Artistic Lines from Joan Justis January 2017 Website: joanjustis.com Instagram: joanjustisstudios
Libby Creek Joan Justis
Paintings filled with tinted snow provide artists with many moods to color—orange with the setting sun, yellow with purple afternoon shadows, varied grays with blowing and drifting flakes, and blue with icy streams.
Snowy landscapes always bring to my mind the paintings of John F. Carlson (1875-1947)
He was a master of aerial perspective using “changes and gradations of color distinctness and hue” to show changes of space.
One of my favorites is Spring Flood. Notice how the changes in the color create foreground, middle ground, and deep background.
His book Carlson’s Guide to Landscape Painting 1929 is a must for anyone studying the painting of nature. “In landscape painting the thing that is of importance to artistic expression is the ‘landscape sense’, a sense that makes us feel the weight of the mountain, feel the float of a cloud, feel the rhythmic reach of a tree, the hardness of a stone.” Now look at this painting by Carlson.
Winter Tranquility



