In his pursuit of artistic truth, painter Lynn Boggess has taken plein air to an extreme level of dedication.
“What I’m looking for out there is the energy and the light, and to act on the impulses I have with the paint,” he says. “It’s about capturing the experience of nature.”
Boggess, who owns a 120-acre wilderness tract in West Virginia, often ventures out into the dense countryside with huge canvases measuring as large as 48 inches wide, which he sets up on an easel under a makeshift shelter that he builds on site. It’s very much off-road plein air done on an immense scale. This method of painting is not without its risks—“I’ve left paintings outdoors for days at a time,” he says. “Oil paint is quite resilient. Just knock the snow off and you’re good to go.”—but it’s the only way that puts the artist this close to his subject matter.
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