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  • At River City Gallery

    At River City Gallery

    I’ll be the featured artist in the La Cross Society of Arts and Crafts in January and February.

    These are watercolors and available for purchase.  On the First Friday of January and February, there will be refreshments and local artists from 4-7 pm. River City Gallery is a cooperative of local artists, located at 321 Main Street, La Crosse.

    The theme is getting to know the region, since we moved here in 2022.

    I’ll be commenting on each picture during January and February.

  • Upcoming in 2025

    Upcoming in 2025

    I’ll have some wall space at River City Gallery this January and February. It is a space reserved for members of the La Crosse Society of Arts.

    I’m debating the theme of Discovering the Coulee region or the of elements. In the first case the arts are good for observation of life here. In the second, bluffs, rivers and cloudscapes stand out

    I have a week to ponder.

  • This and that

    This and that

    Plein Air season is over, so what next?

    Well, painting with grandkids in Galesville.

    West from Presley Ln.

    Some sketching.

    The Good Bean

    Photos for work inside

    I’m also taking in drawing sessions at Gallery 1311. I’ll be helping plan the Trempeleau Reserve event in June 2025. In January I’ll have a few things at River City gallery.

    Unrelated, there is a Murphy Bed project to complete before Thanksgiving.

    Murphy bed parts

    Stay tuned.

  • Between the Bluffs fini

    Between the Bluffs fini

    This was both fun and a learning experience (in a good way).  Things learned:

    1. Paint twice as many as you submit. My bluff acrylic and my three rivers watercolor did not succeed. The farmland watercolor and the serviceberry acrylic did.
    2. Let the water do the work is solid advice. Thank you Mary Lou Ferguson. 
    3. Paint with confidence during the quick paint. 

    Here are my submissions:

    Hawks Delight
    Backyard Bluff
    Autumn Glory
    Quick Paint

    I look forward to next year.

  • Community Trail Farm

    Community Trail Farm

    ORA is an organization that preserves land and creates trails.  We met on this farmland for an afternoon.

    Location

    There are some barns and other structures here. But I liked the grass path through fields with receding lines of trees.  The sky was gray and foreboding, but the hawks were riding the wind.

    Progress

    I like the result. Can you find the hawks?

    Hawks Delight
    Between the Bluffs

    Public show at Gallery 1802, October 19, 20

  • Autumn Glory

    Autumn Glory

    We’ve planted a number of plants since moving to La Crosse two years ago.  One is a serviceberry tree.

    Turning

    I set up on our front yard and tried again with Plein Air acrylics.  At least water was easily available.

    The background is a fade from blue to burned umber with some lavender.  I used an acrylic pen to draw in leaves.  The painting is free-alistic. 

    Autumn Glory

    If you are wondering, the tree was pruned to be upright, as serviceberry can be a bit shrub like.

  • Acrylic Plein Air

    Acrylic Plein Air

    Acrylic Plein Air is a trip.  It tends to dry on the pallet, but takes its time on the canvas.

    Top of Cliffwood Bluff

    It ended up sort of Seurat adjacent.

    It was at least a nice day in nature.

    Hawk sparing

    I’ll submit three, not sure if it will make the cut.

  • Three Rivers

    Three Rivers

    This is where the La Crosse, the Black and the Mississippi rivers meet.

    Water is so changeable it challenges a painter. Which moment to capture? How do you indicate flow?

    Location

    It was a cold morning, though sunny. I decided to paint from this stone patio in the International Friendship Garden on the La Crosse waterfront.  I like the quiet flow on the La Crosse river where it merges with the Black River. Notice the color change as well as the surface texture. In the distance is the Mississippi.

    Not quite right

    I saw some gulls and a few boats.

    Fortunately watercolor can be reworked, if it’s not overworked. That’s a delicate balance.

    Final version

    “Three Rivers” is the title.

  • Isle la Plum

    Isle la Plum

    My second effort for Between the Bluffs is this scene of Isle la Plum on the La Crosse waterfront. I wanted to get evening color. So I left at 3 pm to find my spot and draw in the scene. I was hoping for sunset colors to arrive and then I’d add them quickly.

    Waiting

    The water changed minute by minute. As I waited some hawks arrived. One dove for a fish but apparently it came away empty.

    Smooth water

    I’d started on the water before it became mirror smooth. That would have been a different picture. My paper was 140 lb cold press, which was quite textured.  I’d have needed hot press, a smoother paper. (Note to self).

    Here is the result

    Color added

  • Back Yard Bluff

    Back Yard Bluff

    This is the first effort for the Between the Bluffs Plein Air event.  It is my daughter’s back yard view of Miller Bluff in La Crosse.

    Back yard view

    The two of us painted while Jerry started to sashiko stitch the view.

    Two media, one bluff

    I’m deciding that it is finished. I might like it more after it rests. It’s like when you paint a room, you are aware of all mistakes, but soon that is forgotten.

    Is it done?

About Me

I am a student of the Word and the World around us. These TWO BOOKS, World and Word or Nature and Scripture are the focus of these reflections. I am a retired pastor and a practicing artist and writer, now living in LaCrosse, WI, between the bluffs to the East and the Mississippi to the West. David E. Carlson

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