California Dreamin’

January 1 will mark the 20th anniversary of my arrival in California. This New Yorker had trouble adjusting at first: roses in January? green hills in winter and brown hills in summer? It was a very different world than I was used to.

What made me finally fully appreciate my new state was a long slow bike ride. The 1999 AIDS Ride took me (and several thousand other bikers) through miles of rolling golden hills and steep valleys and dramatic coastline. I especially fell in love with the tawny hills – the shapes, the contours, the lonely oaks casting a circle of shade!

I’m not doing long-distance biking any more – I’ve replaced that with an even slower mode, long-distance hiking – but I still love exploring the small less-trafficked roads of California. And I’ve started a series of prints celebrating them.

I began with I-5. Not that the Interstate is small or has little traffic! But I love its wide horizontal views, and the odd human constructions that cross or follow it: the aqueducts and high-tension wires.
I-5, CA
I-5, CA

Next up was a favorite turn of road in Napa, on Hwy 29. As you leave Napa, just after the road to Sonoma, the road curves to the left, and there is a vineyard and a line of eucalyptus trees in front of you. The land lies low beyond, so the trees are silhouetted against the sky creating a beautiful pattern of positive and negative space.
SR29, Napa
SR29, Napa

Closer to home, just north of Davenport, Big Basin State Park meets the ocean where Waddell Creek empties into the sea. Dramatic cliffs tower over the highway, and there are usually para-surfers and hang gliders taking advantage of the upward wind drafts. It’s big and bold and beautiful and kind of quintessentially California. It’s also one of our favorite beaches for walks and treasure hunting.
SR1, Waddell Creek
SR1, Waddell Creek

The newest highway print celebrates my new home town of Watsonville. If the midwest is the breadbasket of the world, Watsonville is the berry basket. Field upon field of strawberries, raspberries, and boysenberries climb the hills that surround the valley. Often the berries are protected from the intense sun by large tents, similar in shape to old Quonset huts. And rows of corn or sunflowers act as windbreaks for the berries and for the workers who labor under the tents.
SR129, Watsonville
SR129, Watsonville

These prints are small, 4″ by 6″, and done quickly. I want the cumulative effect to be that of a sketchbook – quick notes of a specific place and time. I’m looking forward to my next road trip and the chance to make another California print.

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Our Lady of the Redwoods

Our Lady of the Redwoods is a print I was hoping to have ready for the Open Studios Art Tour last year – but here it is, ready for this year’s Open Studios instead. I like the idea of local deities who live in the rocks and rivers and everyday places, and combined that idea with an image of the virgin and child.

The moment of truth, pulling the paper off the block for the first time.
The moment of truth

So far so good…
So far so good

And hooray! The print is just fine. 🙂
Our Lady of the Redwoods

This will be my selection at the Open Studios Preview Exhibit at the Santa Cruz Art League. I bought the frame today; now I just have to let it dry and put it all together.

Our Lady of the Redwoods is 24″ tall by 5″ wide. I’m finishing up a companion piece, Our Lady of the Slough, and hope to have that done for Open Studios as well.
Press and print

Open Studios will be held on October 4 & 5 and October 18 & 19. I’m in Watsonville now; come see my new digs!

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