Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Great Camp Sagamore, Blue Mountain Lake, 2014 New York Plein Air Painters Retreat

Ten artists and one spouse who was a photographer attended this years retreat at Great Camp Sagamore near Raquette Lake in the Adirondacks. It's nice to have all your meals prepared and be able to get right back to where you had left your easel set up and continue painting. One day was pack you own lunch from well supplied options and I used that day to travel about 16 miles to Blue Mountain Lake and paint the view from the observation deck, high up at the Adirondack Museum.  About a month before the retreat I saw a PBS TV show on the Raquette River which featured a view of lake from the observation deck and I emailed the Museum to get permission to paint the view (after paying admission of course).
Lake Sagamore Exploration Tools
 The Raquette River is the third longest in New York Sate (146 miles,235 km), the Hudson being the longest.Historically, the river was a part of the "Highway of the Adirondacks", by which it was possible to travel hundreds of miles by canoe or guide boat with short stretches of portage connecting various waterways. This route is still followed by the Northern Forest Canoe Trail, a 740-mile (1,190 km) canoe trail from Old Forge to Fort Kent in Maine. It is also the basis of the route of the Adirondack Canoe Classic, a three-day, 90-mile canoe race from Old Forge to Saranac Lake. Blue Mountain Lake is one of the lakes in the River's Chain which eventually enters the St Lawrence Rive near Massena at the Mohawk Nation of Akwesasne .
My favorite painting below is of Blue Mountain Lake (11 x 14 oil on stretched linen). At 10:30 AM when I set up the sun was out and roasting me in my wool shirt.About 11 AM it clouded over and stayed that way. This gave me about four hours without the light changing too much. I captured  the land and  reflections values in a burnt sienna under painting  quickly and  then worked on the detail. The 
Blue Mountain Lake
canoe rack above has a sign "Use by Permission Only" and also has a couple paddle boards (12 x 9 inch oil on linen panel).
The Boat house below  has two row boats, multiple aluminum canoes, and some kayaks that you just sign out  and in on your own. Personal flotation devices and paddles of all sizes are available. (10 x 8 oil on linen panel) Prevailing winds are away from the Boathouse so the paddle back is a little longer-don't be late for dinner!
The Lake Outflow is just below the Boathouse.
The afternoon light (4 pm Sept.) is shut off by the trees along the stream while the sun still illuminates the Lake. This is an 11 x 15 watercolor and pen. It was started 4 pm Monday afternoon  with watercolor washes. Tuesday afternoon the ink drawing was superimposed followed by more watercolor. Back home after the trip I put a final wash on the stream and lifted the lights on the rocks.
Sagamore Lake Outflow

Great Camp Sagamore Boathouse

Friday, September 5, 2014

Painting In The Adirondack Plein Air Festival, Saranac Lake NY

Saranac River Permanent Rapids

Black Pond Inlet

Fast Water Saranac River
 The 2014 event had about 80 artists registered, not all of whom displayed for the competition. There were a great many accomplished painters and some advant garde work on display, also,"how could it be plein air if you spent 26 hours on it and it looks like a photo". No one in our group of five from PAPTIR were award winners  or enjoyed a lot of sales success. The event seemed to drain our energy and part of that was having to have your framed paintings in by 9 to 10 am Sunday instead of the past 10 to 11- perhaps because of the record number of artists. It's hard to finish framing, photograph your painting (in case it sells), pack up your suitcase, and leave the rental in decent shape to rescue your security deposit, drive 10 miles, find a parking space, and lug your paintings to the City hall- so early.Yet is is always warming to see painting friends from around New York State and elsewhere and their works displayed on the racks. Of course, only the award winners, agree with the judges choices. In spite of  the litany of text book criteria the judges express as utilized in the process- it all comes down to subjectivity, and the wise let it go at that. On the top left is a 16 x 12 inch oil on linen, Saranac River Permanent Rapids. This section of the Saranac is about 6 miles on River Road from Bloomingdale. For kayaks it is class 3 rapids. It was fun painting it and comfortable in the shade on the bank with a nice breeze. On the top right is Black Pond Inlet, 14 x 11 inch oil on linen. It is located on Keese Mill Road at the back end of Paul Smith's Visitor Interpretation Center (VIC). The VIC is acres of marshes, ponds, trails, streams, used in Paul Smith's College degree programs for Forestry and related disciplines. I painted a 12 x 9 inch version of the same scene (with the large pitcher plant on the foreground log) in the 2013 event and went back to paint it again. The 9 x 12 version was one of two paintings I had hanging in the VIC Plein Air Invitational Show 7/26-8/28. Friday evening at a painters barbecue at the VIC I learned that it had sold to someone from Erie PA.
All of the pieces in the show were done "en plein air" at the VIC.  Eleven artists displayed 21 works.  
Lake Clear Carpenter Road
    The 9 x 12 oil, Fast Water Saranac River, is a painting knife on a linen panel. Painted another late afternoon at the same spot on Permanent Rapids again in the shade in a bug-less breeze. To the right, Lake Clear Carpenter Road, is on the way to our rental camp on Lake Clear. I made a studio painting out of the plein air as I repainted the road and the dappled light. My original road looked like a set of stairs with alternating light and dark strips. Must have been the relentless mosquitoes in the woods. I had loaned my bug spray to the man an woman returning down the hill from a walk with their little dogs. It was quite a challenging hilly, curvy, and bumpy road in sections down to a "Hole in The Woods", which was the Carpenter family original name for the road. This was the only section that was a Birch tree forest.
Looking forward to the 2015 event and have already reserved  the camp we had in 2013.