Friday, May 29, 2015

In a hanging valley high above Lake Louise

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Lake Agnes – much higher than it was the last time I climbed up there in 1957

Watercolour and crayon

©2015 Charlene Brown



This painting is based on photos I took when I climbed to Lake Agnes with my daughter and granddaughter last summer, on what turned out to be the hottest day in the history of Lake Louise – nearly 30 degrees Celsius! Although it was more of a climb than I remembered, we were okay as we’d headed up there right after breakfast... Not so sure about the people who were just starting up in the heat of the day about the time we got back down to Lake Louise.

Saturday, May 23, 2015

Glaciers soaring out of sight

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Canoes on Lake Louise
watercolour
©2015 Charlene Brown

Some of my favourite Group of Seven paintings are of the Continental Divide with the tops of the mountains not included.
  
(click on image to enlarge)
I’ve taken photographs like these on the right showing reflections of mountain-tops without including all (or any) of the mountain, but I think this is the first time I’ve ever tried a painting like this.

Sunday, May 17, 2015

Summer in a steep back yard


Orchard descending a staircase
watercolour + Photoshop™
©2015 Charlene Brown

This backyard clings to the mountainside at the head of the Howe Sound fjord. 

I took the pictures on which this painting is based about a week ago and the fruit and vegetables in the garden were not in fact as ready to pick as I have shown them. A little crop improvement seemed like the least I could do as I haven’t helped with this particular garden for several years...


Not since that great day when I planted some bulbs in the rock garden and discovered the rocks were not just decorative – they form most of the topsoil. Some of the bulbs were so shallowly ‘planted’ that the squirrels were able to re-purpose them almost immediately.

Thursday, May 14, 2015

Bridging the gulf of mutual ignorance III


(click on image to enlarge)
Lyme Bay Allegory
Watercolour and crayon
©2015 Charlene Brown

Two of my paintings last year, Intersections of diametrically opposed disciplines and Multi-disciplinary Bridges, were allegories related to bridging C.P. Snow’s ‘gulf of mutual ignorance’ between the disciplines of the arts and sciences.

This third ‘bridging allegory’ painting depicts an actual set of stacked and balanced stones, some bridging the spaces between stacks – that appeared recently near where I live. As the whole thing has been set up on an ‘island’ that only appears at low tide, we have the added drama of the occasional, and mysterious, re-bridging of a gulf, when any of the key components gets washed out.


Thursday, May 7, 2015

Virtual Paintout in Cesky Krumlov

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View from the Castle Garden
Watercolour and crayon
©2015 Charlene Brown



We were here exactly five years ago, and I painted this same ‘partly Gothic/partly Renaissance’ Cesky Krumlov Castle Tower from a picnic area in the middle of the river.   

Here is the link to this view from the Castle Garden, high above the river. 

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Spring in a busy backyard

(click on image to enlarge)
An axonometric projection
Watercolour and Photoshop™
©2015 Charlene Brown


According to Wikipedia, in an axonometric projection “the scale of distant features is the same as for near features, so such pictures will look distorted, as this is not how our eyes or photography work.” In fact, the distortion in this painting is caused by shifting and shoving the many features – waterfalls, greenhouse, stream, footbridge, rock garden, hot tub, trampoline, patio, fish pond – viewed from several angles, and forgetting to adjust the perspective from time to time... 
I usually explain this as a 'Cubist' approach, but thought I’d call it ‘axonometric’ this time.  Also, the greenhouse (that isometric axonometric wedge full of seedlings in the far corner) reminded me of a properly drawn axonometric projection of a proposed addition to the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria that I saw recently.