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Coming up: Pastel
Journal, April 2007 issue
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April 2007 Issue: Please
click below to read the article by Bob Bahr.

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From: SCENE, December 1, 2006
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"Jenny Lake
Morning," by Ann
Sanders. Below is Sanders' "Palm Sunset"
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ANN SANDERS, "NEW PASTELS"
When: Through Dec. 22, 2006
Where: Arts Fund Gallery, 205C Santa Barbara St.
Gallery hours: Noon-5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday
Information: 965-7321
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ART REVIEW: The soft-edged lay of the land
By Josef Woodard, NEWS-PRESS CORRESPONDENT
Landscape artists who decide to work with pastels are dealing with an
in-between medium of special qualities and special challenges. With the
softened edges and unique blends of its color palette, pastels exist somewhere
between the watery fluidity of watercolor and the sturdier materiality of oils
and acrylic paint.
Count Ann Sanders as one of those inspired pastel artists
with an apparent hot line to the muse. As seen in an impressive show at the Arts
Fund Gallery, Sanders brings a sensitivity to light, land and atmosphere, using
her medium to its fullest. She brings something fresh and also unpretentiously
nature-worshipping in her plein air works, some created in the south of France
but mostly in the south of California -- within easy access for Santa Barbarans
seeking a fix of nature.
While Santa Barbara's landscape artist community is a
populous one, few have gone the pastel route. In the acclaimed "Oak
Group" of artists, recently with work gone public at the Santa Barbara
Museum of Natural History and the Central Library, only Glenna Hartmann and
Chris Chapman have looked to pastels, surrounded on all sides by oil painters
and water colorists.
In effect, pastel is an acquired taste and an acquired
passion, and Sanders appears to have fully acquired it. Some of the more
appealing works here were done in areas we are well-familiar with, but they are
given an exotic spin through the artist's careful framing and perception.
"San Marcos Foothills" is all rolling,
intersecting planes of fields and framed by oaks and eucalyptus trees, with no
sign of humanity or development in sight (yet).
A dreamy image of the Douglas Family Preserve (still known
fondly as the "Wilcox Property" to longtime Santa Barbarans) is
positively idyllic, with its shade-casting canopy of trees on a cliff
overlooking the Pacific below and beyond.
Similarly, "Carpinteria Salt Marsh" is an
Arcadian-like vista we have trouble associating with its proximity to the 101
and the former home of the jumbo Santa Claus effigy. Undulant patchworks of
colors and marshlands suggest a 19th century French landscape painting and the
thumbprint of God.
One of the stronger images in the show is "Palm
Sunset," certainly a common subject for artists in this be-palmed beach
town. But Sanders depicts the tall, iconic trees connecting land and sky, and in
the dramatizing, waning light of sunset. More shadow play, on European turf,
enlivens the compositions in "Provence Shadows" and "Vauvenargues."
Moving to another corner of the globe and another time of
day, her piece "Jenny Lake Morning" captures the brittle morning light
of the Sierras.
And in a rare, fleeting appearance of man's handiwork and
evidence that we're not in the 19th century, "Red Tractor" depicts
said subject as a funky little afterthought in a painting otherwise celebrating
the spread of rich farmland and arboreal waves of dark green.
Defying the dismissive stereotype of what the pastel medium
is capable of, Sanders finds ways of investing mystery and awe in her field
reports from encounters with mother nature.
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