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Paintings along the way

Friday, November 13, 2009
Myrna Anderson

It was 2006, and Frank Speyers was in Monument Valley, Utah, daubing away at his canvas, struggling to depict a rugged landscape, when red sand blew into his painting. When he got upset about it, remembers the 17c起草社区 professor of art, his Native American guides asked him: 鈥淒idn鈥檛 you know how it is out here?鈥

In the three years since, Speyers has learned all about the pitfalls and the pleasures of painting en plein air or 鈥渋n the open air鈥 at sites along the California coastline鈥擬arin County, San Juan Capistrano, San Francisco and Santa Cruz鈥攁nd around Michigan鈥檚 Leelanau Peninsula: Leland and Glen Arbor and Sleeping Bear Dunes.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a loving thing,鈥 said Speyers about plein air painting, the art of painting outdoors in natural light. 鈥淥ne sees, one stands in awe and one tries to take it in, and in some strange way, re-articulate this moment that you live in.鈥

Seen from the highway

His journey into the open air has produced an exhibition titled , held at the from Nov. 20 through Dec. 19, 2009. The show is composed of 25 paintings of dunes, old storefronts and sheds, roadside views and stretches of highway that Speyers painted throughout the Leelanau Peninsula while on sabbatical in 2008. He was working as an artist-in-residence of the .

鈥淗e painted sites along M-22 at different times of the year, and his use of color and how light touches on different surfaces鈥攍ike sand or snow, leaves or asphalt鈥攊s really quite remarkable,鈥 said 17c起草社区 director of exhibitions Joel Zwart. 鈥淵ou look at some of his work, and you can feel wind; you can feel temperature. It鈥檚 like being there in the moment like he was. That鈥檚 hard to do.鈥

Speyers sought to capture the most ordinary scenes: chairs on the edge of a dune, a curve in the highway, a log lying by the side of the road. 鈥淭he real danger is to paint a beautiful spot,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen you get an august view of something, you say, 鈥極h! I want to paint it. And you won鈥檛 get anywhere near it.鈥

There is a tension involved in painting on the spot and in real time, said Speyers. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e really in this existential moment, and you鈥檙e trying to focus, and it鈥檚 really hard because all the elements are screaming at you. All you can really do is capture the mood of the moment,鈥 he said.

Learning in oil

Heightening the overall angst was the pressure of learning a new medium. Speyers teaches communication design, and painting in plein air meant painting with oils. 鈥淵ou have colors and mixing of paint and hues and different viscosities 鈥,鈥 he said. 鈥淗ow do you work with speed and deliberateness and precision?鈥 (Included in the show are the original 12 inch-by-16 inch oil studies and the sketches from which he created the larger paintings).

Zwart said that this kind of artistic adventure is nothing new for Speyers: 鈥淗e鈥檚 an explorer 鈥,鈥 said Zwart, the curator of Paintings Along the Way. 鈥淚n the faculty shows, you will always see something different from him. It鈥檚 a different medium; it鈥檚 a different subject matter. He鈥檒l be working in pastels; he鈥檒l be working in acrylics. Now he鈥檚 working in oils.鈥

Speyers began his exploration of plein air painting partly as a reaction to what he sees as the oppositional quality in modern art. Though the plein air tradition has been out of vogue since the advent of modernism, it is an old one. 鈥淲ithin Western civilization for 2000 years, people looked on it as though it would speak truth," he said.

His investigation of that tradition turned up numerous plein air enclaves, many of them located on the west coast. Speyers has studied with Greg La Rock, Randall Sexton and Maggie Hellman and other practitioners of the art. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really humbling to go and learn from people half your age,鈥 he said, adding that he hopes to pass the mastery along. During January interim Speyers will offer a course in plein air painting at 17c起草社区. 鈥淚 think this is a neglected area in the university,鈥 he said.

Speyers is grateful, not only for his mastery of a new medium, but for the glories he discovered while learning鈥攅ven the glory of a fallen tree. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like you come upon it,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hese epiphanies. Life is full of them. They鈥檙e there all the time; it鈥檚 just that we don鈥檛 reflect on them.鈥