This one got forgotten until this morning when I came across it. This is a beautiful spot in the Shawangunks area of New York’s Catskill Mountains. I miss New York.
Yellow Sky
Improbable though sometimes this happens, doesn’t matter: it captures the way the light bounces around in the water caught in the air. This has the feel of country roads in the area. Winter fields yellowed, makes the mountains even more startlingly blue by comparison.
Sometimes its nice just to make a landscape, no words.
2020 will be a year of exhibiting my work
Starting in February with Bloom
North Gallery
Bloom: In Honor of the Centennial Anniversary of Women’s Suffrage
Home portrait - my fave so far
Granted I had a lot to work with here - a stunning photo of a lovely house and a happy client - - -
Virginia History
Coming back from Morocco it hit me with a perfumed chorus of crickets - Virginia is a limpid verdant paradise. The air is sweet and crackling with water. Virginia is so alive. Virginia is green.
Morocco
A feast for the eyes.
More to come, but first, major props to the graphic designer who has the name of this product in Latin alphabet (left to right, in red) and in Arabic script (right to left, in blue), simultaneously, intertwined. Surely this artist is intimately acquainted with the brilliant Arabic calligraphy tradition. Not only an ancient art.
New Poster
Based on the old postrer
Shenandoah National Park
Is stunning. Sunsets! Beautiful waterfalls, trails, views - - -
But I think I like this better
We all need a little, or a lot of, inspiration these days. Great book, great subject. Great president.
Colors came on today
Good read. Glad I picked it up - at my *library*
Closing sentence from author Nick Taylor: The "New Deal's fundamental wisdom of treating people as a resource and not as a commodity ... fulfill[ed] the founding vision of a government by and for its people. All its people.”
Asked who would pay for all this, Hopkins spoke passionately of the moral necessity of big government. "You are. ... This is America, the richest country in the world. We can afford to pay for anything we want. And we want a decent life for all the people in this country."
What did the WPA do? Paraphrasing the author here - WPA was so successful and ubiquitous and had such impact that its physical legacy is so familiar as to be unnoticed. Millions of us grow up riding on WPA built roads and crossing WPA built bridges, reading books in WPOA libraries attending WPA built schools adorned with WPA murals, swam in lakes made by WPA dams in parks constructed by WPA.
Hot lunches in public schools, vaccinations, outhouses in rural unplumbed areas, university stadiums, lodges in grand national parks, mobile libraries, Americanization classes for immigrants.
And some great murals, frescoes, mosaics, paintings, novels, theater productions - and travel guides and posters.
Phillip Guston’s mural at the 1939 World’s Fair. Screenshot of photo by WPA Art Project. Phillip Guston went on to become a painter’s painter in the Abstract Expressionist era and made NYC the pinnacle of post War art
sketches -
Source material, from the Library of Congress - Message? Check. Image - especially the top left one - three white(ish?) men; noted
Problematic images - the WPA was of its time, of course. Interesting to update this one a bit.
Lyndhurst, designed 1820s revised extensively I gather 1860s? Gothic Revivial, super glam drama queen of architectural styles
Do you think my illustration has a look similar to these, below, from the 1910s?
Informed Opinion Counts
Another timeless message, from Penna WPA
Afton
!!!!!!
We are in scary alarming dangerous times. If you are not paying attention I cannot blame you at all. Here’s a pug.
A National Park - belongs to all of us
As I am reading a very engaging book about the WPA and the New Deal, a visit to one of its crowning achievements was extra fulfilling. I bow to the ancestors, those who came before us and had the foresight to provide for future generations a gem along the spine of the mountains of Virginia.
It may have been 93 degrees in Charlottesville but on Hawksbill in Shenadoah National Park it was 69 and as always gorgeous
World Progress Association
Proceeding with WPA posters, updated and completely repurposed and redone, retaining a similar message yet not at all - current for 2019, issues everlasting, since the 1935 - 1943 WPA period. Headlines are often the challenge.
The poster’s visual antecedent
Frederick Douglass
Ima brag - recently finished the 900 page biography of him by David Blight, listened to it as I worked in the studio - 35+ hours. Had to really parcel out the early years of his life, as an enslaved child in Maryland. It was all fascinating and distressing as so many issues he contended with are still roiling our country.