"Dogwood Laurel" ~ Oil on Canvas ~ 24 x 20 Best Of Plein Air Show 2008 by Rachel Uchizono
A resident of Laguna Beach, Rachel began to formalize her love for
the wilderness through painting. Many of her works capture the myriad
of light and color prevalent in the California coastline’s landscapes
and seascapes. Her still life paintings echo this sensitivity to light,
shadow and the vivid colors of native flowers and foliage.
Rachel Uchizono has devoted the last several years to studying and
refining her skills in the “plein air” tradition. She exhibits at
Studio 7 Gallery in Laguna Beach.
“California provides a remarkable landscape for capturing the play
of light and color in nature. I actively pursue inspiration from wild
and undiscovered locations, seeking a unique view of this magnificent
region of the country.” |
"In All Her Glory" ~ Acrylic on Canvas ~ 36 x 48" ~ C. 2007 by W. Bradley Elsberry
After a photo taken by Mr. Elsberry on the old Laguna Canyon Road in 2005.
"This
portrait of this tree could be considered a "Nude" since at this point
in her life cycle she has at last shed all her leaves and the late
afternoon light guilds the beautiful form and textures normally hidden
from view. While this tree is no longer green it should be noted that
there is new growth coming up from her roots. At first glance desolate,
this is actually a look at a moment when the time of day, the time of
year, and this time of transition in this tree's life give us a clear
golden look at this Oak tree's strength and beauty.
"I
photographed this tree along the side of old Laguna Canyon Road in 2005
and it was not spared when the new road went through. I like to think
that some of the smaller Oaks still standing are her offspring." - W.
Bradley Elsberry
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"Cardoons" - Oil on Canvas - 2008 - 30x48" by Candice Bohannon
From Southwest Art Magazine (August 2009): Candice
Bohannon drove past a patch of wildflowers called cardoons for years
before she decided to paint them. At first, she recalls, she was
content to merely grab the prickly plants from the side of the road and
bring them home. “I came back home with a lot of wounds because they
are very thorny,” Bohannan says with a laugh. Not long ago, however,
the cardoons seemed particularly stunning. And she knew the area was
soon to be cleared for a new roadway. It would be their last season. It
was time to capture them on canvas. “I love how weeds can sometimes be
very beautiful. Cardoons grow wild everywhere in Southern California
with very little water and nurturing,” she says. “They are so forceful
and willful.” Bohannon not only talks about the wildflowers as if they
have human characteristics, she paints them that way, too. Anyone who
saw her painting in the California Art Club’s Gold Medal Show recently
might have observed that the spiny weeds did, in fact, convey a
human-like energy, almost as if they could walk off the canvas and onto
the floor of the museum. At 27, Bohannon was one of the youngest
artists featured in the juried show. Already an award-winning painter,
she most recently was named a semi-finalist in the Smithsonian’s
National Portrait Gallery’s Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition. Her
painting captured an elderly woman afflicted with dementia. Unlike some
artists, Bohannon relishes working in many genres—still life,
landscape, figurative. “I paint things that interest me,” she says.
What doesn’t interest this Northern California-based painter and
sculptor though, is art that comes from a cynical point of view,
mocking and tearing apart things she holds dear. For Bohannon, art
heals and awakens emotions as well as brings substance to light. She
explains with this analogy: “Great artworks can be related to a feast,
the meal laid out for you: beauty, thought, emotion, and kinship. It
can leave you feeling full or perhaps serve to awaken the appetite
further. But it will never leave you empty.” Universal themes are what
interest her most, and she looks to many of art history’s great
painters, such as Rembrandt and Michelangelo, for inspiration. “I’m not
going to paint the inside of my car or my daily sandwich,” she says.
“Those things don’t register an emotional blip on my radar screen.”
Growing up in Applegate, a small mountain town in the foothills of the
Sierra Nevadas, Bohannon says she was a quiet and shy girl. By the time
she started thinking about what she wanted to become, she realized that
she loved and was good at only two things: writing and visual art.
Thus, after high school graduation, she headed for the Laguna College
of Art and Design in Laguna Beach, CA, which seemed like the big city
at the time. Since graduating from there, she has returned once again
to Applegate, where she shares her life and art with her husband, Julio
Reyes, also a talented emerging artist. Bohannon’s studio is in her
home, and it’s not unusual for her to spend more than 100 hours there
working on a single piece. But her method is strictly spontaneous and
embraces variety. For example, when she met an intriguing woman at a
wedding in Baltimore last year, she asked her to sit for her. When she
saw a horse at an equestrian center, she watched it for hours and then
painted the white equine as a symbol of innocence. Although it’s early
in her career, Bohannon is self-assured about her career choice. As she
writes, “I create because I must create, it is what I was born to do.
There’s no other life for me.”
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