Arboreal

Ann Lofquist, Alamo Creek Lower Grove, South View, oil 4.75x18 in.

Ann Lofquist, Alamo Creek Lower Grove, South View, oil 4.75x18 in.

January 17 through March 15, 2020

Records of history and hope for the future of our planet, trees are also a source of inspiration for our Gallery artists.

Drawings of bare trees composed of delicate lines hang on our gallery wall next to works composed of washes, tendrils, and strips of paint that form full foliage canopies. When featured alone, a single tree becomes an intimate portrait. Gathered in forests, copses, and on ridge lines, trees form tableaux vivants that satisfy our desire to anthropomorphize.

Tree trunks are nature's vertical stripes: painters use them to break up a canvas or frame a scene. Fading into the distance, they pierce the sky. Their rhythm upholds the canopy creating an irregular horizon that moves to a distant vanishing point. Trees are an invitation to abstraction, allowing our artists to visualize alien forms in their scraggly limbs and leaf patterns.

For our Gallery landscape painters, whether realist or tending toward decoration or abstraction, trees supply creative oxygen.

Marcia Burtt, Morning Light, Palms & Eucalyptus, acrylic, 10x18 in.

Marcia Burtt, Morning Light, Palms & Eucalyptus, acrylic, 10x18 in.

Randal David Tipton, The Mountain from the Train, watercolor, 14x11 in.

Randal David Tipton, The Mountain from the Train, watercolor, 14x11 in.

Marcia Burtt Gallery