Gordon drives Dome Valley |
"The boss" in this instance is Bruce Springsteen who started playing just as I began to title the piece. Louise's husband had lent us his satellite radio as reception on normal radio stations in the desert can be very patchy. Gordon managed to work out how the radio worked and then kept us tuned to a radio station which played a lot of Jimmy Buffet for most of the journey. Everybody was amazed I'd never heard of him......
After a while I began to realise that there was an opportunity to sketch from the car because the view is the same for mile after mile so accuracy in terms of what you can see from an exact spot becomes rather redundant and it's also easier to get a good sense of the place. Thus the next sketch (pen and ink and coloured pencil in my Moleskine travel sketchbook) is a composite of the desert landscape we were passing. The hills come from one bit of the road, the sky from another and the shapes of cacti were filled in as we passd them.
Sand Tank Mountains, Arizona |
The large cacti in the sketch of this particular part of the Sonoran desert are called Saguaro Cactus. The other main vegetation we saw everywhere on this part of the trip is called the Ocotillo - and it's not a cactus, its a shrub . This is a photo of what an ocotillo looks like close up.
One of the main features of the trip that day were the cloud formations. We had great big cumulus clouds initially over the various mountain ranges in the distance and then just before we turned right on to Interstate 10 Louise and I spotted an anvil cloud - which usually means there's a storm hovering somewhere in the vicinity.
We drove past Tucson heading for San Xavier du Bac Mission on its outskirts The history of this church is explained in the history section of its website. In outline, the first church foundations were built in 1700 and the present church was built between 1783 and 1797. It's suggested to be one of the very finest examples of Mission architecture given the blending of various styles and the dazzling ornamentation and colour of the interior. It was incredibly hot and humid while we were there. As we began to leave we could not help but notice that there was a dramatic change in the sky - the storm clouds were gathering.
As we started the next leg of the journey to Tombstone the rain started - and it 'bucketed down' I feel it necessary to point out that I announced that this was nothing to do with me ;) as England currently has a ban on the use of hose pipe due to a lack of rain. I felt it much more likely that it had something to do with the man from Maine (and by the end of the trip I was calling him the 'rainmaker'). Two weeks later the area we were moving through had some really bad summer flash floods.
Then we arrived in Tombstone, home of the OK Corral........
Technorati tags: Arizona , art , coloured pencils , coloured pencils , drawing , moleskine , pen and ink , pencil , plein air , sketching , sketchbook , travel , travel sketchbook
I love seeing your sketches from the trip. It seems as though you had a busy, lively holiday.
ReplyDeleteDid you learn anything about which art supplies are best to pack? I'd be interested to know if you're going to streamline before your September trip.
By the look of it, I don't think I'm going to have any option but to streamline some more - probably on the clothes!
ReplyDeleteI've certainly got some comments about what travels well and will work in a post about that soon.
The way to go! Hi, I'm Wendy from Geelong, Australia and I stumbled onto your site via Julie. Travelling with both a camera and a sketchbook is crucial to keeping the memories of a trip alive. I even paste in bus tickets, museum entries, leaves when I go periodically to Fiji. At Melbourne airport though, they confiscated my scissors last time!
ReplyDeleteW.
Your trip sketches are just wonderful! And you get extra points for being able to draw the driver while the car was moving -- yep, extra points indeed!
ReplyDelete:-)