Deep Winter

I have a deep dark secret: I enjoy suffering. It’s taken me years to realize this, but there it is. The worse the weather, the happier I am. Here is a fine example:

Drifted Over

The sun is now shining, but notice my paint box. It has drifted over in the two hours since I set up. I could only paint facing east, with my back to the wind and my tripod set into the bullet hard drift. It’s just stupid not to give up and go home! But here’s the portrait of a happy fool after a painting session:

Happy Painter

I don’t think it’s some cheap Hemingway man’s man great-white-hunter crap that makes me so happy. I don’t feel at all like I wrestled nature and won. I just showed up and, as Robert Frost said, “that made all the difference.” It’s not merely nature that I’m after, it’s what happens in nature:

ground-blizzards.jpg

I look at this picture and I can hear the wind ripping through the willows and pushing me up off of my heels. I can remember ground blizzards blowing snow into the paint and turning it the consistency of frosting. Occasionally the entire landscape would be whipped into a white nothing, and I’d just wait for the snow to blow through. Can I mix an intensely personal experience into reds and blues? Can I describe the feel of January wind and the thrill of watching a snow devil spin a path across the hillside with a brush? Hardly. But what a privilege it is to try:

January Squall

“January Squall”
9×12. Oil.

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2 Responses to "Deep Winter"

  1. Man, you get first prize for standing there in all that. And you got a great painting out of it too.
    If you had not pointed out the paint box under the snow, I would not have even seen it.

  2. Hi Aaron,
    So good to see your website, it is a stunning echo of your elegant and profound paintings. I loved seeing your approach to family, art, and the transcendent nature of human contact with wilderness, with each other.
    Wanted to keep in touch with you, and have followed your work from afar. I’m currently in the Netherlands for a brief time on a research gig regarding forgiveness and servant leadership, and couldn’t get your email to come up. Sorry to bog down the blog, but wanted to comment here also of the joy your paintings bring me, having grown up in Paradise Valley. Your respect for light, power, and mystery encourage me in my own art (fiction, poetry). All the best to you in your fine work!
    Shann

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