The Painter's Keys Community For Artists

Yes, please go ahead, forward this clickback to a friend: by email or

Related Clickbacks:

High exaltation Your creative truth 'Earth' art quotations

In the mountains
July 29, 2005

Dear Artist,

I'm laptopping you from an alpine-flowered slope above Two Jack Lake, near Banff, Alberta. Earlier today, at a First Nations' powwow, Stoney elder David Daniels said: "These mountains were given to us by the Great Chief so that we might never be depressed." He was making reference to some of the problems that plague native communities--drugs, alcoholism, teen suicide. As he spoke, his feathered regalia sparkled and rustled in the Champaign air. Rising up behind him was the silhouette of Mt. Rundle, one of the great peaks of the Canadian Rockies.

What is it about mountains that awes and inspires us? Why do some artists never cease painting them? Perhaps for the same reason that we take their challenging paths and climb them--because they are there. Mountains in all their moods are symbols of something greater, something worth aspiring to. Mountains are powerful, dangerous, beautiful, noble and mysterious. Mountains get respect.

Seen from a distance, mountains are affected by a full range of atmospheric interference. Ultra blues and grayed purples can dominate. Like monuments they rise above clouds and out of valley mist--an endearing motif for artists. Up close, their flints and talus can be hard, sharp and unforgiving. The foreground and background up here practically always gives a contrast. Look for edge patterns and the way the sky sculpts the tops. The design of snow, when present, gives courage and activation to the upper end of a painting. Snow lies in predictable places, but often flirts in an arbitrary design--as if the Great Chief decided to go abstract just for fun.

More than anything mountains are forms. These forms follow the terms of erosion and upheaval. Mountain art very often depends on an understanding of tumult and its lighting. This lighting, while an opportunity to describe the forms, is also an opportunity for focus--to guide the eye and get high-end control of design--much as sky formations do in other works. Through all of my study and chronic love of mountains there is one word that helps more than any other. This word is "condition." Light, late and early, as well as weather and the obscuring of vision play their part. There's a squall--a veil creeps and envelopes the mountain. "The Great Chief," says David Daniels, "also honours modesty."

Best regards,

Robert

PS: "What wonders lie in every mountain day!" (John Muir)

"We are all, in some sense, mountaineers, and going to the mountains is going home." (John Muir)

Esoterica: An appealing aspect of mountain art is the opportunity for what I call "graphic soundness." The monumental nature of mountains invites strong trans-canvas design, linearity, lineups and diagonals coupled together with gradations and other compositional devices. While elusiveness and mystery are also desirable, this intellectualization of mountains seems to me to give them additional power. "Mountains are earth's undecaying monuments," noted Nathaniel Hawthorne in 1860. So you can get an idea of what we're talking about, I've unmodestly asked Andrew to put up a couple of examples of my recent mountain work below.



In the mountains
Clickback contributors:
Mountains you can count on by Helen Scott
Surviving the mountains by Stella Reinwald
Mountainous landfill does the trick by Hank Tilbury
Heritage of mountains in art by Gabriella Morrison
Two types of MMA by Paul Vasquez (Hungry Bear)
Mountain methodology by Barbara Steinberg
Underdone paintings give pleasure by George Kubac
Mountains in your DNA by Mary Timme
Grounded in the mountains by Aliye Cullu
Mountain cornucopia by Coulter Watt
John Muir on tapestry by Helen Webber
Vistas in Norway by Deena Welde Peschek
Modifying the universe by H. Cigdem Yorgancioglu
Time will tell by Debbie Collingwood

How quotable are you?
Our Resource of Art Quotations is the largest of its kind. Lately we've been looking at the writing of those who contribute to these twice-weekly clickbacks. To see if you've been included just type your name--or any name for that matter--into the box below. Press "search" and thank you for being so quotable.
 
Browse Authors Index
Browse Quotations Categories
Submit quotations

Art Directory


Our Free and Premium art listings will increase your website(s) popularity with search engines.


Artists' Responses to In the mountains by Robert Genn
Be sure to check our Archives for related material.

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by Helen Scott :: Mountains you can count on

by Helen Scott, New Bern, North Carolina, USA

contact Helen Scott share Helen's letter with a friend

As a native Coloradoan who is living on the very flat coastal plain of North Carolina, my mouth is watering for just one mountain trip in my wonderful native state and to have my car climb its way up along the flanks of the high mountain passes (no matter what time of year, just as long as the road is open). You wrote about the wonder of mountains, no matter where they are. They are so solid, and so "just there". Something you can really count on. Yet, they change from time of day to time of day, from season to season. Move your easel a little to the left or a little to the right and it's a whole new mountain. New patches of snow to paint, new fleeting shadows, new crags to catch just right. And, yes, the air!


, Related material on Mountains you can count on
top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by Stella Reinwald :: Surviving the mountains

by Stella Reinwald, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA

contact Stella Reinwald share Stella's letter with a friend

Mountains thrill us to be small among such beauty and grandeur – it is the most ennobling kind of humility. Society and the company of men too often make us feel sad and impotent to be small among such malignant power, chaos and competition. How revealing that men who climb, often refer to the experience as 'conquering' a mountain rather than surviving it. Nature will always have the last say; we live here at her discretion, not ours.


, Other letters by Stella, Related material on Surviving the mountains
top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by Hank Tilbury :: Mountainous landfill does the trick

by Hank Tilbury, Kansas City, Kansas, USA

contact Hank Tilbury share Hank's letter with a friend

Here in the famously flat state of Kansas, we don't have towering peaks to inspire our
The Johnson County Landfill by Hank Tilbury, Watercolor field sketch
The Johnson County Landfill
Watercolor field sketch
 click image to enlarge
artistic efforts. In fact, the most imposing massif in my area is the county garbage landfill, and it has become my own personal Mont St. Victoire. I find it both grotesque, from an environmental and sociological viewpoint, and strangely fascinating, from a visual viewpoint. Constantly built up and graded down, it is one the few mountains whose shape changes at a rate a person can observe. The landfill is tucked away in a distant corner of our sprawling suburban county; most people in the area have never seen it and probably never will. I have felt compelled to include views of this mountain of garbage among the other landscapes in my art shows just to remind people that it exists and that we all are adding to it every day. When people ask why I paint pictures of the landfill, I reply with Sir Edmund Hilary's famous quote: "Because it's there."


, Other letters by Hank
top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by Gabriella Morrison :: Heritage of mountains in art

by Gabriella Morrison, Maple Ridge, BC, Canada

contact Gabriella Morrison share Gabriella's letter with a friend

You are continuing on in your love affair with mountains, and like any other lover can
Mont Sainte Victoire by Gabriella Morrison, by: Paul Cezanne
Mont Sainte Victoire
by: Paul Cezanne
 click image to enlarge
chart the moods and contours of your loved one. Mountains figure in art historical examples, from Trecento depictions of hermits and saints in rocky terrain, to glimpsed backgrounds in windows in front of which portraits were made in the Renaissance. Durer and Elsheimer made studies of mountainous terrain. The German, Caspar D. Friedrich made paintings where studies of mountainous conditions informed the image. Hokusai did his famous series of woodcuts of the views of Mount Fuji. And of course there were those wonderful paintings Cezanne made of Mont St. Victoire.


, Other letters by Gabriella, Related material on Heritage of mountains in art
top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by Paul Vasquez (Hungry Bear) :: Two types of MMA

by Paul Vasquez (Hungry Bear), Mariposa, CA, USA

contact Paul Vasquez (Hungry Bear) share Paul's letter with a friend

I am a Native American living near Yosemite. My children are native to Yosemite. We
Paul Vasquez (Hungry Bear), Hungry Bear; Yosemite
Hungry Bear; Yosemite
have a very rich and vibrant culture based in Yosemite. I have been doing art full time for just under a year. I do two types of MMA. That is "multi media art" and "mixed martial art." That includes photography, videography, digital/computer art and ultimate fighting. I am doing everything I can think of to market myself but it's slow going, I'm very busy training for my first fight on September 30th and I'm going to start giving tours in Yosemite for Yosemite Guides. I have gotten one lodge and one store to start carrying my photography. I have a non-profit environmental organization giving me photo assignments and paying me a small amount. I am also the photographer for several fight organizations but I haven't made a penny from that. It's prestigious, fun and exciting. I get to sit touching the cage and take photos. It is still costing me to do it, but it's worth every penny because I love it.


top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by Barbara Steinberg :: Mountain methodology

by Barbara Steinberg, Maui, Hawaii, USA

contact Barbara Steinberg share Barbara's letter with a friend

I really feel close to you there as I too love the mountains and painting them on
Bridge at Kepaniwai Park by Barbara Steinberg, by: Barbara Steinberg
Bridge at Kepaniwai Park
by: Barbara Steinberg
 click image to enlarge
location. I love John Muir too. I had planned to go to Yosemite this summer but it is a bad mosquito year so I cancelled. I wish to ask if your paintings are done 100% on location or did you use your jpegs online to paint from as well?

(RG note) Thanks Barbara. These days I'm doing only smaller paintings on location – up to 12 x 16 inches. I seldom finish on location. I bring the unfinished beginnings back to the studio, throw them around and throw some out. This is when, with a little luck, I pull them together. The glazing process which I use works better for me in the studio. The larger ones, as in the photos, are totally synthesized in the studio. Lately I've been using a Canon digital projector but my reference of choice is still slides. You might say that plein air, in my case, is a stimulating adjunct—an act in itself—which causes me to slow down, smell the daisies, reassess and restock the idea bank. With the concomitant ct of plein air, I find myself to be less dependent on photos.


, Other letters by Barbara, Related material on Mountain methodology
top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by George Kubac :: Underdone paintings give pleasure

by George Kubac, Edmonton, AB, USA

contact George Kubac share George's letter with a friend

Recently I took my five grandchildren and stayed for five days in the Lake Louise
Blue hill by George Kubac, Watercolour
Blue hill
Watercolour
 click image to enlarge
area. I started with a few plein air attempts to capture the beauty of this place. The atmospheric changes were very fast. At first I thought I would not be able to handle this. But it turned out that the fast and often half finished and underdone pieces were giving me more pleasure than laboriously ended paintings. So I am left with many "unfinished" works done for my soul and not for sale.


, Other letters by George, George Kubac Website,
top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by Mary Timme :: Mountains in your DNA

by Mary Timme, Aurora, CO, USA

contact Mary Timme share Mary's letter with a friend

I live on the plains, but look at the foothills and up to the divide almost everyday. My
Gravid by Mary Timme, handmade neckpiece
Gravid
handmade neckpiece
 click image to enlarge
heart is at home here. When I first came to live in the Denver area, I had no idea why I felt the pull of the mountains. Then I found out my maternal grandmother had been born in a mining camp called Twin Lakes here in the mountains. She also married her first husband, who died of brown lung, and later married my grandfather in Fairplay. Whenever I go out onto the road and turn west I think, "Well you could live somewhere else." But I don't know why I would. This is the home of my heart. Mountains are like no other…


, Other letters by Mary, Related material on Mountains in your DNA, Mary Timme Website,
top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by Aliye Cullu :: Grounded in the mountains

by Aliye Cullu, Gainesville, FL, USA

contact Aliye Cullu share Aliye's letter with a friend

My husband, Michael Campbell, and I just returned from a short trip to the Appalachian mountains of Virginia and West Virginia. I love the mountains and have never really been able to fully articulate why, other than feeling more grounded, strengthened, and awe-inspired by their presence. I am especially fond of the White Mountains of New Hampshire. I can't seem to get enough of them and never want to leave when it's time.


, Other letters by Aliye, Related material on Grounded in the mountains
top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by Coulter Watt :: Mountain cornucopia

by Coulter Watt, Quakertown, PA, USA

contact Coulter Watt share Coulter's letter with a friend

I like European mountains because they've built really fine, serpentine roads on them that I've enjoyed driving on like a lunatic. But, being visual beings, mountains offer a break from the concrete world of city life and connect us to the raw power of nature and to gaze upon the stars at night shrinks our little daily human problems to nothingness. Mountain vistas provide a painter with a cornucopia of mood, atmosphere, substance, texture and the spectacle of how light dances on the mix of textures and color rendering a psychedelic wonderment of reality, a preternatural experience that amazes. It's not profound, it just is. But, it's the experience that matters and if painters can take a viewer on the experience, they've created a work of art. I'd venture to say that any landscape can offer the same sense of wonderment if we take the time to look closely and observe.


, Other letters by Coulter, Coulter Watt Website,
top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by Helen Webber :: John Muir on tapestry

by Helen Webber, Berwyb, PA, USA

contact Helen Webber share Helen's letter with a friend

Speaking of John Muir, I recently completed a commission for a mountain climbing
Helen Webber, collage tapestry
collage tapestry
 click image to enlarge
family living in Lake Tahoe. They selected a John Muir quote and I then created a six by four foot fabric collage tapestry.


, Related material on John Muir on tapestry, Helen Webber Website,
top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by Deena Welde Peschek :: Vistas in Norway

by Deena Welde Peschek, Windham, NH, USA

contact Deena Welde Peschek share Deena's letter with a friend

I could not help but think of Ansel Adams, perhaps because of my photography
El Capitan, Sunrise, Yosemite by Deena Welde Peschek, Original photograph<br>by: Ansel Adams
El Capitan, Sunrise, Yosemite
Original photograph
by: Ansel Adams
 click image to enlarge
background. His explorations and studies of canyons and the Yosemite area make me wonder about how he would respond to your letter. Did his choice of subject dispel some sort of depression for him? Also I am intrigued by your choice of travel. I recently discovered the pleasure of traveling by train in Norway, going around the southern coast from Oslo to Stavanger as opposed to the trip over the mountains from Oslo to Bergen. I am a first generation Norwegian American, and I have a large family in Norway that I visit there often. If anyone is looking for travel ideas, they may want to consider a visit to Norway. Its vistas are extraordinary running the gamut from seaside fishing coves, pastoral hillside farms and up to craggy islands, soaring cliffs, deep fjords, glaciers and mountains. Government policy in Norway strongly encourages citizens to be outside exploring and communing with nature as frequently as possible. This is so different from the U.S. materialistic approach to life.


, Other letters by Deena, Related material on Vistas in Norway
top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by H. Cigdem Yorgancioglu :: Modifying the universe

by H. Cigdem Yorgancioglu, Istanbul, Turkey

contact H. Cigdem Yorgancioglu share H.'s letter with a friend

I have been flirting and dancing with colours, compositions and abstracts ever since I
H. Cigdem Yorgancioglu, original painting by artist
original painting by artist
 click image to enlarge
accidentally found my daddy's paintings in a bookshelf at the age of 6. Art was inevitable in my life. I got the feeling that I may even modify the universe or at least recreate it. I am the first lady in Turkey who painted on her pantaloons. The pantaloons in question were given to a Greek artist in New York City and were danced in Central Park. I also do work on hats and hats by me with Prussian blue paintings have been distributed to people at Damrak Square in Amsterdam. I also painted on a dustbin of Sri Marinan Temple at Singapore. I painted the face of Maori and boat of Maori during my last visit to New Zealand. All my paintings are done with my fingers.


, Related material on Modifying the universe
top of page

 

Response to 'In the mountains' by Debbie Collingwood :: Time will tell

by Debbie Collingwood, St. John's, NF, Canada

contact Debbie Collingwood share Debbie's letter with a friend

Morning is breaking on the East Coast as I tap tap tap on the top top top on the key board. Fireweed stands tall outside my window. Its colour sings a story into my eyes. I have just read your letter composed on an alpine-flowered slope above Two Jack Lake. For a moment, in my mind, there was an ant that had made it to the top of an Indian Paintbrush swaying in that meadow. The ant looked at the mountain and read your thoughtful creation on the laptop screen. He saw that it was good but was passionately annoyed with the term 'laptopping you'. The ant, actually his name is Frank, was unsure if it is just him that doesn't like the aesthetics of being laptopped, or if there are other people that feel the same way. He mentions this to his brother, Brian as they climb down the paint brush together and glance back at Mt. Rundle disappearing between grass blades.

"Time will tell" says Brian, swinging his antennae. "You have to admit that it is really kind of cool to be able to communicate like that from our alpine meadow."

"Yeah" says Frank, "and I liked reading that guy Genn's stuff. I just like picking up crumbs now and again." Frank and Brian get back to work. So must I.

(RG note) Thanks Debbie. Having 'laptopped' people several times in these letters, I have often wondered if I was pushing the language a bit much. I rationalized that there is after all 'lapdancing', which seems nice although I have not yet had it done. Also, even though I may be on an alpine-flowered slope, I still run the letter past the eyes of editors, among them professionals like Judi Birnberg in California and Lorna MacPhee in Ontario. While these experts have called me on all kinds of inexcusable literary boo-boos, there has not been a single peep about 'laptopping' in their often extensive deconstructions. Perhaps they’re thinking of Frank and Brian who, while ants and while initially critical, might also be sensitive to the possible birth of a new verb. For the time being Debbie, unless I hear differently, I’ll continue to laptop you every time I have the opportunity.


, Related material on Time will tell
top of page


World of Art Featured artist Peter Adams, Los Angeles, CA, USA
SELECTIONS FROM THE PAINTER'S KEYS ART DIRECTORY PAGES CLICK HERE FOR A FREE ART LISTING

Featured Artist Peter Adams, Los Angeles, CA, USA
' California Wilderness in Fog; Palo Alto</i> by Peter Adams, Los Angeles, CA, USA
California Wilderness in Fog; Palo Alto
Oil on board
 Peter Adams, Los Angeles, CA, USA

Contact Peter Adams ::: More artwork by Peter Adams

Clickback afterthoughts - The Painter's KeysAFTERTHOUGHTS


Please feel free to comment on anyone's remarks. If you add your email address right after your name at the end of your letter, we will include it. If you wish to write incognito we will honor that too. All unused letters are carefully archived for possible future use. We generally include ten or so letters in each "clickback" so you can expect about the same amount of reading. Readers really appreciate it when you tell us approximately where you are located. It would also be great if you could include where we might find some of your work on the net. We edit most letters for clarity and brevity. We are able to translate letters from most languages. Please address your letters to


You may be interested to know that artists from every state in the USA, every province in Canada, and at least 105 countries worldwide have visited these pages since January 1, 2005.


If you would like to see selected correspondence relating to the last letter "Exporting the scenery" and others, please go to www.painterskeys.com/clickbacks/exporting-scenery.asp

If you think a friend or fellow artist may find value in this material please feel free to forward it. This does not mean that they will automatically be subscribed to the Twice-Weekly Letter. They have to do it voluntarily and can find out about it by going to www.painterskeys.com

The Twice-Weekly Letters are in Russian at painterskeys.narod.ru/ and in French at www.painterskeys.com/lettersarchive.asp?fr2003




Previous ClickbackExporting the scenery click here to go to the top of this page Next Clickback:  Spots of time Spots of time

HOME CLICKBACKS SUBSCRIBE FREE ART QUOTES ART DIRECTORY
Robert's world-wide gift that artists love to get.

Absolutely free, no strings. Cancel at any time.
You'll get the valuable twice-weekly letter only.
Your email address will not be lent, sold or put
on any spam or other nasty list. Guaranteed.
CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE FREE


Last modified: August 1, 2005 :: Copyright 2005 Robert Genn, All Rights Reserved