Half the job of any artist is finding what you like to
paint. I don’t know why but I’m drawn to images of western landscapes and old stuff left behind.
Machines, buildings, signs, parts of small towns that once were thriving and
offering promising futures but in a relatively short time have outlived their
usefulness.
Telephone wires, Ore carts, two lane highways, travel
trailers, railroad tracks and windmills pumping water into rural tanks all tell
of a time when innovation inspired people to change, to move, and to grow.
Because America is such a young country, our history can often times be read in
the stone foundations, roadside signs and abandoned cars and trucks in
overgrown fields.
The world marches by and things once new and important are
now ignored and left behind to weather and slowly become part of a faded
landscape unnoticed by the modern eye. There are lots of places like that along
the business loops on Route 66 and in the remote small towns where I like to
drive and live.
I also enjoy creating contemporary landscapes by digitally
"airbrushing" landscape scenes of the southwest. Since I enjoy
traveling to out-of-the-way places that don't always have their own travel
posters, I have found my niche by creating these imaginary posters for these
very real destinations.
