plein-air painting

35. Light in the Redwoods

A  Redwood forest can be a cool and dark place even on a sunny day. So when the light singles out a small tree on the forest floor, it dazzles you with the contrast and captures your full attention. I recently found a very small Redwood tree that stood out and captured my attention because it was bathed in a beautiful but fleeting light. I did capture the scene in a photo and was able to finish the painting even though the light had moved on before I actually started to paint.  

The beauty of such a scene takes your mind to higher thoughts. Mine did turn to the symbolism of light. I thought the Hindu festival of Divali, which is the triumph of knowledge (light) over ignorance (darkness). I also thought of Easter.  In Easter, believers turn to Jesus as the Light of the World. In China people celebrate the lantern festival on the first full moon of the lunar year which is in February each year. The Lantern Festival began as a celebration in honor of Gautama Buddha (which means enlightened one) and has grown to celebrate the power of family. 

While painting I try and have a path for the light to travel in my painting. I am usually not thinking of it in its spiritual sense. But one thing I have noticed is that the lighter areas show up more clearly if they are standing in contrast to some dark. I do take considerable time to figure out where to place the darks. When you are out in the field the light changes frequently so you have to make up your own light or remember a lighted scene that captured your imagination. 

The light in the Redwoods reminds you of the power of light to reveal and conceal. It’s very similar to how we light up areas in our minds by putting our attention on that area. In painting, the path you make for the light can remind you that you create the light in your own life through the simple act of attention. The next time you paint, think about the light areas and dark areas and what they are revealing to your viewer. 

6. Arboretum Tree

The Arboretum in Santa Cruz, CA is a wonderful place to paint a variety of exotic species nurtured by the UCSC horicultural students. Actually filmed in August, 2012, I painted an old and wonderous Eucalyptus tree. I had been meaning to paint this tree for a long time and originally started a painting in watercolor but never finished it. Here you can see my process in oil from start to finish.

Trees have been considered sacred, if we go way back in history. In about 800AD, there is a reference to Charlemagne destroying a temple that housed the wood of the famous Irminsul tree thought to be the "pillar of the universe which, supports all things." There are many references to sacred tree pillars in Celtic and German spirituality. Even if we don't think of trees as sacred today, we do feel the strength of the spirit of a very old and developed tree. Part of our fascination stems from our primordial roots where the Gods were thought to dwell in the sky. A tree trunk points our eyes into the heavens and then the branches spread out and appear to try and touch the essence of the sky. The tree that I painted at the Arboretum has beautiful curving branches that remind us how we try in our own lives to reach the heavens from many different angles and perspectives.  

3. Painting at the Arboretum

Artists, this is a great place to paint in Santa Cruz, California. Follow High Street until it turns into Empire Grade. You will find the Arboretum on your right. This place makes you really think about the abundance of God. Your eyes feast on numerous blooming plants that create a kaliedescope of contrasting and analogous colors and shapes. This place makes my spirit want to sit here and just bask in the beauty. Beauty is one ways that humans experience transcendence. Many Native American sacred spots were chosen because of the awesome beauty you experience while standing there. Have you ever visited Crater Lake in Oregon. That was considered a sacred place for the Indians to come and be cleansed. The beauty of that spot lives on in your memory as will the Arboretum