What a treat to wake up to the Seattle Times newspaper review about
my work! I don't know writer Nancy Worssam but she seems to understand
my goals as a painter... Yay! Read the entire review here.
A review of “Paintings About Trees,”
comprising works by Barbara Benedetti Newton, Monte Shelton and Darin
Clark, at Jeffrey Moose Gallery through Saturday, May 3, 2014.
The
landscapes by Barbara Benedetti Newton are suffused with gossamer
colors. Newton began as a colored-pencil artist, won numerous prizes and
became a well-known teacher and writer about the form. She then began
experimenting in pastels and more recently in oils. In these media, too,
she has won numerous prizes and become a known authority, masterfully
capturing the diffused light of the Northwest.
The
pastel and oil landscapes on exhibit are impressionist renderings. For
some pastels she adds moisture to achieve a wash that gives the works a
diaphanous quality. Yet within these works she often includes hard-edged
elements more precisely rendered.
There’s a lovely
gauziness in her oils, too, where shapes and colors flow into one
another. In these paintings she plays with the paint, sometimes
feathering it out, at other times carefully defining each element of the
landscape. Look for the bursts of color in many of the paintings,
bursts like subtle fireworks that are powerfully effective.
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