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Watercolorist has a fresh touch.


Byline: Bob Keefer The Register-Guard

Bouquets and landscapes done in watercolor by an artist on the Oregon Coast The Oregon Coast is a geographical term that is used to describe the coast of Oregon along the Pacific Ocean. Stretching 362 miles from Astoria to the California border, the Oregon Coast is unique in that the whole coastline is public land.  may not strike you, on the face of it, as substantial or inviting art.

We've all seen enough frilly frill  
n.
1. A ruffled, gathered, or pleated border or projection, such as a fabric edge used to trim clothing or a curled paper strip for decorating the end of the bone of a piece of meat.

2.
 flower paintings and greeting-card sunsets to last us a lifetime.

But in a show that runs through June 26 at the Karin Clarke Gallery, Eugene lawyer Roger Saydack has found an exceptional artist who paints in watercolor and indeed produces landscapes and flower paintings.

Saydack, who leads a dual life as a lawyer and an art connoisseur, discovered the work of George Kettlewell at a coastal gallery while visiting Cannon Beach. Fascinated with his work, Saydack met the artist and eventually curated this show of Kettlewell's recent watercolors for the Clarke Gallery.

Kettlewell is a rare find, an artist who doesn't go out of his way to promote his career. He didn't show up for his own opening reception, and he declined to be interviewed for this story. He supports himself working as a janitor.

In a handwritten hand·write  
tr.v. hand·wrote , hand·writ·ten , hand·writ·ing, hand·writes
To write by hand.



[Back-formation from handwritten.]

Adj. 1.
 biographical note to the gallery, Kettlewell said he graduated in 1970 from Kent State University with a bachelor of fine arts The Bachelor of Fine Arts, usually abbreviated BFA, is the standard undergraduate degree for students seeking a professional education in the visual or performing arts. Also named in some countries the Bachelor of Creative Arts or BCA.  degree in painting.

He moved to Oregon in 1972, and he and his wife ran a ceramics studio and gallery for 10 years in Cannon Beach. He has mostly been shown around Cannon Beach, except for a show at the late William Jamison's gallery in Portland.

The watercolors Saydack selected for the Clarke Gallery show are rough, brooding and full of emotional resonance. They are about evenly divided between landscapes, which somewhat resemble 19th century sepia SEPIA - Standard ECRC Prolog Integrating Applications. Prolog with many extensions including attributed variables ("metaterms") and declarative coroutining. "SEPIA", Micha Meier <micha@ecrc.de> et al, TR-LP-36 ECRC, March 1988. Version 3.1 available for Suns and VAX.  colored photographs, and still lifes of cut flowers flowers cut from the stalk, as for making a bouquet.

See also: Flower
, which are casually thrown onto a surface or set into a glass of water. A few other paintings are of mushrooms and some, very dark and dramatic, are of tarts on plates.

Within this limited subject matter, Kettlewell has mastered the art of understatement. Watercolor so often encourages excess that gaudy colors and photographic detail have become the standard in much watercolor flower painting. Not here.

Instead Kettlewell creates a mood and a presence that moves beyond mere details. Some of his flowers are even difficult to decipher Same as decrypt.  as flowers, so broadly are they drawn. Even so, the painting is highly accurate, perfectly capturing the arrangement of light and shadow in each piece. The paintings of mushrooms seem to glow like ghosts.

Most of Kettlewell's work in this show is monochromatic monochromatic /mono·chro·mat·ic/ (-kro-mat´ik)
1. existing in or having only one color.

2. pertaining to or affected by monochromatic vision.

3. staining with only one dye at a time.
 or nearly so. The landscapes are done in warm tones of brown; the tarts are done in blacks. The flowers alone contribute their own colors to his work, but even here the color is muted.

The overall effect, perhaps surprisingly, is one of lushness. These flowers are not pretty, but they are beautiful, and they get better and better with each viewing.

Kettlewell's painting has more in common with such earlier Northwest artists as Morris Graves Morris Cole Graves (August 28, 1910 – May 5, 2001) was an American painter and a founder of the Northwest School (art). Early years
Born the sixth son of a Methodist family in Fox Valley, Oregon, Graves was a country boy.
 and C.S. Price - on the latter artist, not coincidentally co·in·ci·den·tal  
adj.
1. Occurring as or resulting from coincidence.

2. Happening or existing at the same time.



co·in
, Saydack is an acknowledged expert - than he does with contemporary Sunday flower painters.

Saydack's statement accompanying the show describes Kettlewell's work in tactile tactile /tac·tile/ (tak´til) pertaining to touch.

tac·tile
adj.
1. Perceptible to the sense of touch; tangible.

2. Used for feeling.

3.
 terms.

"Kettlewell's landscape paintings feel as if he made them with his bare hands," Saydack writes. "What makes George Kettlewell's groups of cut flowers, thrown roughly on a tabletop, so engaging, is his touch."

EXHIBIT REVIEW

Life, Still-life and Landscape

What: Watercolors by Cannon Beach artist George Kettlewell

Where: Karin Clarke Gallery, 760 Willamette St.

When: Through June 26

Hours: 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday

CAPTION(S):

A watercolor by George Kettlewell of some flowers is part of his show at the Clarke Gallery.
COPYRIGHT 2004 The Register Guard
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Arts & Literature
Publication:The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
Date:Jun 20, 2004
Words:610
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