Nearing the equinox, I'm mindful on this gray day that until the new year, I must interrupt my weekly coffee-house schedule. Family priorities and cafe holiday closings mean I'll see only those companions who regularly join me on Monday mornings. Those who share their wit and wisdom each Thursday and Friday shall remain distant until next January 7.
This enforced silence seems at this moment an eon. Perhaps at my advanced age I feel a need for weekly assurance that their absence will not be made permanent by an accident of traffic or health. More likely, I seek this weekly milepost to measure the distance of my own life journey.
Bon voyage, all. I hope we meet again in good health and cheer that first week into Two-thousand-sixteen, Common Era.
Friday, December 18, 2015
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
What'd he say?
Friend Jimmy delicately wiped whipped cream from his walrus-stache.
"I had this wierd dream last night," he declared. "I wasn't supposed to use any words that began with a 'W'!"
"Like 'weird'? asked Jody, across the cafe table.
"Or 'word'?" added Keith, next chair over.
"Wow!" I exclaimed. "What prompted that dream?"
Jody pressed: "When did you wake up?"
"And why?" asked Keith. "It sounded wonderful!"
Jimmy took another sip of his latte, leaving another white ribbon across his mustache.
"Wipe off your mustache," Jody said. "Who started this conversation, anyway?"
"And where is it going?"
"And when will it end?" I asked.
Mornings at the Cafe Brosseau are like that.
"I had this wierd dream last night," he declared. "I wasn't supposed to use any words that began with a 'W'!"
"Like 'weird'? asked Jody, across the cafe table.
"Or 'word'?" added Keith, next chair over.
"Wow!" I exclaimed. "What prompted that dream?"
Jody pressed: "When did you wake up?"
"And why?" asked Keith. "It sounded wonderful!"
Jimmy took another sip of his latte, leaving another white ribbon across his mustache.
"Wipe off your mustache," Jody said. "Who started this conversation, anyway?"
"And where is it going?"
"And when will it end?" I asked.
Mornings at the Cafe Brosseau are like that.
Saturday, November 28, 2015
Time for another "The Bob Show"
I'm looking out my living-room window, choosing colors that I'd use to paint the neighbor's birches, which only now are beginning to lose their leaves. Yellow oxide? Some of the umbers? Another winter fog dilutes the deep greens of the conifers up the block. I won't be painting any of them. Does looking through a window still count as plein air?
This fog will burn off by early afternoon. Brilliant yellows from a low-hung sun will light the tree barks beneath a too-cerulean blue sky. And I won't paint any of them, either.
An all-white bulk carrier ship, waiting for a berth at the Ruston Way grain terminal, anchored off Point Ruston's Copperline Condos last week. After a late lunch at the Antique Sandwich Co. on North Pearl Street, I drove the Artmobile down the hill and found a parking spot in front of the new movie house. I loaded my paints, easel and canvas onto the collapsible stroller that is my sidewalk kit, and wheeled it around to the Waterwalk. I set up the easel, my work table, loaded up the canvas--and took them all right back to the van. Forty degrees, and a brisk north wind seemed just too damned plein air for acrylics, and for me.
It didn't help that the ship swung end-to-end while I was setting up. This constant see-saw of my subject between the wind and the tide plaqued me all last winter, when I was painting oils of the container ships idled by the longshore slowdown. It wasn't until I began framing those pochades for my show at Cafe Brosseau last fall that I realized I had painted some 20 of them. Photographs taken of me by passing strollers show me bundled up like a Santa pack, with rocks suspended from the paintbox tripod to keep it steady against that wind.
Tomorrow afternoon I'll be addressing a small audience at a church on Tacoma's South 56th Street where I've hung 33 canvases and panels. Most are small oils, but I have some larger canvases that I began painting last summer.
My topic is listed as something about plein air painting as a path to spiritual peace and enlightenment.
How about plein air painting as a path to constant challenge and frustration?
This fog will burn off by early afternoon. Brilliant yellows from a low-hung sun will light the tree barks beneath a too-cerulean blue sky. And I won't paint any of them, either.
An all-white bulk carrier ship, waiting for a berth at the Ruston Way grain terminal, anchored off Point Ruston's Copperline Condos last week. After a late lunch at the Antique Sandwich Co. on North Pearl Street, I drove the Artmobile down the hill and found a parking spot in front of the new movie house. I loaded my paints, easel and canvas onto the collapsible stroller that is my sidewalk kit, and wheeled it around to the Waterwalk. I set up the easel, my work table, loaded up the canvas--and took them all right back to the van. Forty degrees, and a brisk north wind seemed just too damned plein air for acrylics, and for me.
It didn't help that the ship swung end-to-end while I was setting up. This constant see-saw of my subject between the wind and the tide plaqued me all last winter, when I was painting oils of the container ships idled by the longshore slowdown. It wasn't until I began framing those pochades for my show at Cafe Brosseau last fall that I realized I had painted some 20 of them. Photographs taken of me by passing strollers show me bundled up like a Santa pack, with rocks suspended from the paintbox tripod to keep it steady against that wind.
Tomorrow afternoon I'll be addressing a small audience at a church on Tacoma's South 56th Street where I've hung 33 canvases and panels. Most are small oils, but I have some larger canvases that I began painting last summer.
My topic is listed as something about plein air painting as a path to spiritual peace and enlightenment.
How about plein air painting as a path to constant challenge and frustration?
Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Home from the Old Country
Friend Gary joined me this morning at the Treo's coffee house in Tacoma's Old Town. Rain whispered on the rooftops. A flat, gray sheen of water to the north lay beneath a flat, gray sky. Not a boat was visible from North 30th Street.
Gary had returned this week from an extended visit to family in Geneva, Switzerland. He brought with him to our weekly show-and-tell two small notebooks of pen-and-wash sketches. Each painting was exquisite. Every one brought an aging, urban landscape to life.
Gary is an architect. His eye and pen captured details that, otherwise unnoted, contribute to an overall statement of sometimes recent and sometimes old construction that reflects Geneva's centuries of established beauty.
He is no stranger to freehand drawing but relatively new to plein air sketching and watercolor painting. He works from a small pocketbook that carries his watercolor-paper notebooks, his india-ink drawing pens, brushes and a small tray of watercolor pans.
Plein air artists work fast in any clime--but Geneva in winter--despite this month's Indian summer there--dictates rapid sketching, rapid painting. Despite this enforced haste, Gary has captured Geneva with bold lines and sensitive washes that provide an illusion of detail and completeness.
I can't wait until he turns his educated eye upon Tacoma!
Gary had returned this week from an extended visit to family in Geneva, Switzerland. He brought with him to our weekly show-and-tell two small notebooks of pen-and-wash sketches. Each painting was exquisite. Every one brought an aging, urban landscape to life.
Gary is an architect. His eye and pen captured details that, otherwise unnoted, contribute to an overall statement of sometimes recent and sometimes old construction that reflects Geneva's centuries of established beauty.
He is no stranger to freehand drawing but relatively new to plein air sketching and watercolor painting. He works from a small pocketbook that carries his watercolor-paper notebooks, his india-ink drawing pens, brushes and a small tray of watercolor pans.
Plein air artists work fast in any clime--but Geneva in winter--despite this month's Indian summer there--dictates rapid sketching, rapid painting. Despite this enforced haste, Gary has captured Geneva with bold lines and sensitive washes that provide an illusion of detail and completeness.
I can't wait until he turns his educated eye upon Tacoma!
Saturday, March 21, 2015
Painting in the plein air rain
A drumming downpour on the roof the the Nature Center at the Nisqually Wildlife Refuge this spring morning surely was the last gasp of a fast-moving weather system. Gray sky couldn't make me believe that sunshine wasn't far behind. After eight decades, a guy has to know something about weather patterns, right? And sure enough, the pounding on the shakes eased up into a misting drizzle.
So Allan Dreyer and I left the company of the Washington Plein Air artists who were setting up to paint a quite-adequate scene of willow-lined wetlands and noodling mallards at the Center. With art-making materials to hand, we trudged out along the boardwalk for the covered watchtower that overlooked the broad estuary. Allan was to sketch, but I had acquired a 12-by-48-inch canvas that was absolutely made for the horizontal compositions of that scene. With fast-drying acrylic paint and a 1-inch brush, I was certain to create a masterful, impressionist souvenir of this day.
As we moved along the glistening planks, I was overjoyed to see the subtle greens and browns through the leafless trees. The defused morning light from the low-hanging cloud cover brought out colors that are all but invisible in the dark shadows of summer. I looked forward to slapping paint when we reached the shelter.
Allan is a lifelong man of the mountains. His sure-footed steps set a rhythm that I hard time matching, although he is much older than me--by some 14 months. His pace would eat up the few miles to the estuary and we would be there in no apparent time at all.
As I struggled to keep up with his red jacket, I noticed that puddles were splashing higher from his weathered mountain boots. And water was dripping heavily from the brim of my stylish woolen hat. Hell, it was raining again!
We left the company of the alder and cottonwood and trekked out along the graveled dike. Two Canada geese on the trail ahead watched our approach. They goose-steeped down the berm toward the water. We kept on.
The watchtower was in sight, barely defined through the now-heavy rainfall. A half-mile to go? A mile? Allan, a keen judge of distance from his years as a forest ranger, fire-fighter and national-park volunteer, stopped. He turned. "Too wet," he announced. And headed back. For the first time, I was ahead of him!
We all but loped past the plein air painters crouched behind their easels beneath the Nature Center's roof. I opened the doors of the van. We tossed our sodden packs and coats in the back. In 10 minutes we were at Norma's Breakfast Grille.in nearby Nisqually, warming our hands on cups of coffee and a light brunch.
And came outside a half-hour later to cerulean- blue skies and marshmallow clouds.
When things dry out--say, in mid-August--we'll be back.
So Allan Dreyer and I left the company of the Washington Plein Air artists who were setting up to paint a quite-adequate scene of willow-lined wetlands and noodling mallards at the Center. With art-making materials to hand, we trudged out along the boardwalk for the covered watchtower that overlooked the broad estuary. Allan was to sketch, but I had acquired a 12-by-48-inch canvas that was absolutely made for the horizontal compositions of that scene. With fast-drying acrylic paint and a 1-inch brush, I was certain to create a masterful, impressionist souvenir of this day.
As we moved along the glistening planks, I was overjoyed to see the subtle greens and browns through the leafless trees. The defused morning light from the low-hanging cloud cover brought out colors that are all but invisible in the dark shadows of summer. I looked forward to slapping paint when we reached the shelter.
Allan is a lifelong man of the mountains. His sure-footed steps set a rhythm that I hard time matching, although he is much older than me--by some 14 months. His pace would eat up the few miles to the estuary and we would be there in no apparent time at all.
As I struggled to keep up with his red jacket, I noticed that puddles were splashing higher from his weathered mountain boots. And water was dripping heavily from the brim of my stylish woolen hat. Hell, it was raining again!
We left the company of the alder and cottonwood and trekked out along the graveled dike. Two Canada geese on the trail ahead watched our approach. They goose-steeped down the berm toward the water. We kept on.
The watchtower was in sight, barely defined through the now-heavy rainfall. A half-mile to go? A mile? Allan, a keen judge of distance from his years as a forest ranger, fire-fighter and national-park volunteer, stopped. He turned. "Too wet," he announced. And headed back. For the first time, I was ahead of him!
We all but loped past the plein air painters crouched behind their easels beneath the Nature Center's roof. I opened the doors of the van. We tossed our sodden packs and coats in the back. In 10 minutes we were at Norma's Breakfast Grille.in nearby Nisqually, warming our hands on cups of coffee and a light brunch.
And came outside a half-hour later to cerulean- blue skies and marshmallow clouds.
When things dry out--say, in mid-August--we'll be back.