EDGAR PAYNE (1883-1947)
Tioga Peak (3,513 m - 11,526 ft)
Tioga Peak (3,513 m - 11,526 ft)
United States of America (California)
The mountain
Tioga Peak (3,513 m - 11,526 ft) is technically outside of Yosemite National Park, a bit north-north-east of Tioga Pass. It is in the Inyo National Forest. Tioga Peak is north of Tioga Pass, at the head of Lee Vining Canyon. Highway 120 goes direct past its south and east slopes. It is easily accessible, a class 1 to class 2 scramble, from Gardisky Lake. The summit is like a rolling dome. It has some of the best views of the Tioga Pass region. Both Mount Dana and Tioga Pass are visible, from the summit.
Tioga Peak is a rounded peak, made of metamorphic rock. Metamorphic rocks make up a large part of the Earth's crust and form 12% of the Earth's land surface. They are classified by texture and by chemical and mineral assemblage (metamorphic facies).
The painter
Edgar
Alwin Payne was an American Western landscape painter and muralist. He
made his way to California for the first time in 1909, at the age of 26.
He spent several months painting at Laguna Beach, then headed to San
Francisco. In San Francisco he met other artists, including commercial
artist Elsie Palmer (1884–1971). On November 1912, Edgar married Elsie
Palmer. As a couple they became well known in Chicago's art circle.
Between 1915 and 1918-19, Edgar maintained a professional address in
Chicago at the Tree Studio Building on East Ohio Street.
He earned his first major commission in 1917. In a bid to attract tourism, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad
asked him to paint the Southwest, along the railroads' trek from
Albuquerque to California. This commission not only solidified his
reputation as an artist, it also forever linked him to Western America.
Although he painted in Europe, he is most remembered for his work from
the Four Corners area of the Navajo Nation Reservation, Yosemite, and
the California coast. This area, from Taos, New Mexico to the Grand
Canyon, became one of Payne's two main inspirations for the next twenty
years.The Santa Fe Railroad commissions were the turn of the century brainchild of William H. Simpson, chief of the railway's advertising department. Starting in 1892, with Thomas Moran, Simpson exchanged travel on the train, along with lodging at railroad hotels and meals at railroad restaurants, and sometimes even cash, for paintings, photographs, pottery, and jewelry. This endeavor lasted for decades and made the Santa Fe one of the largest collectors of southwestern fine art.
His lifelong obsession with the Sierras would lead him to produce a documentary film, “Sierra Journey”. In 1941 he wrote "Composition of Outdoor Painting", a comprehensive book on composition and composition forms. The book also explains landscape painting techniques, color, repetition, rhythm, and value. The seventh edition printing of the work was completed in 2005.
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2020 - Wandering Vertexes...
by Francis Rousseau