We are into the summer "monsoon" season which brings afternoon and
evening rains to Colorado. This can be trouble for evening painters but
if you are patient sometimes the sky will break apart with amazing late
light effects.
On this Tuesday night our class met north of town,
in what used to be a dairy. This spot has given me great long view
paintings of Mt. Blanca and in the other direction, flaming sunsets over
the San Juans.
One thing we have observed about early evening painting
tho', the sun seems to linger high in the sky - so it can be difficult to
anticipate just WHAT the light will do as the sun sets and where the best scenes will
be. We stare into the sun, block in landscape shapes, it feels hot like
high noon, then bam - the sun drops suddenly, daylight vanishes and you
are caught trying to frantically capture the most fleeting light.
This evening was just like that. Rain had come and gone all afternoon and clouds flew around the sky. Here Lara and Judith struggle with glaring afternoon sun while trying to make decisions about how to proceed.
Richard and I set up looking west to the horizon where a bank of clouds sat blocking any sky. It was a gamble but I was just betting that the sky would break apart, lighting up the clouds for a nice sunset - and it did. As it turned out tho'- the best stuff was going on in other parts of the sky: rich alpen glo on Mt. Blanca, virgas that looked like fire falling from the clouds and distant thunder heads catching light from a sun long set. It was one of the most beautiful evenings - ever-
an unfolding drama that just got better and better. Painting aside, I was thrilled just to be out to enjoy it.
On the bottom is my piece from the evening.
2 comments:
The sky was unbelievably dynamic that night! Your painting beautifully conveys the glowing, rich colors of that unforgettable sunset! Hope we have some more like that :-)
Judith
Thanks Judith;
and let's keep our fingers crossed- for good weather.
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