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 Monday, November 20, 2006
The sun is peeking out
12:30 a.m. The sun is peeking out, and a wonderful rainbow is cast around the ship from the spray. Tomorrow we hope to make landfall and start painting onsite. Hope to share some insights into the process of starting a painting on site. In the meantime keep the hatches battened down!
5:30 p.m. and sun is shining. Waves have eased as we turn by the South Shetland Islands.
-- David
 Breaking Waves at the Bow, Drake Passage November 16, 2006
 Cape petrels from the porthole, Drake Passage November 16, 2006
 The Studio and Models, Snow Hill Island November 11, 2006.
More Information:
Winsor&Newton's Tips for Painting Watercolor in Freezing Temperatures
There are a couple of interesting options to lower the freezing temperature of water in the extreme latitudes. Some compounds affect the colligative properties of a solution. In real-world language, that means that there are things that you can put into water that will inhibit how water does what it typically does. Thus, there are things that can be added to lower the freezing point (which will also, by the way, raise the boiling point, too). Salt is a prime example: it lowers the freezing point, which is why it's used to melt sidewalks in January. It also does, as you well know, funky things in a watercolor paint layer.
Another option is to add a bit of glycol (either ethylene or propylene). Both will significantly lower the freezing temp of water although there is a downside: the 'feel' of the paint will get a bit slick, and the glycols will take a period of time to fully evaporate from the paint layer. You could also try adding some glycerin, which will drop the freezing temperature, although not quite as much as the glycols. And glycerin will also act as a humectant, holding moisture, as well. Here are a couple of cool (pun fully intended!) tables that show the freezing point of glycol-water and glycerin-water solutions as a function of the percentage of the added stuff. Note that a solution containing 20% glycerin (with 80% water) drops to a freezing point of 23°F. A solution of 20% of one of the glycols (with 80% water) will freeze at around 15°.

 As you can imagine, these are conditions that don't often get tested!
Artists & Writers Program in Concert with the National Science Foundation The National Science Foundation has a division that makes it possible for artists and writers, as well as scientists, to be part of the U.S. Antarctic Program. Artists work at U.S. stations and camps, often alongside scientists, but sometimes on their own. The premise of the program is that artists will create pictures or accounts that will educate as well as delight and thus broaden Americans' understanding of this remote and mysterious region. Applicants who are chosen by a peer review panel will receive field support, including air travel from the United States. Applications are available at the National Science Foundation's Web site at www.nsf.gov/pubsys/ods/getpub.cfm. For a list of artists and writers who previously won grants, visit www.nsf.gov/od/opp/aawr.htm. Birds of Antarctica David McEown reported seeing fulmars and Cape Petrels in flight. Fulmars have wingspans of four feet; the petrel is much smaller. The petrel's name derives from the legend of St. Peter, who miraculously walked toward Jesus's ship on the Sea of Galilee. Petrels are ship-followers; they sometimes feed on carrion. They breed in cliff ledges and can live up to 20 years. To see pictures of Caper Petrels and to hear their cry, visit www.antarcticconnection.com/antarctic/wildlife/birds/petrels.shtml. Antarctic fulmars, who look a little like big gulls, are related to the albatross. To read more, visit the same site (www.antarcticconnection.com/antarcitc/wildlife/birds/petrels.shtml) or go to http://birding.about.com/od/birdsfulmars.
Antarctica Week 1
11/20/2006 3:37:03 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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Weather rules!
Day 2 on the Drake Passage. Promise of our first Antarctic landing on the South Shetland Islands looks uncertain tonight. Six-meter seas and a fifty-knot wind hitting the ship straight on have made progress slow. Driving rain and snow have made it impossible for even the extreme painter to work outside, although it's tempting! The captain has closed the outer decks for safety. The best place to work sketching the breaking waves and spray over this immense ship's bow is from the porthole. From the deck 8 starboard cabin windows, I keep an eye on the brightening horizon and the massive wave crests. Cape Petrels and fulmars glide effortlessly along the spray ridges and are reflected, for split a second, in the elastic wave surfaces. As we cross the Antarctic convergence, the water temperature drops. The colors of the water appear more phthalo blue and green.
On Sea Days like this, everything is in slow motion because every move has to be in sync with the wave action. It takes time to set up the painting materials in a manner to ensure that that they'll not roll away. Papers can slide out beneath you, or the water bucket can spill in your lap. Last year on the Drake Passage I hadn't tied down my easel. I left it for 10 seconds. In that time the ship rolled, tipping the apparatus and breaking the easel's main parts. Thankfully the ship had some very effective Russian super glue to repair it! Painting on deck is the platform in which I have control over the main force in watercolor and that is gravity.
Essential Materials for Painting Near the South Pole As I prepare my supplies for the upcoming busy landings in Antarctica, I have listed below some of the essentials.
The Painting Board. The folder is made from two corrugated plastic sheets duct taped at one end to make for a lightweight, ultra sturdy, waterproof, painting surface and folder. I use 2 sizes to accommodate both full and half sheets. Corrugated plastic is available at most art stores. I use a gray color, as it's neutral and not blinding when the sun reflects off it. When going into the backcountry, I can carry about 30 half sheets in the 16x22 folder which fits in to my large backpack. I find this way of storing the paper affords me more variety in custom paper sizes; it's also more economical than commercial watercolor blocks. You just clip the paper onto the board, and you're ready to paint. There's no time to stretch paper here! For more versatility, this board can be clipped onto a sturdy Masonite board that is customized with a universal adapter to fit a photographic tripod. The tripod allows endless angle variations so you can manipulate the water bead. With a little innovation you can also attach a water container to the easel. A collapsible easel is preferable. Watch the wind and waves though. It might be wise to tie the easel down.
Paper: 140 lb. (cold press surface is my preference) is ideal, as this weight of paper tends not to buckle but does not weigh the pack down. The paper I'd use in my studio, 300 lb., would.
Arches Bright White and Winsor & Newton are great for depicting clean, bright snow and mountains and ocean surf. Saunders 200 lb. has lovely warmth for autumn or sunsets.
Tubes of Watercolor and palette. Fresh tubes of paint to squeeze out are preferable to maybe overly dried out cakes, and the landscape may ask for fully saturated color! Store tubes in a small box or container, so as not to crush them. I use a Holbein Kit that holds the tubes, brushes, and a folding palette, which also acts as a lid. I don't like the new version of this palette as much as my old one, as there are now many more areas for cakes. This Holbein Kit is compact and clean, as well as easy to set up and take down. It is important to have a folding palette (with a thumbhole) and large mixing areas. I use a variety of leading brands and colors (however Winsor & Newton, in my opinion, makes the best), mainly in the primaries with a few secondary. I prefer to mix most earth tones and grays. When painting winter scenes in winter, I keep the paint box near my body heat so the paints don't freeze!
Watercolor Brushes: I use a pointed round sable brush (No.12), and one other brush (No. 4). I find also that some Chinese bamboo brushes create interesting effects. My favorite brush is a wolf hair mountain brush. Many elements in the landscape can also make interesting marks on paintings. Try twigs or moss, for example. My advice is to transport brushes in a breathable holder of some sort. Remember that brushes can rot and the tips need to be protected. You could try rolling them in a bamboo place mat, for example.
Other Important Items:
- Pencil, kneaded eraser, knife, palette knife for scraping.
- Water container for cleaning brushes and plastic bottles for storing fresh water as well as taking dirty water back to ship (once we get off ship).
- Rain jacket or large garbage bags: these are handy in case of rain, or to sit on if ground is wet and covered with penguin guano.
- Small folding painting or camping stool.
- Sun hat (very important to cut down on eye fatigue and glare.)
- Sunscreen, neutral tinted sunglasses,
- Camera, with plenty of film or extra digital memory cards: It's important to gather reference material or documentation. When I'm on land, I often travel with a laptop computer so I can review the journey in the evening.
- Backpack or large portfolio to carry all this stuff!!
Antarctica Week 1
11/20/2006 3:29:18 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 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
 A View of Sea and Sky in watercolor by David McEown
 Another View
 David painting in watercolor on a quarter sheet of Winsor&Newton watercolor paper.
 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)
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 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)
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 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.htmlThe 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)
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 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




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)
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