I did these two pochades a couple of Sundays ago in horse country, just east
of Ann Arbor, Mich. The week earlier I had visited a friend who rents a room in
an old, circa late 1800s, farmhouse on 40 acres. Behind the house is an ancient
Black Walnut tree. estimated by the county to be between 600-900 years old. Yes,
you read that correctly. I was in awe.
Behind the house and the black
walnut was a collapsed old barn, dropped by a powerful straight-line wind that
blew through the area about 4-5 years ago. And hidden from sight beyond the barn
wreck and assorted other dilapidated farm buildings was a beautiful little pond
and a wide open grass field backed by woods. When I came back the next weekend,
the fall colors were waiting.
It was about the last warm, sunny Sunday in
mid-October and I was almost giddy to be out painting such a simple but lovely
landscape. There were lots of greens to challenge me, along with more yellows
than usual, plus some fabulous reds. I had to hold myself back on the reds -- I
think we're so thrilled to see them in the fall that we think they look redder than they
are.Overall, I'm pleased with the way this piece turned out. I like the
variation of blue and white in the sky and the way the leafless trees fade out
above the rest of the woods. I was able to capture the grasses and shrubs around
the pond, as well as the reflections.
For whatever reason, this is an
area of southeast Michigan I haven't explored. It wasn't far from home, around
30 minutes by freeway on a Sunday, but I had no idea there are horse farms so
close to the metropolitan area. Shame on me. While there are no horses on the
old farm my friend lives on, there is a Morgan farm next door and several others
on the half-mile or so back to the main road.After finishing the first, I turned around and focused on the barn
next door that belongs to the landlord. I'm not sure if it's in use but it
didn't look neglected. I was attracted by the orange leaves behind the red barn
and the interesting shadow play on the grass in the foreground. This view
presented numerous challenges: The pine tree in front of the orange tree on the
right, the sinuous shadows on the bright sunlit grass and the skeleton of the
leafless tree in the background.
At this point it was getting close to
late afternoon and I was going to lose this great light soon. I did the barn
first, then put in the orange trees, then the green tree and shrub on the left,
then the shadows in front. The leafless tree was one of the last areas I
painted.
Now that I've had a few weeks to look at this one, there are
some areas that don't satisfy me -- the leafless tree in the background looks
too cumbersome and the green pine on the right needs more form. I'm also not too
sure about the short side of the barn; I think the back corner needs to recede
more to be more believable. I'm also still deciding if the shadows in the
foreground work as well as they could. Nonetheless, a very satisfying afternoon.
What is it Radar would have said in M*A*S*H --"slaked."
Let me know what
you think. I've changed the requirements in the Comment box so you don't have to have a Google account to leave a
comment. And I've added Feedburner, so this blog is available as a feed sent to
you as it's updated. Feedburner also reformats the posts so that they are more
readable by search engines, which in theory, could generate more traffic. We'll
see!
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