Artist Denise Hartley blogs about art, painting, murals, and philosophy.
As an artist I seek balance in my life. As a healer, I use healing in my art process to address the healing of our planet.
Showing posts with label #bestmountainartist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #bestmountainartist. Show all posts
A study of the painting, Aquamarine, by Maxfield Parrish.
For the fans of Parrish, I began this study to learn how to create the glowing intensity of his works.
My study was created in acrylic paint. A larger work will follow, created in oil.
Aquamarine, 1917, Oil on panel, 15 ½ x 19 ¼”
Photo from Maxfield Parrish and the American Imagists,
Laurence S. Cutler, Judy Goffman Cutler, and the National Museum of American Illustration, 2004.
Work in Progress:
Study of Maxfield Parrish, D.A Hartley, 2021
The mountains of Sequoia National Park, foreground Lake Kaweah.
Nature Series:
My art consists of a combination of video installations and paintings, which form an exploration of the sights and sounds of water. Focusing on a natural vista, the viewer may experience the crashing of waves, the roar of a whitewater river, and the sounds of a brook working its way downward, in the cycle of movement, back to the ocean.
Photo by D.A. Hartley
My paintings create a tactile experience for the viewer, transforming the gallery into a visual world of life sized natural forms which mirror the existing environment. The paintings are sculptural, created on large wood panels, with deep texture, stains and oils are worked into the wood. The videos are of natural events, surrounding the viewer with the gentle or crashing sounds of water, designed to include the viewer within the artwork.
"Lost Canyon".
Paintings in this video: “Lost Canyon”, mixed media on wood, 4’ x 6’, 2005. Private collection. “Blossom Peak”, mixed media on wood, 4’ x 6’, 2004. Private collection. “Aspen”, mixed media on wood, 4’ x 6’, 2002. Private collection. “Starlight”, mixed media on canvas, diptych, 76” x 54”, 2004. Private collection. “Old Friends”, mixed media on wood, 4’ x 8’, 2001. Courtesy of the artist. “Old Oak and Rock”, oil on canvas, unfinished, 2017-2018. ”Cypress and Basalt”, mixed media on wood, 4’ x 6’, 2006. Private collection. “Aspens”, mixed media, gold on wood, diptych, 6’ x 8’, 2006. Private collection. “Tao”, cast bronze, 10.5” x 22”, 2002. Collection of the artist.
Art Exhibitions for this series:
Water! 2008, Conley Art Gallery, Fresno, CA. Solo Exhibition
Icons, 2004, Three Person Exhibition, Fourth Street Art Gallery, Berkeley, CA.
Temporal Man in Nature, 2002, Cort Gallery, Three Rivers, CA. Solo Exhibition.
Nature influences my art, every aspect of nature in
the wild is so precious. In California we have been experiencing an extreme
drought, which is causing fires, and tree disease and plant die out in our
Sierra Nevada Mountains. We have lost thousands of trees in the last few years,
and the loss of natural habitat is shocking.
My painting “Nobe Young Falls”, is a landscape created in oil paints. Nobe
Young Falls are in Sequoia National Forest. I used to have a home in Camp
Nelson, and the falls were near my home. It is an area that was homesteaded by
my son’s great, great, grandmother, Nellie Marshall (the niece of John
Marshall, discoverer of Gold! in California). She homesteaded 200 acres near
Ponderosa, CA. in the Sierra Nevada’s of California, in 1870’s. She married
Nathan Dillon, a gold rush businessman, and owner of land that is now
Dillonwood Sequoia Grove in Sequoia National Park.
Nobe Young Falls are now a destination, when I hiked there it was an
unmarked trail. If you would like to visit these falls there are now directions
posted. https://www.world-of-waterfalls.com/california-nobe-young-falls.html
Here is a map of the Giant Sequoia Groves in the Sequoia National Forest.
Camp Nelson, Ponderosa, and Dillonwood are located on the second map: Giant Sequoia
Groves in Sequoia National Forest.