Sunday, November 19, 2006
The sea is like a moving, liquid steel mountain range

The sea is like a moving, liquid steel mountain range. The wind and salt air awaken the senses and ignite that spark to create. When teaching painting I like to focus on 4 aspects or spokes of what I call the vision wheel. First of all is the inspiration, the aesthetic spark, an inner emotional need to communicate something of the heart. The next is the discipline to carry forth with this action. To be successful in this act one must have command of the other two key spokes of the artist wheel, that is that the ability to really see and a confident command of technique. On this journey to Antarctica I will refer to these 4 different aspects of the vision wheel.

Today, in the middle of the Drake Passage and the blasting winds and waves, I am overcome with inspiration to make marks and just respond to the energy and rhymes of the ocean. It is a reckless approach, letting the raindrops stain the page as I work on my half sheet watercolor paper divided into 4 parts. First decision is where shall I place the horizon? Is the dominant subject the sky or the sea?

What creates the horizon is often the light values. Today the violet silver with ochre variations has wonderful transitions from light to dark at the horizon, and the water is dark to light, thus creating a dramatic counterpoint.

When responding to this expressive, moving subject matter, it is easy to get lost or dizzy. To help me keep focused, I locate a vanishing point where all the energy of the marks originate. Then I can sculpt the waves like mountains. Today I started with the sky first; these colors will be used in the water below. The brush, in this case, is an old wolf hair, oriental brush which I drag when very dry across the water to leave the sparkle and whites of the waves below. Winsor &Newton cold pressed 140lb, paper is ideal for this technique, as it has a soft tooth and it’s a very crisp white ideal for suggesting spray. I often use the seabirds that dash and skim along the waves’ crests and valleys as focal landing points. To capture the ruggedness of the ocean, I often use a commercial paint scraper to carve out the dark, wet shapes, revealing the glow and transparency of each wave.

-- David

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A View of Sea and Sky in watercolor by David McEown

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Another View

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David painting in watercolor on a quarter sheet of Winsor&Newton watercolor paper.

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Another view of the deck.

More Information:
The earth’s fourth largest ocean, The Southern or South Polar Ocean was formerly called the Antarctic Ocean. To find out how and why The Antarctic Ocean became The Southern Ocean, visit http://geography.about.com/od/learnabouttheearth/a/fifthocean.htm.

For a preview of what David will see on his journey, take a virtual tour of the South Pole by clicking on http://astro.uchicago.edu/cara/vtour/pole/.

To see live camera shots of the South Pole, visit www.cmdl.noaa.gov/obop/spo/livecamera.html.

Because the Antarctic Continent is imperiled by climate change, scientists from around the world have founded the Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition, whose mission is “to ensure that the Antarctic Continent, its surrounding islands and the great Southern Ocean survive as the world’s last unspoiled wilderness.” To read more about the ASOC, visit www.ASOC.org/.


Antarctica Week 1
11/19/2006 9:16:29 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Saturday, November 18, 2006
The sea is like a moving, liquid steel mountain range

We have left the port of Ushuaia. After a blustery day, the Beagle Channel is now calm, begging to be painted. This will be my first painting of this semi-circumnavigation of Antarctica. After supper the paints, water and paper are stowed away in anticipation of the entry into the Drake Passage, which contains some of the most wild and unpredictable waters.

-- David

More Information:
The Beagle Channel is a strait separating the islands of the Tierra del Fuego archipelago. Its eastern portion is part of the border between Chile and Argentina. The channel was named after the HMS Beagle that took part in two hydrographic surveys of the southern part of South America in the 19th century. On HMS Beagles’s second voyage, Captain Fitz Roy took a 22-year-old naturalist, Charles Darwin, aboard on what became famous as the Voyage of the HMS Beagle.

The Beagle Channel is 150 miles long and 3 miles wide at its narrowest point. To read more about the Beagle Channel, visit www.theworldwidegourmet.com/travel/southamerica/argentina/beagle-channel.htm.
Charles Darwin kept a journal that R.D. Keynes edited. Cambridge University Press reprinted it in 1988. Charles Darwin’s Beagle Diary is available in paperback, as is the Voyage of the Beagle: Charles Darwin’s Journal of Researches as a Penguin Classic.


Antarctica Week 1
11/18/2006 9:05:50 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, November 16, 2006
We embark from Ushuaia, Argentina
Day Two:

I look forward to posting daily updates to this Web page that will be inspired during a semi-circumnavigation expedition to Antarctica’s spectacular and remote places that are only accessible by a polar-class icebreaker, the Kapitan Klebnikov (Quark Expeditions).

As artist in residence, along with an expert team of biologists, geologists, a historian and 100 international passengers, I will be conducting several drawing and painting workshops for the many curious and inspired passengers. Through the creative act of seeing and painting, we hope to enhance our experience of and find some way to express reverence for this incredibly beautiful place.

I look forward, too, to creating a body of work and keeping a journal that will record the challenges of painting in watercolor while experiencing the sometimes-freezing temperatures of Antarctica. Also I will share the challenges of painting on the high seas and on the infamous Drake Passage.

Today seas are calm as we return across the Drake Passage to Ushuaia, Argentina to pick up a new group of passengers for the Epic Antarctica 28-day voyage board aboard Kapitan Klebnikov.

-- David


The icebreaker Kapitan Khlebnikov


More information:
The seas are rarely calm in the Drake Passage! To read more about the Drake Passage in the Southern Ocean, a body of water between Cape Horn and the Antarctic Peninsula, visit www.soc.sotonac.uk/JRD/HYDRO/drake


Departure to the Antarctic Peninsula from the port of
Ushuaia, Argentina, on the southern tip of South America.

The South Pole is breathtaking in a different way when seen from space. To see incredible satellite images of the South Pole and the Drake Passage, visit www.gdargaud.net/Antarctica/RadarSat.html
The place where David McEown posted this blog, Ushuaia, is the southernmost city in the world. On the shores of The Beagle Channel, it is surrounded by the Martial Mountains. Ushuaia is home to three of the world’s largest birds: the rhea, the condor and the albatross. Other animals travelers might spot are guanacos, otters, seals and sea lions. To read about Ushuaia, the capital of Tierra del Fuego, Antarctica, and the Southern Atlantic Islands Province, visit www.patagonia-argentina.com/i/tierradelfuego/ushuaia.

The voyage David McEown embarks on today brings to mind Ernest Shackleton’s heroic trial when his ship, the Endurance, broke apart in polar ice in 1914.  During the perilous journey to safe harbor, Shackleton and his crew endured unspeakable deprivation in the most harrowing circumstances; miraculously, they all survived. Shackleton’s own journals (with entries from Fergus Fleming and Frank Hurley) are collected in South: The Endurance Exhibition, now in paperback from Penguin Classics. Another account, this one by Alfred Lansing, is Endurance: Shackleton’s Incredible Voyage, reprinted by Carroll and Graf Publishers in 1986.

To read a biography of Sir Ernest Shackleton and a capsule version of his journey, visit www.south-pole.com/p0000098.htm.

You may want to rent the 2000 movie, as well: The Endurance: Shackleton’s Legendary Antarctic Expedition, starring Liam Neeson and Julian Ayer, directed by George Butler.


Drake Passage, Horizon Embrace (watercolor, 8.5 x14.5)


Drake Passage #1 (watercolor, 10x 14.5)


Drake Passage #2 (watercolor,10 x 14.5)


Antarctica Week 1
11/16/2006 1:50:02 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [4] 
 Tuesday, November 14, 2006
Antarctica is a painter’s dream

Day One: It's November 13 and we are just heading back to port to pick up passengers for the second voyage. Today I'm sending you some amazing pictures from fourteen days ago, on our penguin trip. We encountered rough seas, but I was stil able to take some amazing pictures.

Journeying to the Antarctic is like discovering a new world of unforgiving beauty, giant in scale, with shapes reduced to basic raw elements. The colors of ice are so subtle, translucent and fragile. This is a land inhabited by innocent, curious creatures that have no fear of us.

Tomorrow I will send you pictures from port as we take off from Argentina.

-- David

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More information:
The emperor penguin, Aptenodytes forsteri, is one of only two species of penguin that inhabit the Antarctic continent. Adelie penguins breed there in summer; emperor penguins breed in winter.

Males and females are indistinguishable until it comes time for the male to assume his paternal duties. The female lays one egg; the father and mother can fit only one egg (and later one chick)  on their feet. The father fasts through the winter, while he is incubating the egg. He folds the egg on top of his feet and covers it with his skin for two months.

The emperor penguin feeds on shoaling fish, small crustaceans and squid. Most emperor colonies are located on what's called fast ice, which is frozen sea ice.


Antarctica Week 1
11/14/2006 4:26:17 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [11]