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PAINTING, PHOTOGRAPHY AND SCULPTURE

Entries in Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts (4)

Thursday
Mar012012

Image of the Day, March 1, 2012

By Donna Poulton

Jimmy Swinnerton painted in every kind of weather, the most dramatic being when dark-clouded thunderstorms loomed over the large buttes.  In Desert Clouds, Utah, the vertically developed cumulus clouds, common in the West during hot summer months, seem to emerge audaciously from terra firma.  In reality, cumulus clouds can hover as low as 300 feet above the desert landscape.

James Guilford Swinnerton, Desert Clouds, Utah, 1940s, oil on canvas, 22 x 34 in. Credit: Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts“I don’t use many colors,” Jimmy volunteers. “Two blues, one green, blue black, several reds—I’m finding all the time that it’s how you use them, not the number involved.  Light is superimposed on darkness.  You can notice that as the day grows long.  There are so many parts to a landscape that attention must be paid to all of them.  The clouds should float, instead of looking like rocks.  The sky should be air, not blue paint…” - Jimmy Swinnerton, from Painters of the Desert by Ed Ainsworth

Other Posts on Jimmy Swinnerton:

Painting of the Day, October 23, 2011

Friday
Dec302011

Painting of the Day, December 30, 2011

By Donna Poulton

Anton J. Rasmussen, Delicate Arch (Study), 1995 oil on canvas on masonite, 36 x 48 in. Private Collection.  Credit: Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

Anton J. Rasmussen’s Delicate Arch (1995) is his most widely recognized work. Commissioned by the Salt Lake International Airport and painted on location, the towering image of Delicate Arch is 23 feet high by 18 feet wide; a size worthy of its subject.

Delicate Arch at the Salt Lake International Airport.  Credit: 3M30

Like Thomas Moran, whose landscapes were not composed for literal reference, but rather to evoke emotional impressions of a setting, Rasmussen's paintings represent: 

"… a composite of different perspectives and different rock formations, and the palette is developed out of visual sensations collected over time … Many people have commented that they’ve seen the particular view I painted ‘just that way,’ even though it would be impossible to do so.  I have decided that as one recalls the experience of visiting the southern Utah landscape, the experience is idealized … the experiences are combined in the viewer’s mind to form a single recollection of the experience."

The multi-colored clouds and spiraling activity in Delicate Arch are loud, crowding for attention. The clouds are a softer version of the repeated motifs seen in the rocks and are important elements in understanding the decay of the rock itself. Of this process Rasmussen notes that there is a lot of “rhythm and movement, the sort of things that would have carved that rock out over the many millions of years.”

Sunday
Oct022011

Conrad Buff - The Other-Worldness of the West

by Donna Poulton

Canyonland. Credit: Donna Poulton and Vern Swanson Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

There are few artists of the southwest whose technique is as expressive or singular as that of Conrad Buff (1886-1975).  His Modern interpretation of the southwest, using high-keyed architectural compositions and broken color patterns to distinguish the desert landscape, is unrivaled.  Born and raised in Switzerland, Buff moved to Los Angeles in his mid-twenties where he studied art under a number of instructors, but his work with Edgar Payne seems to have been a pivotal point in guiding his art career, especially in mural work.

Landscape with Trees. Credit: Donna Poulton and Vern Swanson Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

Horse. Credit: SternFineArts.com

In 1923, Conrad Buff and his wife, Mary, made the first of many trips to the then relatively undiscovered Zion National Park.  Buff wrote that as they drove to Zion “The air got clearer and clearer and the landscape was as fantastic as it was beautiful.  Always the same varied pattern of hills, the same foreground with the sagebrush, but the air was so clear that the design of the hills stood out against the deep blue sky which has always fascinated me and still does—the deep blue sky and the mountains and hills against it.”

Canyon Wall, Zion National Park. Credit: Donna Poulton and Vern Swanson Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

In the late 1920s Buff was commissioned to paint mural decorations for a social hall in Huntington Park, California. After seeing other Utah landscapes and work related to the mural project at an exhibit at the Los Angeles Museum, Los Angeles art critic Merle Armitage wrote, “Conrad Buff comprehends the enormity of the West.  More than that, he adds thereto a discernment of the stylized and conventionalized forms in which the West abounds.  Not one artist in a hundred grasps the significance of the West’s dynamic forms.”

Monument Valley. Credit: SternFineArts.com

An exhibition at the Ilsley Gallery in Los Angeles showcased some of Buff’s Utah scenes, and a large Zion scene especially interested one exhibition visitor—Maynard Dixon.  Will South wrote that, “Immediately, there began a friendship which lasted as long as Maynard Dixon lived….[Dixon] was impressed by the style of the young Swiss and also by the locale of some of his paintings.”  South goes on to note that “According to Buff, Dixon was quite taken with a view of Zion National Park and had to ask its location because he had never been there on his own many travels of the West. Two months later, in June 1933, Dixon headed out to Zion in the company of his wife, photographer Dorothea Lange (1895-1965)…”

Monument Valley. Credit: SternFineArts.com

During the Depression Buff worked briefly for the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP).  Art critic Arthur Millier wrote, “…resting on Mr. Buff’s exploration, one can visualize a future school of painter, to whom he will have discovered the other-worldness of a region in which it is not uncommon to see, one behind another, red, white, black and blue peaks.  What at first seems to be his personal colorations turn out to be typical of the desert slope of mountains."

Canyon de Chelly. Credit: SternFineArts.com

Canyon Land (see above) depicts a large bluff surrounded by the waterway that has, over the millennia, cut its large rectangular profile and left it standing alone as an island.  The painting is unusually monochromatic for Buff, and his identifiable short brushstrokes and cross hatching are absent.  It suggests the silence and isolation of the eons and the weight of time.  Ed Ainsworth reported that Buff “repeatedly journeyed to the country known as the Wayne Wonderland on the Fremont River…sometimes with his wife and the Dixons.”

Deep Canyon. Credit: SternFineArts.com

Will South has suggested that it was his German accent, but whatever the reason, Conrad Buff spent much of his time in southern Utah during the War years. From this period came an outpouring of paintings and an evolution in his composition and method.  Since most of his paintings are undated and untitled it is difficult to ascertain exactly when and where the work was done.  Buff observed that:

Landscape painting has been my favorite thing practically all my life.  But I found out that the way that I saw landscape, especially the western landscape that I was so much in love with, wasn’t the way the public saw it.  I just couldn’t get interested in the verbenas and the sunsets.  I kept on painting these magnificent forms that I saw and that I was interested in, and I tried to get the magnificent blues that we saw on the desert, which wasn’t so easy to harmonize with the rest of the landscape.  And especially the wild country in Utah.

Utah Mesa. Credit: SternFineArts.com

Throughout the later 1950s and 60s, the perspective in Buff’s paintings comes down to eye level.  Landscapes that had been set at dizzying heights to illustrate the stature and depth of desert monoliths is replaced by scenes set at ground level.  But with the change in altitude came attendant explorations with plasticity.  The sky remained his signature blue, largely unbroken by texture or line, but the foreground elements were applied with thicker impasto and longer brush strokes.  The impression of light was achieved by the application of pure color rather than blending on the palette.

 

Lake Powell, Utah. Credit: SternFineArts.com

Buff’s mature desert series advanced further in the 1970s to expressive primary colors, flattened planes and architectural edifices recognizable only because they are iconographic emblems of the desert.  In these paintings, the landscape is an object - it has been stripped of the painterly devices of thick impasto, cross-hatching and the neo-impressionistic techniques of broken color. Nature has been reduced to minimal form and pure color, but in doing so Buff has established his own unrivaled vision of the West and nothing of its essence has been lost.

Untitled, Southern Utah. Credit: Donna Poulton and Vern Swanson Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

Tuesday
Jul262011

“Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts”

"Painters of Utah's Canyons and Deserts" - By Donna L. Poulton and Vern G. Swanson - Gibbs Smith Publishing

-- Jacket Cover: Edgar Payne, "Red Mesa, Monument Valley, Utah" Credit: Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

Famous movie director John Ford once exclaimed, “…Monument Valley was my greatest star.” 

--James Swinnerton, “Desert Clouds”  Credit: Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

But long before Ford lionized these great icons of the southwest, paintings of the sweeping desert and colorful canyon country of Utah’s plateau province had captured the popular imagination of American and European audiences.

--Salomon Nunes Carvalho, “Natural Obelisks” Credit: Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

--Thomas Moran in Zion Credit: Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

Vividly illustrated and exhaustively researched, “Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts” is the first comprehensive history of the artists who painted Utah’s Red Rock with more than 300 paintings spanning 155 years of art.

--David Meikle “View of Zion Canyon” Credit: Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

--Clay Wagstaff “Late October Evening” Credit: Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

The book explores the contrasts between painters who called Utah home and those who explored and visited.  The book looks at lively anecdotes of the “artist as explorer,” including John Wesley Powell’s harrowing trip down the Colorado River, artist Solomon Nunes Carvalho’s recovery from the brink of starvation, and Richard Kern’s death at the hands of the Paiutes.

--David Meikle “Mount Carmel Afternoon” Credit: Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

--Edie Roberson “Annie’s Trip to Southern Utah” Credit: Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

Love of the western landscape has to do with the capacity of the viewer to experience vast space.  To appreciate the desert terrain, one has to be comfortable with an inscrutable universe.  Whether existential or spiritual, these themes are evoked in the modern paintings of Ed Mell, Conrad Buff, Maynard Dixon, Gary E. Smith and many others.

--Ed Mell “Canyon Light and Rain” Credit: Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts

--Gary E. Smith “Canyon Dweller” Credit: Painters of Utah’s Canyons and Deserts