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Posts Tagged ‘landscape’

This weekend Steve and I were lucky enough to spend a couple of hours in the woods of the Brooks Estate surrounded by blues and browns, sheets of ice and, of course, layered light.  We brought along food to entice the squirrels but few did we see this time.  Maybe next week. 😉

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When I recently picked up a  note card with its image of  green trees layered against a green-gold sky, I knew that I intended to tape it to my wall.  Such a quiet scene with its ethereal light.  A bit of brightness in the increasing pale of winter.  No matter how many times I looked at the image, I found something new to ponder.  Finally, last night, I did what I should have done in the first place — I looked up the artist.  I had never heard of Eyvind Earle.  He passed away over a decade ago.  A publishing house oversees the continued exhibition of his works.  His website bio revealed he had been an illustrator with Disney for films like Sleeping Beauty,  but most exciting for me was learning that at 21 he cycled across the country paying his way by painting watercolors inspired by the journey. What a forested landscape he must have cycled through!  His work surely inspired me in a tree-way this morning.

Nothing fancy of course.  Just some quick work with pencils and paper and scissors and glue exploring color and texture and the sometimes unexpected sinuous shapes to found amongst the trees.

I can’t wait to revisit his work but now I need to leave my desk.  As I walk out into the world I can’t help but think that my perspective has been changed.  I know my travel route.  I will pass many a tree of different shapes and sizes.  I hope I don’t miss my train as I lose myself in their branches. 😉

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Recently Steve shared pictures from a trip abroad.  Dreamy images of a Canadian landscape with narrow strips of land separating sky and water.  Beautiful images to be sure, but what made them truly fascinating was Steve’s perspective as he shared them.  He suggested in terms of their display the images should be rotated 90 degrees thus highlighting what he had been trying to capture — the reflection of the landscape in (often) still waters creating perfect symmetry, i.e. use the vertical line, not the horizontal, to heighten the viewer’s experience of the reflection.  See what you think. 😉

I must admit, as I viewed some of these images at their new orientation, I began to “see” complex and rich structures that had nothing to do with their actual subject matter (trees, water, sky).  I especially thought of the green man in the woods figure with this one.

What do you see?

 

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In Fall 2009, Steve and I visited the Blue Hills Reservation, a state park covering 7,000 acres south of Boston.   There we climbed an observation tower where I was able to snap these landscape shots, including one of Boston from afar.  With the weather warming up, we ventured back there recently.  Here are a few images from the day.  No tower shots … yet. 😉

 

 

 

 

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