Wednesday, February 25, 2015

new work


I have been doing a tonne of new work recently but none of it has made its way to the webs.
I have been working mostly Alla Prima (working wet in wet), On location. as quickly as possible. That leaves some of it feeling a little raw. But who ever complains about raw painting?? 













3 Comments So Far:

  1. Love them all, especially the rowboat!
    (Emily Martin)

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  2. What do you call the work of the cabin? If I had the money for art I'd buy it immediately.

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  3. Thats called "Hunt Log Cabin". Here is an excerpt about it from the city of Clemson Website

    "Nestled deep in the South Carolina Botanical Garden stands a monument to a forgotten time. The restored Hunt Cabin was built around 1826. The log structure is the centerpiece of the Garden's "Pioneer Complex".

    Charles Hunt Jr. married Martha Dalton in 1825. As a wedding present, Martha's father, Solomon Dalton, gave Charles 2,300 acres of land. The Hunt Cabin was built on this tract of land in Seneca, South Carolina. The Cabin was scheduled to be torn down, but was purchased by the Clemson Class of 1915 for $35.00 and moved to Clemson College in 1955.

    The Hunt Cabin offers an interesting comparison to the Hanover House, also located in the Garden. Built about 110 years apart, each represents very different lifestyles in the State

    of South Carolina. The elegant Hanover House, a replica of French Huguenot design was a low country home built in 1716, while the 19th century Hunt Cabin is representative of the upcountry, small farmer. Both houses were lived in by the typical "middle-class" families of the different time periods.

    The original home contained four bedrooms on the first floor and a large front porch. As it currently stands, the Hunt Cabin has one large open room on the first floor, and the front porch is long removed. During the early years, the Hunt Cabin was visited by many travelers. General Andrew Pickens, a good friend of the Hunts, spent many nights in their home. Legend has it that during the Civil War, General Sherman spent a night at the cabin, and thus spared it from the torched during his long campaign in the South.
    Other structures in the Pioneer Complex offer a glimpse of life in early Upstate South Carolina. A smaller log cabin stands there, as well as a grist mill and a smoke house. The South Carolina Botanical Garden is open year round and is free to the public. As you walk under the deep canopy of trees, step back into a time when small cabins like these dotted the South Carolina landscape. "

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