Word

I took a painting class once, in college. It was when I was at Bennington. This was an “Introduction to Painting” class and the other students, like myself, were not art majors and had little previous experience drawing or painting. The teacher wanted us to learn about light. She started us working with charcoal on rough white drawing paper. We were to draw trees with special attention to shadows and light. She made us notice the way the bark was rough and mottled with shades of gray and brown on the side where the sun fell upon it, but was just a flat black surface on the shaded side. She set up still-life arrangements in the studio. A clear vase, a couple of green pears, a white bowl on a bunched-up red velvety cloth draped across a table. She shone a light on the tableau and had us just use charcoal and chalk to draw the scene. She wanted us to notice the shapes and patterns, but most of all she wanted us to be aware of light. It seemed to be the most important, the most fundamental thing in painting.

Horses, Snow, Sky

I have been really tied up in this book but am almost finished! Haven’t had much time to blog, but here are some photos.
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I’ve said it before, but I must say again that I love the light in winter. Everywhere there are my favorite shades of white and gray and the entire spectrum of blue. I think I have the opposite of Seasonal Affective Disorder, which makes some people depressed in winter. I feel so much energy when it’s bright and white like this. In the summer, the light seems thin and filtered and it’s so effing hot! That’s when I’m S.A.D.
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Bleakness

You know how yesterday I was blathering on about all the abundant color and brilliant light that abounds here in Connecticut this time of year?

This is what today looked like. It’s not a black and white photo. It’s an untouched color photo of the view from my kitchen:
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It was grey. In places where there were no trees or buildings, the ground and the sky were the exact same shade of grey and the horizon was lost. It wasn’t raining, nor exactly snowing. It was what the local weather men like to call a “wintery mix,” which sounds like a CD or a can of nuts, but it’s really just slush falling from the sky

Winter Colors

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I don’t know why the words “bleak” and “dark” are so often used to describe the winter, here in New England. Where I live, it’s the most colorful and brilliant time of year, especially during a winter like this, where we’ve had snow on the ground for what seems like months.
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Country Living

I know I spend a lot of time on this blog griping about country life, but in all honesty I love where I live. Today, I had to go into the city, and on the way home I was feeling very melancholy (because I’m perverse and deranged, nobody as blessed and lucky as me should ever be sad but there you have it) but as soon as I reached this bridge, I felt better, as I always do.
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Ode to Autumn

We’re having such a beautiful fall in New England. The trees have never been more brilliant, everybody around here agrees. Was planning to go out and take some photos for my blog but realize that nobody wants to see another foliage shot. So I decided, instead to post John Keats’, Ode to Autumn, which I learned recently was the last poem he ever wrote. It’s a beautiful poem, and maybe because when I read it this time, knowing he was soon to die, it seemed to be a little sad and foreboding. There’s all this abundance and ripe beauty, but the gathering swallows give me a chill.