
Paintings and Prints available
4/30/07
4/19/07
Eagle study, 16x20, watercolor

I spent the day studying the eagle family on the Sanpoil.
After about 4 hours one of the adults arrived with Junior, who must be last years eaglet. He perched in the nearby cottonwood and squawked hungrily while mom and dad told him to go get his own food, evidently he hadn't been successful when out with dad. He's a typical teenager, ruffled feathers and all.
When dad or mom, whoever it was, got finished feeding the youngun he flew over and knocked junior off the limb he was on as if to say, "Go earn a living!" I didn't see him the rest of the day.
It is a fantastic and wild place on the Sanpoil although the hiway isn't 100 yards away from the nest. I thought I might be imposing myself but a helicopter flew right over the nest and they didn't miss a lick.
4/17/07
"Dancing Willow of Spring" 11x14" oil on wood
4/16/07
Buckley Riverview, Kettle WA, oil sketch, 14x20"
Morning mist on the Colville River rises into the Cerulean sky. While painting plein air, there were a flock of 50 wild turkeys around me. The Toms resplendently courting the hens. I should turn to wildlife painting as much wildlife as I run across. While sketching today Betts and I found an eagle nest with a fuzzy yellow eaglet basking in the sun.
It is hard to see in this little jpeg but maybe if you copied it and enlarged it you can see the eaglet. The eagle nest is in the top of the dead cottonwood.
4/11/07
4/06/07
"Dreams of Horses" watercolor, 6x11
4/03/07
"Rez Dreams" watercolor journaling
He sees horses in the cloudsthat stretch to the horizon,
they gallop off to the reservation
where the water runs clean and the air is pure,
where food is free and he feeds himself from the land,
where his prayers can be heard by the Creator,
not drowned out by the noise of traffic,
or sirens of the ambulance scraping the wounded
out of urine soaked alleys.
4/02/07
Air travel doodle, "What's Inside me" 6x11 pen and ink


3/06/07
Portrait study, 14"x16" oil on canvas board
I'm headed to Washington D.C. where I will stop and see George Catlins work that he did in the early 1800's. It is an amazing collection of over 400 paintings he did on an expedition out west just after Lewis and Clark came back from their historic expedition.Catlin studied the lives of many tribes and did portraits of many tribal members in full regalia. His intent was to impress the literati of Europe with this body of work but instead he nearly went broke.
This is another study of my neighbor 'Hob0' as he is known by everyone, a.k.a. Henry Stensgar. Hobo feeds my horses and keeps the fire burning in the stove when I'm off on my jaunts. He is unique in that he lives off what he hunts and the salmon he catches. "Food in a can is no good." He is very traditional. Like me he was born 200 years too late although I think he would have had a problem without his glasses.



