I used my plot camera to capture a video of the wind storm yesterday.
Wind Damage
Yesterday I spent the most part of the day in 99 degree heat and 60 mph wind working on larger paintings. At about 4 pm gusts were getting stronger and blowing my brushes and paints off the table so I hurried to shut down the summer studio. Just as I was finished moving inside a huge dust devil came accross the air strip and into the CLUI yard taking out the studio and the fence. The painting in progress below was blown 25 yards down the road. Shelby was caught naked emerging from a cold plunge and was pelted with gravel. Both Shelby and my paintings survived with out serious damage. When the wind stops in a few days we will rebuild (and secure) the studio and the fence.
Field Drawings
Here are a few examples of some quick field drawings I have produced since I have been here in the Wendover area. Some of them will be developed into larger oil paintings, but mostly are just visual records for myself.
David Heads Home
Today I began packing to head home tomorrow, I feel like I am at a good stopping point with my work where I can easily pick up where I left off when I’m back in Laramie. Ultimately, we will continue to update this blog as we keep working on the work well after leaving Wendover. The end result of the postings and the project as a whole will be an exhibition of our work – hopefully at several venues.
I have to say that I feel like this residency has been very beneficial to my studio practice as well as productive and necessary. I have enjoyed my time just making do here in the studio “Gilligan’s Island Style” with what I have on hand and what I could find (even though there were a few trips to the hardware store). For example, all of the framing for the walls, the siding for the building, and the tower structure were made from strips ripped out of just four 2′ x 4′s. It’s safe to say with this project I became one with the table saw and brad nailer.
After I get back I’d like to resume work on the trailer in my studio at home where I can spend some time looking at it on a clean wall and consider how to finish the composition. Also I’m eager to get back to fabricating the steel components of the tower. I look forward to seeing what Pat and Shelby are up to with the rest of their time on this blog, I know Pat recieved approval to go into a goldmine later this week so I’m eager to see what comes out of that. Shelby has been getting some really nice photos with his game camera as well.
I’d like to conclude this posting by giving a special thank you to Matthew Coolidge for letting us do this. Matt was instumental in getting all of this in Wendover as well as the Center For Land Use Interpretation started. To the best of my knowledge there are at least five other centers in addition to Wendover through out the U.S. and the open ended scope of the work that has come out of these programs has been amazing. I highly reccomend that you at least check this place out - there’s nowhere else like it.
Flavin’s Flavin / Carnitas
Moving Along
Still working on the set and trailer, these are some detail shots taken by my friend Anthony Teneralli. I have really been getting into the surfaces of the objects as well as their finishes, for example a made a “etching pit” out in the yard using a hole, plastic sheeting, muriatic acid, and water to achieve the finish on the metal roof pictured. At this point I have to start thinking about what and how to wrap things up as I get ready to leave on Tuesday. The great thing about my time here is that I feel like I could easily pull two years of work out of this experience-it has been well worth the effort and time that went into the planning to pul this off.
























