![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEirzYThgGJeBvxMzS_T9LoZifnvx_5OL5UjquShNYiIXlwvu-1YCUAPQUAv31DVHjLrA78y67nK9raPkIBe1KIGCNdTtpQQxCBt6NrF0x1HyUEIrF3mihwF6RK6864TL269mOelC9_rAaq9/s320/JoshuaTree_MWPAP.jpg)
Last Sunday the Mt. Washington Painters organized a field trip to Joshua Tree. Our first.
It was hot already but lots of flowers greeted us , albeit not in big masses. Boulders like those of Joshua Tree are interesting by themselves but it is an easy mistake to think they will translate into interesting paintings. A painting has to explain itself and curious shapes and stains that look perfectly natural in real life might look as bizarre design elements in a painting. Rocks color shifts are very interesting and subtle and the form beautiful layers. So the utmost observation of tones and realism, or else, invention and design seem the best approach. I chose the former but my piece became a little cloyed nevertheless.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhCcfGFE9S8_cILs-TmG8rBmzcUY_KY0J41FEEaMXLrR5AKaQ6DHbJJLOawGjfiNIBkqxAr981b-A7r_-apjbt_1h4AWWNcGAzN4CtSIDAV5bucxL3OWmL_yzKuTfEt7ahAPv09v5RnNTA8/s320/JoshuaTree_MWPAP2.jpg)
And here i am looking dashing but dehydrated.
And one of the results of my toils.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh87g9qeTIRcVyZNIMFqPMMobBM6IQm0vEfkJ2ZWgFXHr8g1zMosO2ukvc1UZdsaUDtL1FpKDItptqxLPPp0o92awmWuYjrldCjIVuuY9PHvMdyCLKwl24JbPr5yyQX6Eb4KapN097eNFjv/s320/JoshuaRock_11x14.jpg)