Friday, November 11, 2016

AT THE NEVADA NORTHERN RAILROAD MUSEUM

Nevada Northern Railroad, Ely, NV, 10 x 9 inch ink and watercolor by George C. Clark    AVAILABLE

When I was out in Las Vegas a little over a month ago for the opening of the American Society of Railway Artists Exhibition I had a chance to drive up to Ely in central Nevada to see the remarkable Nevada Northern Railroad Museum which preserves an entire working railroad that served a big copper mine from the early 20th century until the mine closed in 1984.  This is one of my drawn on-site sketches.

Saturday, October 29, 2016

POND AT THE BIRD SANCTUARY

Pond at the Bird Sanctuary, 9.5 x 13.5 inch ink drawing by George C. Clark    AVAILABLE



Monday, October 17, 2016

MY LANDSCAPES AT DANON GALLERY IN EVANSTON OPENING OCTOBER 20, 2016

High Ground, 38 x 50 inch acrylic on canvas painting by George C. Clark    SOLD

Damon Gallery, 1810 CentralStreet (just east of Green Bay Road), Evanston, IL 60201 will present an exhibition featuring the work of George C. Clark, Mark McMahon and John Downs opening with an artists' reception Thursday, October 20 from 6:00 to 9:00pm.  There will be refreshments and live music.  The show will be up for about 3 weeks.  Call (847) 899-7758 for gallery hours.
All three artists have been official artists for the United States Air Force Art Program.  I will be showing mostly work from my "Traveler's Sketchbook" series of on-site travel watercolors. 

Friday, October 14, 2016

BLACKROCK SUMMIT IN "LATER IMPRESSIONS" EXHIBITION AT EVANSTON ART CENTER

Blackrock Summit, Shenandoah National Park, 14.5 x 10.5 inch ink & watercolor by George C. Clark   AVAILABLE


My painting of this view from the Appalachian Trail I painted last Spring will be on display in the Chicago Alliance of Visual Artists' LATER IMPRESSIONS exhibition at Evanston Art Center, 1717 Central Street, Evanston, IL 60201.  Everyone is invited to the Opening Reception on Sunday, October 16, 2016 from 1 to 4pm.  The show will run through November 9.  Gallery hours are Monday through Thursday 9am to 9pm, Friday 9am to 5pm, and Saturday and Sunday 9am to 4pm.




Friday, September 23, 2016

SANTA FE NO. 92 IN THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF RAILWAY ARTISTS NATIONAL EXHIBITION IN LAS VEGAS

Santa Fe No. 92, 15 x 10 inch ink and watercolor painting by George C. Clark    AVAILABLE


My painting of Santa Fe No. 92 in "warbonnet" paint at the Illinois Railway Museum is included in the national ASRA artists' exhibition in the Big Springs Gallery at the Springs Preserve in Las Vegas, Nevada, that will be on view from September 30, 2016 through January 8, 2017.  The gallery is open every day from 10:00am to 6:00pm.  The Springs Preserve is a 180 acre site that includes the Nevada State Museum, the Origen Museum (of Natural History), a Botanic Garden, hiking trails and other attractions.  There is an admission fee to enter the Preserve.

Sunday, July 24, 2016

IN THE BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAINS OF VIRGINIA

Blackrock Summit, Shenandoah National Park, Virginia, 14.5 x 10.5 ink and watercolor by George C, Clark   AVAILABLE

Here is the finished painting I was working on along the Appalachian Trail in Virginia in the previous post.


Friday, June 3, 2016

DRAWING ON THE APPALACHIAN TRAIL

On the Appalachian Trail                     photo by Patricia Clark

We are just back from a road trip to North Carolina and Virginia, and the places between there and Chicago.  Here I am drawing on the Appalachian Trail in the Shenandoah National Park in Virginia.  I only hiked the mile or so out and back to Blackrock Summit from the Blue Ridge Parkway.  I am doing an on-site ink drawing to which I will add watercolor in my home studio.  I'll post the ink and watercolor painting here when it is finished.

Friday, April 15, 2016

WALCHENSEE OR KOCHELSEE?

Walchensee Landscape, 51 x 61 cm watercolor and gouache by Lovis Corinth

Kochelsee in the Rain, 12 x 16 inch watercolor and gouache by George C. Clark    AVAILABLE

I was looking at pictures in my catalog from the big Lovis Corinth exhibition that appeared in museums in Munich, Berlin, Saint Louis and London in 1996-7 when I noticed something that hadn't registered with me on many earlier studies of that book.  On page 355 a watercolor landscape is reproduced that was signed by Corinth, inscribed "Walchensee," and dated August 1924.  However, I am almost certain that the lake depicted is not in fact the Walchensee but the nearby Kochelsee.   And the reason I know this is because I painted that same lake from almost the same point of view on a visit to Germany some years ago.

We had flown into Munich and rented a car to explore southern Germany.  We visited a couple of Mad King Ludwig's castles and then headed for what I considered Corinth Country.  Corinth has been a favorite painter of mine since I discovered his work in a wonderful big book edited by his widow that I found in the art books department of Kroch's and Brentano's while I was in art school in the 1960s.  That book cost $180.  There was no way I could afford to buy it, but I spent a lot of time looking at it in the store.  The man who ran the art department was very tolerant of poor art students.  I think he suspected that some day I would be an art book collector and a good customer.  Thank you, Henry.  In 1998 the U.S. Air Force Art Program flew me to Frankfurt to attend the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Berlin Air Lift and I found a new reprint edition of Charlotte Berend-Corinth's 1958 book Lovis Corinth that I bought.  

Toward the end of World War I Corinth started spending his summers in the alpine lakes region of southern Bavaria.  In 1919 he built a house in the village of Urfeld on the shore of the Walchensee and spent increasing amounts of time there each year until his death in 1925.  His "Walchensee" paintings proved very popular with collectors and he painted a lot of them, some from his own property overlooking the lake, and some from other vantage points in the area.  I based myself in the larger town of Rottach-Egern nearby and spent a full day poking around the places Corinth lived and worked.   I drove around the lakes and explored the little lakeside villages.   It was raining when I pulled off the road at a scenic overlook and painted the watercolor posted above.  I sat in the passenger seat of my rented Volkswagen Golf with my watercolor block on my lap and the paints on the open door of the glove compartment.  I had no idea at the time that my painting idol had painted almost the same view decades earlier, although on a sunny day.  

Why did he inscribe his painting Walchensee and not Kochelsee?  I figure he either forgot which exact body of water he had depicted when he was signing his work perhaps weeks later, or he was using Walchensee as a blanket description for all the locations he painted while living at his house on that lake.  That view overlooking Kochelsee is only about 3 kilometers from his house, after all.       

Thursday, March 31, 2016

SAILING SCHOOL DOCK, WILMETTE HARBOR

Sailing School Dock, Wilmette Harbor, 16 x 12 inch watercolor by George C. Clark   SOLD

Wilmette is a suburb north of Chicago on Lake Michigan.

Friday, February 5, 2016

THE LAST TOMATO IN PAT'S GARDEN

The Last Tomato in Pat's Garden, 12 x 16 inch watercolor by George C. Clark    SOLD

Whenever I do a a "Traveler's Sketchbook" exhibition like the recent one at Beverly Arts Center I describe the subjects as "ranging from the artist's own Chicago backyard to the back roads of Europe."  Here is a painting from my back yard.  I painted it late in the season when the climbing beans had gone crazy and there was a single tomato still ripening.  I asked my wife to leave some of her tools out so that they could be in the picture.