Home >
2007 > July
by RR Jr on July 31, 2007

Riverwinds Gallery has placed an advertisement in the July/August 2007 issue of InsideOut Hudson Valley magazine featuring one of my images “Highlands Sunset”. Considering they told me it was the most expensive ad they’ve ever placed, and the wide range of art and artists they had to choose from, I was quite honored and appreciative of their selection. The issue also contains a great article on Beacon’s renaissance, including an interview with Pete Seeger, musician and activist who lives here in Beacon. You can read the entire article on the BACA website.
Home >
2007 > July
by RR Jr on July 30, 2007
The Summer 2007 newsletter has been emailed to all of the subscribers and is now online. It contains info on upcoming art shows and exhibitions, image info, and other exciting news. You can find it and all past newsletter at the archive. Thanks to everyone who has subscribed, and if you haven’t, what are you waiting for? Subscribe here!
Home >
2007 > July
by RR Jr on July 19, 2007

I spent the weekend in the Catskill Mountains, visiting many of the same scenes and locations made famous in the middle of the nineteenth century by the painters of the Hudson River School. Painters such as Thomas Cole, Asher B. Durand, Federic Church, and Albert Bierstadt drew inspiration from this popular region, and their landscape paintings depicteing the beauty of light and color were unlike anything ever seen before. I visited the site of the famous Catskill Mountain House, now a national landmark, and hiked the Escarpment trail to famous landmarks such as Artist Rock and Sunset Rock.
Though I followed my regular practice of scouting locations and hitting the trails well before sunrise, I didn’t have much success creating images that were compelling to me. A combination of cloudless skies, lack of familiarity with the area, and bad timing didn’t provide the conditions that I seek out in a dramatic scene. Usually when this happens, I don’t get discouraged, but rather focus on the “intimate” landscape, and try to capture the small features of nature that we often literally step over without taking notice. On the last morning shoot, I hike to the summit of Plateau Mountain, a very strenuous climb gaining 1600 feet in about 1 mile. Once I caught my breath, I found myself in a beautiful coniferous forest reminiscent of coastal Maine. Focusing on the forest floor, I was inspired by all of the color and texture, and made this image which I felt conveyed the “feel” of this unique area. It reminds me that looking within the landscape can be just as interesting as the grand view, and provides an opportunity to push myself creatively.