Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Confluence
Several ideas are coming together, but art making can have a timeline similar to geologic events. It's a long, slow, grinding, pressured force, until the catastrophic moment of fractured release. I know that doesn't really tell you much, but if you look at the image, you'll know as much as I do.
Friday, September 17, 2010
Bracteantha in UV

Labels:
backyard,
bracteantha,
creativity,
CSU,
flowers,
garden,
ideas,
inspiration,
lights,
phenomenon,
Robert McFarland,
ultraviolet,
UV
Friday, September 3, 2010
Evening Events
Ever find one of those places that you don't want to leave? I set up my tent and sat here for nearly a week. Most of the recent photos are from very close to this exact spot. In the afternoons, I'd head into the mountain (literally), but mostly... I stayed close to this spot.
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Staring Out, Again.
A two day storm blows itself out, revealing Hallett Peak, as seen from the easy, albeit windy, trail around Sprague Lake in Rocky Mountain National Park. This iconic image can be easily captured by anyone with a camera. I'm certain that anyone who might come to see it when it hangs in the gallery, might intend to go try for themselves. I wonder why, though. As an artist, I am compelled toward the expression of my own peculiar stories and ideas. But what drives others out into the cold to chase an elusive quarry? In the six hours I walked around the park chasing my own demons tail, my mind drifted back to the mornings I'd get up hell bent on reaching the top of places like Hallett Peak. I think it was the post-holing hike with an incredibly heavy pack on my back that dislodged the ancient memory. Maybe it was the very cold and humid spring morning air and wiping my nose on my gloved thumb. Felt good to be out and alone, drifting with the low clouds taking pictures of trees being eaten alive by pine beetles, and rivulet streams flowing through troughs in the new snow. Several months ago I hiked into Dream Lake at 4am for the usual alpenglow photos. After that I hiked to Emerald Lake at the base of the mountain and climbed to a fantastic napping spot in full sun. I didn't sleep so much as stare at the craggy face picturing myself somewhere up there lost in a shadow, perhaps staring back, but more likely staring into the distance, yet again. When, on this snowy morning, the clouds lifted out of the valleys, I slowly walked back to my vehicle, groggy and cold, aging. Something alerts in the trees and goes quiet, all you hear is wind and brushes of snow. You've become increasingly aware in the hushed forest, moving toward the daydream, unknowingly lost, alone, and increasingly happy.
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