Oceans & Beaches

Resurrection

I call this series “Resurrection” because all of these paintings are images of decaying vegetation. New life has the opportunity to thrive when old life releases its vital elements back into the soil. Each of these canvased is small - only six inches square, but the images on them are greatly enlarged.

I have made so many of these little canvases, that I have simply numbered them, instead of titling each one.

Autumn Pond Abstracted

When I go out paddling on May Pond, I see all of the things that one expects to enjoy on a lovely autumn day in Vermont.  There are the hills, brilliant in their fall colors, the sparkling sky, a loon or maybe two.  At the very shallow end of the pond the depth diminishes and eventually the muddy bottom comes up to the surface and the kayak can go no further.  It is here that I find the Water Shield plants (Brasenia scherberi). In September and October these tiny floating leaves put on their autumn colors. The leaves are riddled with the trails of leaf miners and spots of decay.  All of this makes for a stunning array of color and pattern.  As I paddle among them, I am dazzled and completely absorbed by the beauty to be found in an unlikely place in an unassuming little plant.  And I think to myself - with every square inch of the surface a study in abstract pattern and color, "who needs art, anyway?" - Then I finally realized that it is I who need art. I need it so that I can have some means of conveying to other people what I have seen and rejoice in.

These paintings are the reflection of that joy in natural color and form.  I feel that my paint brush has been recruited into the service of a common, little water plant.

I have made so many of these paintings in 6", 20" and 36" squares, that instead of titling them, I have numbered them.