Wednesday,
February 14, 2018_Saturday, 17th February; Canyon de Chelly, Arizona
C1662
“Winter Canyonlight”
(Canyon
de Chelly, Arizona)
Oil Sketch on Pannelli Telati fine Cotton Panel
5” x 7”
Note
that I have added a paragraph about seeing the Zodiacal Light for the first
time towards the bottom of my last post about Chaco Canyon.
(Take Note: for
those of you who have signed up to be notified by email of new postings to this
blog, you have been receiving not just a notification, but an actual copy of
the new blog posting as the email. As
this does not show the images of the paintings in the best possible light, you
should click on the title of the latest blog posting at the top of the post, and
not the title of the painting itself; this will open up the actual blog itself,
and you may then enjoy the paintings at their best.)
Whereas
Chaco Canyon, Hovenweep and even Mesa Verde are all about the architectural
ruins, Canyon de Chelly is all about the landscape. Oh there are Ancestral Puebloan ruins such as
the White House, alright, but they are almost incidental to the grandeur of the
landscape. I was not prepared for this,
even though I had seen photographs, and even paintings of these canyons, the
reality was much more astonishing! I
came expecting more ruins, but what I got was magnificent canyonscapes!! And the low slanting light of Winter brings
out the colours of these thousand foot canyon walls to the fore. Even though you are seeing these canyons from
the many viewpoints along the rim, these views are stupendous.
Canyon
del Muerto … the north rim of Canyon de Chelly, National Monument. |
Close up of Antelope House. |
I believe that is Black Mesa on the horizon. |
Mummy House Ruin, Canyon del Muerto. |
A closer view. |
I
arrived at the campground late in the day, with rain in the offing, and just
managed to settle in for the night before the wind and rain really came
on. The next day the rain was off to the
east, but it looked like the overcast was going to make for a bland light in
which to take in the Canyon; I was still thinking in terms of light and shadows
on ruins. As it turned out, with the
cloud came the sunlight trying to break through, and this made for wonderful
lighting effects all day long. The
Canyon is so large that there was always something to view and/or photograph
without having to wait for clouds to move … I only had one twenty minute waiting
period, for the Sun to appear, all day.
Living on the Edge. |
Sadly,
a guided jeep, or horseback tour along the Canyon floor, was beyond my budget ...
perhaps some future visit. It would be
nice to see these canyon walls from below, like I got a taste of when hiking to
the White House. I would also have to
choose a sunny day, for the right lighting … Autumn would be ideal, when the
Cottonwoods were glowing golden. Part 2
of Canyon de Chelly will continue after an interlude in the Ponderosas, in the
next posting of the blog.
Near Spider Rock. |
Spider
Rock ... the farthest point on the south rim of Canyon de Chelly. |
The
White House is in the alcove in the center of the photo. |
A
closer view of the White House from the same vantage point. |
The
Pigments used in the painting:
Imprimatura:
W&N Venetian Red & Rublev Ercolano Red;
Drawing:
W&N Ultramarine Deep Blue & Rublev Purple Ochre;
Pigments:
W&N: Cerulean, Cobalt and Ultramarine Deep Blues, Cadmium Orange;
Blockx:
Ivory Black;
Rublev: Ercolano Red, Purple Ochre, Blue Ridge
Yellow Ochre, Orange Molybdate & Lead White #2.
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