
McWay Falls in Julia Pfeiffer Burns Sate Park, Big Sur, California
Two of my paintings are being shown at a local gallery this month. They are part of an exhibition titled “For Love of Central & Coastal California.”
One is a view of iconic Morro Bay Rock as seen from the top of Highway 46, not far from where we live. It is one of my favorite views, especially in the spring with the green hills folding down to the sea. In the actual view from the highway, Morro Rock can barely be seen, even on a clear day. But one of the wonderful things about painting is that you can move things around and make them smaller or larger to fit your vision and what you want to capture.

View of Morro Rock from Highway 46, watercolor by Deborah J. Brakset
This painting was a composite of the following two photographs that I took not long ago. I tried to capture the intense green hills and their shadows from the first photo, and more detail of the ravines that spider up the far hills in the second. I made the hills steeper than they actually are and emphasized the road dipping into the folds.


The second painting on display is a view of a hidden sea cave as seen from Highway 1 near Big Sur.

Sea Cave, Big Sur, from Highway 1 – watercolor by Deborah J. Brasket
It is a composite of the following two photos, the first featuring the yellow wild flowers that grow near the highway overlooking the sea, and the second shows the cave itself in its private cove. You can barely make out the fence and pathway leading down the cliff toward the ocean in the photo.


This last painting is not part of the show but shares the theme. It is a painting of a pathway lined with oaks leading to the river near our home. A “California dreamer” leans against a tree trunk.

“A Splash of Sunlight” watercolor by Deborah J. Brasket
This is the reference photo, sans the mountain and the “dreamer” I added.

I was trying to use the colors and the looser style found in the following painting, one of my favorites by Henri Manguin.

“The Parkway”, 1905, by Henri Manguin
Mine isn’t as successful as I had hoped, but it still captures enough of that “dreamy” feeling of late afternoon, with the sun filtering down through the leaves, to want to keep it.
I hope you enjoyed this brief stroll with me through California’s sunlit and sea-splashed hills. May you savor the natural beauty that lies in your own backyard, wherever that may be.
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Congratulations, Deborah. Lovely art and photos. Does any of your work fall in the plein air field? I have a friend who lives in northern Cali who is very involved in the plein air community.
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Thank you, Luanne. I’ve been wanting to do some plein air painting but haven’t yet. Juggling all that equipment out into the field is an obstacle, but then I have plenty of places just outside my door that would be easy to do. So no excuse.
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My friend’s name is Barb Tapp. Keep your eyes peeled for her work. She has a carful of equipment and travels all over, especially the west coast.
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I’ll look out for her work. Thanks, Luanne.
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Congrats on the gallery showing!
I especially love the Big Sur private cove…there are so many private coves in that part of the coast…wild and wooly Big Sur…lovely memories.
I was wondering, there’s Spanish Moss on the trees near Moro Bay? (the photo reference above)
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Thank you, Laura. It was just a bunch of art students getting together to show our work, and we were able to get space at a large gallery.
Yes, that is Spanish moss. I love it, but chose not to include it in my painting. One of these days I’ll try to capture that too.
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