C1502
“Afternoon Cloud
Shadows”
(Grand
Canyon, Arizona)
Oil Sketch on Ampersand Gesso Panel
3” x 4”
And after finishing yesterday’s
Oil Sketch it was time for lunch, hastily wolfed it down and began on the next
one, above. By now the light was a bit
mellower, as a little afternoon haze softened the distance. There was more Sun as the clouds had thinned
and become those cumulous of oft remembered lazy days; but no lazing for
me. The slowly moving cloud shadows
drifting across the sub-canyons & buttes within the greater chasm itself
now became the reason to paint. The
colours of the landscape became a bit brighter than in the morning’s work, partly
I think because of the more apparent contrast of the soft greens of the
vegetation (grasses, sage?), with the earth reds of the Canyon walls.
Again I chose a 3" x 4" panel, since Morning & Afternoon makes a natural pair; no matter that they might go to separate homes ... it's the painting exercise that matters. I proceeded as with the
earlier painting, with a brush drawing in Cobalt Blue, and again no imprimatura; the pigments used were the
same as the morning, being Cobalt Blue, Venetian Red, Yellow Ochre, Naples
Yellow (hue), Cadmium Red, and Titanium White.
The lovely quiet greens, were mixed from the blue and both yellows and
the white; I’m always surprised with the various greens one can get with these subdued
yellows.
There
is something singular about the perception of space and distance in the
West. I first began to feel this when
first crossing the Cascade Range in Oregon from the Willamette Valley to the
High Desert, and I realized that I could see where I’d been two hours before
and sixty miles off in the distance.
Again and again his happens when travelling out here. On Thanksgiving Day in 2012, and the day
after, while heading east from Oregon to Oklahoma, this would happen again and
again with even greater distances. Here on
the edge of the Grand Canyon one looks down thousands of feet and miles across
to the opposite rim and, and as you come to terms with the actuality of those distances
you realize how long it might take you to walk those distances. I can well understand those first Spanish
explorers with Coronado, who upon looking down from the South Rim for the first
time, thought that the “little brook” a few hundreds of feet below could be easily
stepped across; or so they thought until members of their party actually climbed
down and confronted the Colorado River itself; then they had to climb back up!
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