With their virginal white limbs reaching for
the sky, Quaking Aspen trees and Birch trees appear delicate
and vulnerable. However, they provide food and shelter for
a multitude of animals as well as for humans. Native Americans
used the bark of these trees to make tea and medicine. Their
unusual markings are usually the result of teeth bites and
animals rubbing their bodies or antlers against the trunk and
limbs. Their marred bark is evidence of having been ravaged.
The shapes of broken branches suggest sexual organs and a variety
of sex acts are also suggested where limbs intersect.
This work strives for intimacy with these generous and
unabashed sensual entities. Small sections of a tree
where branches meet are enlarged and studied using different
mediums and surfaces. Graphite, etching, gouache,
and oil have been employed to describe and celebrate these
extraordinary trees’ unique forms.
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