George Strickland called random names drawn from a hat, students roared with cheers as lucky winners received an assortment of gifts.
Saturday night, we were reunited again for the grand opening of Plein Air Color & Light. It was a fine evening at the Lyme Art Association. as wine flowed and paintings sold. Smiles and laughter prevailed in "America's Giverny".

