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Chris Stoffel Overvoorde - Watercolors

Chris Stoffel Overvoorde - Crowsnest River
Crowsnest River in Hillcrest, Alberta
watercolor/paper
9x9.25", framed

$375.00 CDN

 

Chris Stoffel Overvoorde - Foothills
Foothills Near Hillcrest, Looking East, 2006
watercolor/paper
9.5x34", framed
$1500.00 CDN

 

Chris Stoffel Overvoorde - Waterton Valley
Waterton Valley, Alberta, Evening Sky
watercolor/paper
9.5 x 34", framed
$1500.00 CDN

 

Chris Stoffel Overvoorde - Evening Light
Evening Light on the Rockies in Alberta (near Waterton Lakes National Park)
watercolor/paper
8x25", framed
$1125.00 CDN

 

Porcupine Hills, Alberta, August 2004
watercolor/paper
6 1/2 x 9 3/4", framed
$400.00 CDN

 

"...the true artist employs his hands, his head, and his heart." 
(Chris Stoffel Overvoorde. Passing the Colors. Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2002:49)

 

August Prairie View, August 2004
watercolor/paper
3 1/4 x 10 1/4", framed
$400.00 CDN

 

"A place is nevertheless representative of the entire environment. With your feet in the dirt and with the sky overwhelmingly above, you experience a sense of proportion, scale, and perspective that is refreshing and renewing."
(Chris Stoffel Overvoorde, "Review of the Sabbath, Inspace to Landscape," in Twenty-Five Years as an American Artist, Chris Stoffel, Grand Rapids, MI.: Calvin College, 1986.)

 

Citadel Peaks, Waterton / Glacier International Peace Park
watercolor/paper
22x36"
$2000.00 CDN

 

"Art is a response connecting insight, emphasis, or viewpoint to a sense of place or belonging."
(Chris Stoffel Overvoorde, "Review of the Sabbath, Inspace to Landscape," in Twenty-Five Years as an American Artist, Chris Stoffel, Grand Rapids, MI.: Calvin College, 1986.)

 

Artist's Statement

Landscape painting is exploring nature in a special way.  To stand or sit in a landscape is an experience we cannot always express in words.  The inability to say it in words has led me to painting.  The process of painting allows me to understand that special moment in a new way.  Painting is a way of knowing, of exploring, a new way of seeing what at first was ordinary and commonplace.  To reach beyond the appearance of the physical and search for the invisible elements of nature has been my challenge.

For the seventh time Greta and I have returned to work in the Gushul Studio as an artist in residence with the University of Lethbridge. The studio is located in the small mining town of Blairmore, which is part of the Crowsnest Pass in the southeast corner of Alberta, Canada.  The studio has been, over the years, a place of inspiration and meditation for me.  The entire north wall is a two-story high glass wall and half the ceiling is glass as well, making the light a very special feature in this space. 

Alberta is the place of spectacular triumphs as well as defeats of the forces of nature battling against each other.  In the west the massive ranges of the Rockies thrust up from below sea level to heights of over 12,000 feet.  In between valleys of up to 6000 feet cut across these mountains ranges.  Eastward are the plains with the wide-open spaces of the prairie.  Here the struggle is less dramatic although erosion by water, wind, frost, and ice has reshaped the land for 60 million years.  In the south the Old Man River cuts through the Livingstone Range before entering the foothills.[1]  It was this area that I explored more fully this time by making drawings on the spot and recording it digitally. The ridges of the foothills typically run in a northwesterly direction.  It is rugged country with steep valleys in which heavy forests are interspersed with grasslands.  Sparse trees often define the crest of the hills.  We traveled north as far as Black Diamond and as far south as the US border near Waterton Lakes National Park.

The sky has always been important to me as a landscape painter, so now too the special light of the sky has played an important role in these new works.  The cloud formations in this area are almost unbelievable as they form against the dome of the sky; sometimes they are sculpted by the winds coming off the mountains.  Light and space play with each other here. Light for me is also symbolic, for it reminds me of God the creator who is still at work in His creation. To be able to respond visually is a gift and seeing the show is sharing of that gift.  Enjoy.


[1] W.G. Hardy, Alberta, A Natural History.

Link to Artist's Website

 

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This page was last edited  January 19, 2010
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