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This year, on my way to Montana for the NWR show, I took
a few days and stopped in Idaho to visit one of the artist's I've idolized
since art school; George Carlson. At the Academy, Mr. Parks showed us a
videotape of George Carlson doing a demo for the National Academy of
Western Art and we were all amazed at both his sculptures and drawings.
George had actually also gone to the American Academy of Art himself and
my teacher had been trained by the same teachers who George studied with.
I would have been amazed had I thought I would get to know and become such
good friends with someone like this whom I consider one of the handful of
true masters of our time. I don't say this lightly, and it is not only
because of his technical skill, but even more importantly because of the
honesty and uncompromising search for truth that George imbues all his
work and life with that I feel as I do. In a world where money has
diverted many great visionaries, this is one artist who has stayed focused
on what Art is meant to stand for and I have no doubt that he will be one
of the few remembered by history.

Here's George working away in his studio with the
skeleton of a monument in the foreground.

Each morning we got up early and went out either bike
riding or canoeing. After the infusion of natural beauty, we went to
George's studio where he had arranged a model to pose for painting,
sculpting, and sketching. Here's a shot of George about halfway through a
portrait we did together.

And here's a couple shots of his final portrait after
only three hours! I'll spare your eyes and my ego a shot of my attempt.
Three hours seems like more than enough time for me to do a finished
portrait in oil, but wax is a whole new ball of... well, you get the idea.
The most illuminating thing for me was just the procedure for measuring
and of turning the model and your sculpture small increments and lining
things up from a dozen angles all the way around -- just as if you were
drawing twelve different charcoals.

Here's a piece a model was posing for when I arrived.

A close up of one of George's Bronzes. He didn't just
find his inspiration for these subjects in a book, but traveled to Mexico
over and over again and lived with these Indians for months at a time
before their culture had been altered by the intrusion of the modern
world. George told me that the boy he hired to act as his guide and
interpreter was so interested in art himself that he paid to send him to
Chicago to attend the American Academy in the seventies.

Here's one of the many pieces from his American Ballet
Theatre series when he lived in New York.

This is a taste of some of the marshes we canoed through
in the mornings.

After about twenty minutes of hard rowing though wild
rice our "shortcut" had already taken us twice as long as the
normal way, but isn't that what adventure is all about! Here's George
looking back at the path our canoe had cut through the rice. We'd finally
hit a patch that was just too shallow to row through any longer, so just
after this was taken, we both got out into the water and dragged the canoe
for a while until it deepened again.

Terry
Lee, the renowned wildlife artist, was kind enough
to invite me to join him and George at his studio for some figure drawing
one evening. George has a stack of absolutely amazing drawings in his
studio! I love collecting drawings
so was happy to add one of his to my wall at home!



If you want any yourself, just e-mail George's wife,
Pam, at
to find out which ones are available and how much they are.
http://georgecarlson.com/

Here's George and Pam on their boat on the way back home
from a day at the studio. Thanks to them both for the amazing
hospitality!

And then on to the Western Rendezvous show in Helena,
Montana! Here's a shot of Susan's paintings on the walls.
http://www.westrendart.com/Default.htm

The show is held in the Helena Civic Center and anyone
who's visited there will know the building by the tall minaret outside on
the dome. It's great because you can see it from anywhere in town so you
never need to ask directions. The building is as marvelously quirky
and varied as the artists in the show and gives this event it's own
flavor. Every year the artists get together at a campout before the show
to hang out, drink beer, run from Grizzlies, and even occasionally do some
painting. I've never seen a group that has so much fun together and
because of this, the show is one of the least pretentious and highest
quality I've ever seen.

There are no restrictions whatsoever on what you paint
in this show. It's all about simply showing great paintings, as you can
see by some of Shirley Novak's
magical floral paintings, hanging next to a Quang Ho interior...

...and some of my paintings from Peru, next to some
cowboys by Tom Browning...

... and this awesome winter snow scene by Kathy
Whipfler.

And it's due in large part to Frank Montibeller, the
Godfather of the NWR group who makes it all possible by leading us as our
president.

Here's Tim Thies
painting at the Quick Draw.

And Greg Beecham painting roses in a cowboy hat in front
of some blue porta-potties -- not a sight you see every day!

Carolyn Anderson.

And Tom Browning trying to save himself a few words with
a pre-emptive t-shirt.

Here's the Hughes', a couple of the most wonderful
people you'll ever meet. Without art lovers like them and the many others
that attend these shows and put their money behind what they believe to be
worthwhile, there simply wouldn't be any artists. They've bought paintings
from us for many years, and, to a large extent, they are just as much
collaborators in the art we create now since we could never have come this
far without people like them. In some of the countries we travel to, I
marvel at the lack of good artists able to support themselves solely from
their work. In all cases, it isn't that they lack talented artists, but
that there isn't the collectors necessary to allow them to paint for the
decades necessary to reach a high level of expression. We are truly
blessed to live in a country where there are people who support what we
love to do above everything else.

Jack Hines starting a bold portrait.

Here's Katrina and Brooke putting on their happy faces.
Brooke did an excellent job modeling for my Quick Draw and both her and
her sister have helped me out the last several years by putting a few
strokes on my painting. My plan is to get them to do more and more of the
paintings each year so that in twenty years they'll be doing them for me
completely!

Time for the Quick Draw paintings to get auctioned off
-- and for me to make my exit!

Well, this year's show was the most crowded it's ever
been and as I looked out the plane's window at this incredible
above-the-clouds sunrise, I couldn't help but wonder at the amount of
beauty and inspiration one can cram into a single week!
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