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THE WORKING WILDERNESS HERITAGE SERIES



LANDSCAPES & LIFE: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE WORKING WILDERNESS HERITAGE SERIES

The Working Wilderness Heritage Series depicts working man’s interaction with the natural world. It may not always be pretty and may anger those who wish for absolutely no contact between nature and man, but it is reality, and properly conducted need not be intrusive or destructive.

As a geologist, I have spent much of my life working in and visiting remote areas of the world, frontier regions that collectively might be termed “wilderness.” The wilderness is of course no such thing, and remains a term coined by humans when failing to encounter large groups of their fellow man while tramping through the bush of the Canadian Shield, over the treeless, vast terrain of the Arctic or the high, windswept plains of the Andes Mountains, through the dense, tangled growth of Ecuadorian or Papua New Guinea jungles or on the shimmering terrain of Mexican or Australian deserts. These so-called wildernesses are filled with the natural world, be they animal, vegetable or mineral. Experiencing the northern lights, the call of the loon, the flight of the eagle, rivers carpeted in crimson by spawning salmon, the explosive colour of Arctic and desert flowering, or the raucous cries of brilliantly plumaged jungle birds to give note to just a few, quickly gives lie to the natural world as wilderness.

The connection of indigenous peoples with the wilderness is intimate and inclusive, extending back to the dawn of mankind. Over the course of such history, the so-called wilderness has been both the key and threat to man’s survival, be it as a source of food and shelter, or a force with which to cope, never to overcome but hopefully to survive. In more modern times, the wilderness has engaged the human race on somewhat different and expanded terms in exploring and exploiting its natural resources. As such, people other than indigenous groups have been added to the human component of the wilderness, as have machines. The term “exploitation” is an interesting one, for that single word can be employed to describe two completely opposite traits, one positive and one pejorative. Webster’s Dictionary defines exploitation to be either an act of productive utilization or the unethical use of something for one’s own advantage or profit. The nature of the former definition is one of balance and enduring quality while the downside of the latter practice as it affects our world is beyond debate, and is neither the focus of this series nor one that has for the most part underlain my personal experience. Rather my involvement in exploration and exploitation has been one of engagement with the wilderness, an engagement that has presented the awesome beauty of the natural world with a daily reminder of the respect and humility required for the survival of both self and the environment itself.

The Working Wilderness Heritage Series reflects some of the places and environments in which I have co-existed during my lifetime. There are those who see in a landscape painting the depiction of a human figure or any signs of human interaction with the landscape as despoiling the art; as somehow lessening the value of the artistic thought and diminishing the beauty of the natural landscape. This artist would disagree, mindful of the fact that we also are part of nature and a balanced interaction of man and nature is part of the natural world. It is fondly remembered how winter roads made through the northern Quebec bush facilitated forestry and one geologist’s travel through the bush, but as well made easier the winter and summer travel of one of the largest populations of its kind in the world…….moose!

The Working Wilderness Heritage Series therefore depicts working man’s interaction with the wilderness, be it within the realm of mineral exploration, forestry, fishing or the like, and as a reflection of the fact that man and the products of his inventions are also an intricate part of the natural world. Voltaire once noted that “the secret of the arts is to correct nature.” But what is there to correct in nature? Absolutely nothing. And no artist, however realistic his or her style, can ever out compose or truly depict the settings or beauty of the natural world. One can only but personalize the experience.

Should a corporation, particularly one engaged in a natural resource industry, wish to depict for posterity and in the form of art, the historical or current settings of the company’s operations, my background and artistic focus are particularly suitable to interpret such settings in artistic form.

Commissions are invited in this regard.


Flight Paths
Flight Paths
Oil on Canvas
30.0 x 40.0 in.
Exploring the Papasquasati River, Northern Quebec
Exploring the Papasquasati River, Northern Quebec
Oil on Canvas
24.0 x 36.0 in.
Working On The Ecstall River, Northern British Columbia
Working On The Ecstall River, Northern British Columbia
Oil on Canvas
30.0 x 48.0 in.
Northern Canada Mineral Exploration Using Early Model Skidoo
Northern Canada Mineral Exploration Using Early Model Skidoo
Oil on Canvas
245.0 x 0.0 in.
Exploration On The Bunster Plateau, British Columbia
Exploration On The Bunster Plateau, British Columbia
Oil on Canvas
30.0 x 48.0 in.
Fresh Supplies!
Fresh Supplies!
Oil on Board
24.0 x 48.0 in.
Flying Over High Country Glaciers, British Columbia
Flying Over High Country Glaciers, British Columbia
Oil on Canvas
40.0 x 30.0 in.
Labrador Fly Camp
Labrador Fly Camp
Oil on Canvas
24.0 x 36.0 in.
Logs Under Tow, Ecstall River, British Columbia
Logs Under Tow, Ecstall River, British Columbia
Watercolour on Fine Art Paper
11.0 x 15.0 in.
Bush Road In Muskwa Range, Northern British Columbia
Bush Road In Muskwa Range, Northern British Columbia
Oil on Canvas
24.0 x 36.0 in.
Seymour River Valley, British Columbia
Seymour River Valley, British Columbia
Oil on Canvas
24.0 x 36.0
Exploring The Bunster Plateau, British Columbia
Exploring The Bunster Plateau, British Columbia
Oil on Canvas
24.0 x 48.0 in.
Turning Final To Bronson Creek Airstrip, Stikine River, British Columbia
Turning Final To Bronson Creek Airstrip, Stikine River, British Columbia
Oil on Board
24.0 x 48.0 in.
Exploring The River Bluff
Exploring The River Bluff
Oil on Board
24.0 x 36.0 in.
Exploring The Muskwa Range, Northern British Columbia
Exploring The Muskwa Range, Northern British Columbia
Oil on Board
24.0 x 36.0 in.
Summer Exploration Camp, Cottonbelt Plateau, British Columbia
Summer Exploration Camp, Cottonbelt Plateau, British Columbia
Oil on Canvas
24.0 x 36.0 in.
Winter Exploration Camp, Cottonbelt Plateau, British Columbia
Winter Exploration Camp, Cottonbelt Plateau, British Columbia
Oil on Canvas
24.0 x 36.0 in.
Exploring The High Canadian Rocky Mountains
Exploring The High Canadian Rocky Mountains
Oil on Board
24.0 x 36.0 in.
Better Late Than Never!
Better Late Than Never!
Oil on Canvas
24.0 x 48.0 in.
Merritt, BC Ranchlands Series: Line Cabin
Merritt, BC Ranchlands Series: Line Cabin
Oil on Canvas
24.0 x 36.0 in.
Merritt, BC Ranchlands Series: Split Herd
Merritt, BC Ranchlands Series: Split Herd
Oil on Board
24.0 x 48.0 in.
Merritt, BC Ranchlands Series: High Country Meadow
Merritt, BC Ranchlands Series: High Country Meadow
Oil on Board
24.0 x 48.0 in.
Nearly Home In The Canadian Arctic
Nearly Home In The Canadian Arctic
Oil on Board
24.0 x 36.0 in.
Towing Logs On The Ecstall River, British Columbia
Towing Logs On The Ecstall River, British Columbia
Oil on Board
24.0 x 36.0 in.
Log Grading, Howe Sound, British Columbia
Log Grading, Howe Sound, British Columbia
Oil on Canvas
24.0 x 36.0 in.
A Race With Darkness
A Race With Darkness
Oil on Canvas
30.0 x 48.0 in.
Log Sorting, Howe Sound, British Columbia
Log Sorting, Howe Sound, British Columbia
Oil on Board
24.0 x 36.0 in.
At The Top Of The Chute
At The Top Of The Chute
Oil on Board
16.0 x 24.0 in.
Geologizing Over Kamloops Lake, British Columbia
Geologizing Over Kamloops Lake, British Columbia
Oil on Board
13.0 x 24.0 in.
Tough Portage!
Tough Portage!
Oil on Board
16.0 x 24.0 in.
On Final To Bronson Creek Airstrip, Stikine River, British Columbia
On Final To Bronson Creek Airstrip, Stikine River, British Columbia
Oil on Canvas
24.0 x 36.0 in.
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