Small paintings from the Inland Northwest and beyond    |  H o m e    |   W e b s i t e
Showing posts with label pendleton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pendleton. Show all posts

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Hillside Snow

Hillside Snow - Oil on linen panel - 5x7

Click to Bid

More snowy scenes, I thought the pines on the hillside were very elegant. 

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Winters Breath

Winters Breath - Oil on Linen Panel - 5x7

Click to Bid

One of the fun things about taking reference photos from the car is you can get so many angles on a scene. This is the same fence as the last painting, but from the opposite side. There's nothing like a nice fence to spice up a composition!

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Follow the Fence Line - Oil painting

Follow the Fence Line - Oil on Linen Panel - 5x7 

Click to Bid

There's something magical about the way a snowstorm simplifies a landscape. What was a tangle of native bunchgrass and cheat grass suddenly becomes only a white and yellow pattern, dotted with red willows and the wandering fencle lines. And of course, while driving through this magical scene I could enjoy it properly because my husband was handling the icy roads!

Monday, January 5, 2015

In the Trees

In the Trees - Oil on linen panel - 5x7

Click to Bid

I've been going through photos taken over the past couple months and found a series that really grabbed me. They were taken outside of Pendleton, Oregon, near and on Cabbage Hill, also called Deadmans Pass. While the pass was named for a group of emigrants killed by natives while traveling the area, the name is also fitting because of how dangerous the road is during the winter; Cabbage was notoriously treacherous even when traveled by wagon as part of the Oregon Trail.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Windswept Farmland

Windswept Farmland - 6x6 - Oil on Gessobord
Click to BidI saw this scene many weeks ago while driving on the Umatilla Indian Reservation just east of Pendleton, Oregon. At this slight hillside you could see for what seemed like forever as the farmlands rolled on and on! But what I really loved were the big billowing clouds rolling overhead in the wind.