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Main | Painted Desert Color »
Painted Desert Silence
by Shirley Bales on 11/8/2008 12:06:12 PM


The Painted Desert: A Unique Contrast of Silence and Vibrancy

 

This painting is up for auction with a starting bid at $300. For more information, email shirleybales@msn.com. Auction is set to close mid November.

Thank you for your support!

This work was created from a Plein Air trip to the Painted Desert over a year ago. I have spent a great deal of time contemplating these images, and how to do them justice. I wanted to express the strange contrast of silence and vibrancy that I felt overlooking one of the most unique landscapes that the southwest has to offer. I plan to do a series of paintings from this trip, and this painting represents one of the first of many.

A little history of the Desert, compliments of Wikipedia:

Painted Desert is the name for a broad area of badlands located in Northern Arizona in the United States. The desert stretches from the Grand Canyon National Park into the Petrified Forest National Park. The Navajo and the Hopi people have lived in the region for at least five hundred, and one thousand years, respectively. However, the modern name for the desert comes from the Spaniards who named it "el Desierto Pintado" due to its brightly colored landscape.

The desert comprises stratified layers of mineral and decayed organic matter. Many hardened dunes can be found. These hardened dunes are visually distinct due to the bands of grays, reds, oranges and yellows which are then shaped by natural wind and rain patterns. The area is noted to be especially beautiful at sunset and sunrise when the land appears to glow in hues of violet, blue, red and gold. Other key features include the many mesas and buttes that rise sharply from the desert floor. Sparse desert flora and fauna can also be found, especially in wet years.

In the southern portions of the desert the remains of a Triassic Era coniferous forest have fossilized over millions of years. Wind, water and soil erosion continue to change the face of the landscape by shifting sediment and exposing layers of the Chinle Formation. An assortment of fossilized prehistoric plants and animals are found in the region, as well as dinosaur tracks and the evidence of early human habitation.

 



 




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