The season has passed and the colors of autumn here are but a memory. They still live in my photos and here are a couple more images of the area behind the Conemaugh Dam not too far from where I live in western Pennsylvania. Click on the images to enlarge.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
21. Conemaugh Photo Album - Autumn 2009 [Conemaugh River Reflections III & IV]
The season has passed and the colors of autumn here are but a memory. They still live in my photos and here are a couple more images of the area behind the Conemaugh Dam not too far from where I live in western Pennsylvania. Click on the images to enlarge.
Thursday, November 12, 2009
20. Tree Dreams I - (photograph)

Tuesday, November 10, 2009
19. Conemaugh Photo Album - Autumn 2009 [Conemaugh River Reflections I & II]
Friday, October 2, 2009
18. Art Juror for the Community Arts and Activities Center of Jeannette, Pennsylvania

Postscript - November 4, 2009: It was a sincere pleasure and honor to be able to judge this art show yesterday. It was very difficult assigning awards due to the large volume of extremely fine pieces which included mixed media sculpture, oil, watercolor, pen and ink, fabric art and other media. The artwork was hung on the wall of the very beautiful main sanctuary of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Holy Trinity. Thanks again for allowing me to be apart of this artistic experience. I highly recommend this exhibit and may enter this show myself in the future. --Bob Bickers
Sunday, September 27, 2009
17. Toll Road - (photograph)

Friday, September 11, 2009
16. Misdirection - (photograph)
Misdirection, by Bob Bickers, photograph, 2009 |
Thursday, September 10, 2009
15. Apollo 11 - 40 Years a Memory Redux

Saturday, September 5, 2009
14. In Murrysville Magazine Article published

Thursday, September 3, 2009
13. A Tale of Two Artists
Convergent evolution is when two different species, sometimes widely separated by time or location, adapt to similar environments by evolving similar characteristics. An example is the streamlined shapes of sharks (a fish), ichthyosaurs (a reptile), and dolphins (a mammal). I think something similar occurs to artists, allowing them to sometimes think very much alike.
In 2006 I visited the Rocky Mountains in Colorado. On my way home, I took a shortcut down a small highway across the great plains of eastern Colorado on to Kansas. I usually keep my eye open for interesting sights along the way that I can photograph and use in my artwork at a later date. We were in a hurry to get home, so I had to be content with taking quick snapshots of buildings and terrain as I sped along in the car. Driving through Matheson, Colorado, my eye spotted a simple, white church that just cried out to be painted. Unfortunately, my camera wasn't ready, I missed the shot and while I should have stopped and gone back to photograph it, I didn't and regretted it almost immediately.
In 2006 I visited the Rocky Mountains in Colorado. On my way home, I took a shortcut down a small highway across the great plains of eastern Colorado on to Kansas. I usually keep my eye open for interesting sights along the way that I can photograph and use in my artwork at a later date. We were in a hurry to get home, so I had to be content with taking quick snapshots of buildings and terrain as I sped along in the car. Driving through Matheson, Colorado, my eye spotted a simple, white church that just cried out to be painted. Unfortunately, my camera wasn't ready, I missed the shot and while I should have stopped and gone back to photograph it, I didn't and regretted it almost immediately.
Then in early 2009, I started to explore on the internet the Street View feature o
f Google Maps that allowed you to view the surrounding landscape from any point along roads that had been photographed by Google. It occurred to me that I might be able to re-capture views from the highway that I had missed before. At right is an image captured from Google Maps Street View of that church that I downloaded in April, 2009.
Great minds must think alike because a couple of weeks ago I opened my September, 2009 issue of Southwest Art magazine and on page 12, to my surprise, was another image
of that same church in Matheson, Colorado. It was a watercolor, Church Key, Matheson, by Brian Clifford, 22 x 30, shown at right. Mr. Clifford's painting is too detailed to have been made from Google's crude image, but it does show that he was, as was I, struck by the same simple lines and graceful shapes of this little church, nearly alone out on the plains. I commend Mr. Clifford for following through and creating a fine work of art. I will eventually do the same, probably in oil. You'll see it here first, when I do.

Great minds must think alike because a couple of weeks ago I opened my September, 2009 issue of Southwest Art magazine and on page 12, to my surprise, was another image

Tuesday, September 1, 2009
12. In Monroeville Magazine Article published

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