Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Keene Valley red barn:  Located at the intersection of NY 73 and NY 9N in Keene Valley, home of the Adirondack High Peaks, is a red barn that has been shaped by North Country weather.  The barn is a well-known landmark which has clearly seen better days.

For more background on this barn, click on “Red barns” under "Labels" on the right-hand side of the blog.

Keene Valley red barn, 11x14 (DtC):




Monday, February 17, 2014

Vernooy Kill Falls:  A popular wilderness destination in an area formerly owned by the Lundy Estate, but now part of DEC’s Sundown Wild Forest.  Open Space Institute acquired this 5,400 acre parcel in 2000 and eventually conveyed it to New York State.  The waterfalls itself drops approximately sixty feet in elevation through a series of multiple cascades of small pools and falls.


The Vernooy Kill is a tributary of the Rondout Creek, whose upper section flows with a brownish tint from tannins in the surrounding forest.  The stream derives its name from the Dutch and Cornelius Vernooy.  Kill comes from the Middle Dutch word kille meaning a body of water or creek.  Cornelius Vernooy was a Dutch settler who came to the Rondout Valley in 1644, whose family established a gristmill below the falls in the early 1700s.  The old mill foundation can still be seen downstream of the footbridge, though it was last utilized in 1809.  However, this historic creek is still home to small, dark wild brook trout.

Footbridge, Vernooy Kill Falls, 11x14:



Vernooy Kill Falls, 11x14:


Tuesday, February 11, 2014


Red barns:  Though often not a watery portrait, who doesn’t love the representation of a red barn?  Vistas of red barns dotting rural landscapes conjure fascinating and lasting images of rustic America in our minds.

And, perhaps red barns were the products of American farming ingenuity?  Centuries ago lacking paint for their barns many farmers made a mixture of skimmed milk, lime, and red iron oxide--- later adding linseed oil derived from flax plants--- to coat and preserve their wooden structures.  The use of red iron oxide--- rust---gave these barns the red color.  It is believed that rust was used to help kill moss and mold.  Refer to Farmers' Almanac for additional information.

CR 3 red barn, 11x14 (DtC):



Located off County Route 3, in the shadows of Ashokan High Point.

Red barn in Keene Valley, 11x14:



This aging structure sits in an Adirondack field not far from the shadows of Pitchoff, Cascade, and Porter Mountains off NY 73.  At one time this land belonged to philanthropist Wallace Murray, and it is believed that this barn was built by Albert Jakes in the 1920s.  The barn, which is in serious disarray, now stands on part of the NYS Forest Preserve.  The landscape was painted from a photo taken in May of 2013.  Additional information about this historic red barn can be found in the August 2013 issue of Adirondack Life.


Thursday, February 6, 2014

Acrylic versus oil:  Below are two painting of the Footbridge at the Vernooy Kill Falls.  One was done with acrylic and completed in 2004 following our first hike into the falls.  The other is a water-mixable oil completed in 2014.


Footbridge, Vernooy Kill Falls(a), 11x14:





 Footbridge, Vernooy Kill Falls(o), 11x14:



Waterfalls:  Below are landscapes, mostly of regional waterfalls.


Top of Kaaterskill Falls, 14x11:



Kaaterskill Falls has been called the highest two-tier falls in New York State with a total drop of two-hundred-sixty feet in elevation.  It was has long been written about and painted, often an icon of the Hudson River School of painters.  Even today it continues to be a focal attraction to Catskill visitors.

Awosting Falls, Minnewaska State Park, 11x14:


A sixty foot plunge on the Peters Kill Creek.


Multnomah Falls, Columbia River Gorge, Oregon, 14x11(Sold):


A commissioned piece of art, painted for a dear friend.


Otter Falls, 11x14:


Wednesday, February 5, 2014


Brook trout and bamboo:  Several of Ed's photographs were chosen to grace the cover of New York's "Freshwater Fishing 2013-14 Official Regulations Guide" including an image of the Rondout Creek seen here,



Lois recently completed the landscape below which will be donated to the Ashokan-Pepacton Watershed Chapter of Trout Unlimited as an auction item in their 26th Annual Dinner to be held on April 5th, 2014.  Hopefully the unique connection to the regulation guide above will be of some financial benefit to the Chapter.

Brook trout and bamboo, 11x14 (DtC):




The bamboo lying across the mossy rock midstream is an Art Weiler replica of a Leonard 39-5 cane rod.  Ed acquired it in memory of his Dad following his father’s death.


Esopus Creek watershed:  The first of the legendary Catskill rivers to be gobbled up by New York City in the early 1900’s in their efforts to satisfy thirsty city dwellers.  It was this watershed that Theodore Gordon, the architect of American dry-fly fishing, wrote in May of 1913 that, “… the new Shokan dam, in the Catskills, will afford the finest trout fishing in America, if properly treated…”  And, this watershed also served as home waters for the likes of Preston Jennings and Ray Smith; it was called “the first trout capital of the Charmed Circle” by Cecil E. Heacox.


Chimney Hole fall, 11x14:



The Trestle, 10x8 (NFS): An early (pre-2014) acrylic painting of the Boiceville Trestle.  The trestle was built ca. 1870 to carry the Ulster & Delaware Railroad across the Esopus Creek. The bridge spanned 294 feet and consisted of a four-span steel-plate girder trestle on stone piers and abutments. Damage from Hurricane Irene and Tropical Storm Lee in 2011 caused the collapse of the Boiceville Trestle.  If was often used as a fishermen’s path across Esopus Creek by anglers walking downriver to Chimney Hole.  In its place today stands an Ashokan Rail Trail way-walk.




Misty Esopus, Phoenicia NY, 11x14 (NFS):


Icehouse on the Bush Kill, 11x14 (Sold):




Otter Falls, 11x14:





Bushnellsville Creek spring, 11x14:




 Oliverea Esopus, 11x14 (Sold):




Winnisook Lake, 11x14(Sold):


Winter in a Catskill hollow, Reisser Pond, 11x14 (Sold):




Rondout Creek:  Catskill naturalist John Burroughs spoke glowingly about this pristine mountaintop river valley and wrote, “My eyes had never before beheld such beauty in a mountain stream.”  It’s a fragile environ with a rugged Catskill history that connects the region’s past with the present.  The Blue Hole, Morrell field, Van Etten bridge, Peekamoose, and many other historic landmarks still can be found today. 

Blue Hole, 11x14 (Sold):

Misty Rondout, 11x14 (Sold): 

Above Morrell field, 11x14:

Van Etten Road bridge, 11x14 (Sold):



Neversink watershed:  This celebrated river of Theodore Gordon and Edward R. Hewitt emanates from the heart of the Catskills.  Wild trout and exquisite scenery still grace the banks of the watershed both above and downstream of New York City’s reservoir.


Haunted House Pool, West Branch Neversink, 11x14 (Sold):



Winter on Biscuit Brook, 11x14 (Sold):



Neversink, B W S Road Bridge, 11x14 (Sold):







East Branch Delaware River:  Yet another Catskill River claimed by thirsty New Yorkers.  Downstream of the Pepacton Reservoir lies one of the finest tailwaters on the east coast that glides through rolling landscapes.  This oil landscape can be found along NY 30, across from Terry’s Shinhopple Campground and was a favorite fishing spot of my husband.


The Wires, East Branch Delaware, 16x20 (NFS):





Commissioned pieces:  Below are a few examples of commissioned paintings, some created from photographs provided by individuals for whom the work was completed.


Mountain Road autumn, 11x14 (Sold):



Multnomah Falls, Columbia River Gorge, 14x11 (Sold):



Upton Lake, Dutchess County, 11x14 (Sold): 



Yellowstone on fire, 11x14 (Sold):




Shenandoah morning, 11x14 (Sold):




Yellowstone sunrise, 11x14 (Sold):



Engagement hill, 11x14 (Sold):



Overlook autumn, 11x14:





Other pieces:  
Mother's Pool Rainbow Trout (DtC)–
The rainbow trout above was created on a thirty-six inch long aluminum blank--- cut out by the Orange County Choppers--- using acrylic paints.  It was one of many trout in the 2012 Leaping Trout Project of the Ashokan-Pepacton Watershed Chapter of Trout Unlimited.
Brook trout (DtC)- 

The book trout above was part of the 2011 Ashokan-Pepacton Watershed Chapter of Trout Unlimited's Leaping Trout Project.


The CatskillWatersArt pair below:
Lois and Ed on the trail in the Shawangunk Mountains: 
 
The artist at work on Birches in her sunroom studio:
 
Birches (24"x48"):  SOLD 
 
And here's Lois, on one of the many Catskill and other regional hikes she enjoys every season of every year, overlooking the Hudson River valley from Escarpment Trail at North/South Lake:



And reading a book at Vernooy Kill Falls: 
 
 
 
And, here's the CatskillWatersArt flyfisher and photographer--- Ed--- standing on Sunset Rock overlooking North/South Lakes,