28 August, 2009
27 August, 2009
Festival Preview
See a thin preview of my art for Sausalito at my blog, Pastel. Someone asked the other day about my current framing, which is shown in these photos. Of course, my work will not be hung so thin, as I have about forty or forty-five originals for this show. Add lighting, signage and a vase of flowers and you get the idea. Simple, but focused on the art.
Secret Knowledge just for readers of The Colorist: I intend to hang only the River Series on the first full day of the festival. Thereafter, my other works will be shown, too.
Sausalito Art Festival
Labor Day Weekend 2009
Friday September 4th · 6:00pm · Preview Party
Saturday September 5th · 9:00am - 6:00pm
Sunday September 6th · 9:00am - 6:00pm
Monday September 7th · 9:00am - 5:00pm
25 August, 2009
River Blues
Imagine the river when the water element overwhelms the vegetation and the air. Foggy, wet, and dense. This is the Northwest's river.
Doc Watson.
James Taylor.
River songs.
24 August, 2009
Silver and Shade
This is an image from behind our house, looking toward the pet cemetery. Finished outside, rather than in my studio.
I may connect this one to my new and upcoming Prairie Series, since farmsteads are a fixture on the prairie.
18 August, 2009
System Corruption
The geek at the computer shop tells me that my operating system is corrupt. In the Old West, those would be fightin' words! But, in the digital era, it just means that I ought to complete a system restore. So, if I can find my (improperly filed) SR software, this will be my next move.
With August activities pressing, and Sausalito upcoming, my posts will be thin.
I leave you with the most frightening movie scene ever filmed. HAL 9000 has your back, Dave.
13 August, 2009
Cezanne, The Proto-Fauvist
Pastel
Paul Cézanne
"Line and color are not distinct...when color is at its richest, form takes on its fullest expression." Paul Cézanne.
12 August, 2009
Blip
My Toshiba laptop is on life support. Being older than four years, the stalwart tool is losing data fast. As I never did proper back ups, I have it in the shop for a complete back-up of the C drive, and when it gets home, I will be running a HD back up as sort of, well, an iron lung (cue Ian Anderson).
I am contemplating sending the laptop back to its infant stages by wiping everything out and starting over. The only programs I have ever used, that I can think of, are the Photoshop (version 2, which I bought used from Fred Flintstone) and whatever came bundled or free, such as Open Office and Firefox. I have the media for PSE 2 and can put that back on and continue to march. Any geeks out there have input on this?
Posting will be thin for about another week, as we are busy in the framing studio and in the final countdown before my show in California.
gif credit: msbilliejoemonique.
06 August, 2009
Portage
Let's take a portage and see some overland scenery. We'll return to the river in due course.
This image has an interesting story. It is a scene by the road that leads from our farm to the highway, and is a low bushy tree that stands at a crop line past a neighbor's farm. I intended for so long to set up and do an on sight painting, but finally did this in the studio from memory. I stalked it so long that it just stayed in my memory.
Because of its local flavor, my wife has decided that the painting is hers.
04 August, 2009
River Honesty
In the service of honesty, let's admit that the river isn't always cheery and sun-kissed. Rain happens.
The ferry is boarding. Rockferry, that is. Here's Welsh singer Duffy, with guitarist Bernard Butler, giving us an intimate, "hold the sauce," session of her melancholy tune.
The singer Duffy is from North Wales. Rugged land, geographic isolation and a don't-mess-with-me attitude are things shared by my home town of Hoquiam and the NorthWelsh. I have only ever met one person from North Wales, but that still shows you it's a small world, huh?
31 July, 2009
My Matisse Book Report
"Seek the strongest color effect possible...the content is of no importance," Henri Matisse.
Reading Hilary Spurling's giant two volume biography on the great French Modernist, Henri Matisse, has been a blessing and a burden. Quite readable, they are, well...long. And, to quote someone on Twitter, "I hate finishing biographies; they always end the same!" I had the same problem with the van Gogh Yellow House book. I couldn't bring myself to face the old boy's demise.
Everything Henri Matisse.
Color photos of Matisse in his studio from LIFE magazine.
Matisse was not only the "King of the Fauves" - he was the master of all Modernism. Equaled only by Pablo Picasso of Spain, our Matisse brushed, sculpted, cut, designed and lived five decades ahead of his time. He was a luminary artist whose colors and lines are his signature, but whose life, until now, has not been well revealed. I cannot recommend Spurling's excellent and authoritative books more.
I want to keep my reactions to the long books concise. How about a painting done in the style of Matisse? Although Matisse himself was très original, it is not uncommon for an artist such as myself to copy a past master to internalize his methods. I was doing a painting as a copy from one of my numerous instruction books, and it reminded me slightly of HM's muse. I ran with that.
The instruction book image was "Erick," by artist Sally Stride. I'll be out of town until Monday - enjoy your weekend!
29 July, 2009
Fauve Tree
Back to the upright format for a while. This one is the spin off of some trompe l'oeil work I did in the studio. Apples, wouldn't you know? Trompe l'oeil means deceiving the eye.
Marlena Shaw's vocals. Eleanor Powell dances. Wade in the Water.
24 July, 2009
Ol' Man River
On an administrative note, I have killed the profile widget in the margin. It was so "blogger." See the biography of me under the business card instead. Takin' my profile back from the man, that's what I call it...
21 July, 2009
Stephen Bauman Blog
Allow me to introduce a new blogging artist and teacher: Stephen Bauman. If you share my love of Italy and of Classic Realism, you will see his new blog as a treasure trove.
Bauman found my post with cast drawings, and was kind enough to comment there. Compare this with these and you will be in for a treat.

Stephen Bauman. "I was raised in Miami, FL and now live and work in Florence Italy. I teach painting and drawing at the Florence Academy of Art, under the direction of Daniel Graves."
Bauman found my post with cast drawings, and was kind enough to comment there. Compare this with these and you will be in for a treat.

Stephen Bauman. "I was raised in Miami, FL and now live and work in Florence Italy. I teach painting and drawing at the Florence Academy of Art, under the direction of Daniel Graves."
20 July, 2009
Remembering Forty Years
That's why I love history. Apollo 11.
Charley Parker alerts us to the art of Apollo 12 Astronaut Alan Bean.
17 July, 2009
Colorist Studio Update - Bumpdated
Bumpdate! See below for updated items of interest.
Time for a cup of coffee. I have been busy in the studio trying to finish the last few artworks for my upcoming Sausalito show. Other challenges I'm planning for are framing and making sure my booth is ready for the unusual set-up at Sausalito (they provide the artist's booth - I usually bring my own). Not to mention the long drive to the Bay Area.
Visitors to the Sausalito Art Festival will get to see all of my River Series pastels in one place for the first time. Probably the only time they will appear together, BTW.
The music stage schedule at the Sausalito Art Festival (Sept. 5-7, 2009) has been announced. Always top drawer, this year's Sausalito music venue is themed as a 40th. anniversary Woodstock tribute. Many San Fransisco Bay Area bands were there, and will be on tap for this special event. My faves? Country Joe McDonald, Johnny Winter, and the Jefferson Starship.
Sausalito Art Festival.
Marin County.
Casey Klahn Mugging for the Camera
Photo: Lorie Klahn
Here are a few things for your weekend reading interest. I made the time yesterday to listen to contemporary master, Wolf Kahn, giving a speech at Wheaton College. It is occasioned around a show of his and Emily Mason's works, and he speaks for 50 minutes (fair warning for your Internet time!) on the "Six Reasons Not to Paint Landscapes." Find it here.
Two American artist bloggers are live blogging their European vacations, complete with museum reports. Jala Pfaff, of Colorado, is in London viewing John Singer Sargent, and Kelly Borsheim, an expat living in Florence, Italy, is giving us Egon Schiele and Gustav Klimt in Vienna.
Back to Wolf Kahn for a moment. Kahn is known for painting barns, and fine artists realize that that isn't about sentiment if you can help it. I like the formal parts: the negative spaces, the position of the barn upon the land, the color planes, the leading of the eye, the bigness, etc. Bob Lafond has been doing barns at Mark and Remark, and has one here that I really love.
Photo: Lorie Klahn
Here are a few things for your weekend reading interest. I made the time yesterday to listen to contemporary master, Wolf Kahn, giving a speech at Wheaton College. It is occasioned around a show of his and Emily Mason's works, and he speaks for 50 minutes (fair warning for your Internet time!) on the "Six Reasons Not to Paint Landscapes." Find it here.
Two American artist bloggers are live blogging their European vacations, complete with museum reports. Jala Pfaff, of Colorado, is in London viewing John Singer Sargent, and Kelly Borsheim, an expat living in Florence, Italy, is giving us Egon Schiele and Gustav Klimt in Vienna.
Back to Wolf Kahn for a moment. Kahn is known for painting barns, and fine artists realize that that isn't about sentiment if you can help it. I like the formal parts: the negative spaces, the position of the barn upon the land, the color planes, the leading of the eye, the bigness, etc. Bob Lafond has been doing barns at Mark and Remark, and has one here that I really love.
Time for a cup of coffee. I have been busy in the studio trying to finish the last few artworks for my upcoming Sausalito show. Other challenges I'm planning for are framing and making sure my booth is ready for the unusual set-up at Sausalito (they provide the artist's booth - I usually bring my own). Not to mention the long drive to the Bay Area.
Visitors to the Sausalito Art Festival will get to see all of my River Series pastels in one place for the first time. Probably the only time they will appear together, BTW.
The music stage schedule at the Sausalito Art Festival (Sept. 5-7, 2009) has been announced. Always top drawer, this year's Sausalito music venue is themed as a 40th. anniversary Woodstock tribute. Many San Fransisco Bay Area bands were there, and will be on tap for this special event. My faves? Country Joe McDonald, Johnny Winter, and the Jefferson Starship.
Sausalito Art Festival.
Marin County.
15 July, 2009
Pink Haze River - Stay Away From My Door
River, stay away from my door. Fiona Apple sings in an acoustic session of this timeless song.
10 July, 2009
Rennaisance River
Renaissance River
7" x 17"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
Pastel
Casey Klahn
Let's stay with the River, since it flows long and cool. I moved the cedar shed image over to Pastel to keep themes separate.
If you haven't figured it out yet, dear reader, my videos accompanying these river works have all been "rough-out" and atmospheric cuts of music with the river theme. Narrative, American, unfinished: words that describe my series. Skip the videos if you must, but the whole experience weaves a story of lazy, summer times by the river; sometimes jazz, sometimes country, rock, spiritual and sometimes silly. Enjoy.
Peter Gabriel, River.
09 July, 2009
Scattered Sky
Love to kick my feet way down the shallow water.
Shoo fly, dragonfly, get back t'your mother.
Pick up a flat rock, skip it across Green River.
Whaaaaeelll... John Fogerty, Green River.
Follows: Gee Gee Kettel, One Man Band. Link.
06 July, 2009
02 July, 2009
Return to the River
Waning Light@ 9" x 12"
Pastel
Casey Klahn
Remember the River Series? I return to it here, and will post the rest in the next few days.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
Abstract Expressionism, Art Criticism, Artists, Colorist Art, Drawing, History, Impressionism, Modern Art, Painting, Pastel, Post Impressionism











