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California Arborescence

The California Arborescence series taps the beauty of the distinct and varied trees that define our forests and describe our California landscapes. Our wonderful native trees are the bones from which shrubs, lichens, groundcovers, and even wildlife, hang.  As a landscape architect used to selecting tree species for their ability to “behave” properly in a given constructed setting, I admire our natives’ evolved ability to perfectly serve and thrive in their distinct ecosystems.

The title of each piece in this series is a play on the botanical name for the tree that is represented.  The first, capitalized, word is the tree’s genus.  The second word, which is not capitalized, is the species of the tree.  The third word, capitalized and surrounded by single quotation marks, is a fictitious cultivar (cultivated variety) name that I made up to imply or reinforce the concept of the painting.

Paintings within this series that are sold framed feature handmade one-of-a-kind frames that I paint and adorn using bark, leaves, cones, seeds and other natural items gleaned from beneath the subject tree.

 

Quercus lobata
Cypress macrocarpa
Pinus ponderosa
Cypress macrocarpa
Cypress macrocarpa
Sequoia sempervirens 'Lightning'
Tsuga mertensiana '5.10' Tsuga mertensiana ‘Sheltered Life’ Arbutus menziezii ‘Revelation’ Juniperus occidentalis ‘Ascent’ Pinus longaeva ‘Beautiful Bones’ Juniperus occudentalis "Windswept"
Pinus longaeva '4,000 Winters' (Bristlecone pine)Pinus longaeva '4,000 Winters' (Bristlecone pine) Pinus longaeva 'Continuity'        

Pinus longaeva '4,000 Winters' (Bristlecone pine)

Pinus longaeva 'Continuity' (Bristlecone Pine), 40" x 36" oil on canvas with recycled rustied steel frame

Bristlecone pines grow in only a few areas in Nevada, California, and Arizona. This ancient tree clings to a jagged fin of rock in the Inyo National Forest in California's White Mountains. Wind, snow, and sun have eroded gaps clear through this still-living tree.