Tag: Paul Olson

  • Saturday, July 13, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm – Art Workshop: Making Art in the Landscape

    Join Paul Olson, the Arnold Arboretum’s exhibiting artist of Drawn to Paint, for a sketching workshop “en plein air” (outside, in the landscape), on Saturday, July 13 from 1 – 3, beginning in the Hunnewell Building of the Arnold Arboretum. Olson, an instructor at Mass College of Art and RISD, will focus on teaching you to sketch trees from direct observation outdoors. He will encourage you to think about simplifying your design with just the essential shapes to make a good composition in light pencil. Then, you can use ink and water for an expressive tonal image. Bring pencils and sketchbooks. Some supplies will be available. Fee $10 member, $20 nonmember

    Register at my.arboretum.harvard.edu or call 617-384-5277.

  • Saturday, May 18, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm – Opening Reception, Drawn to Paint

    Artist Paul Olson has been discovering the nuances of the Arnold Arboretum’s collections since he first passed through its gates in 2011. A landscape painter for decades, Olson explores the grounds with sketchbook in hand, typically in the early morning hours. His goal is to be unencumbered by any agenda and open to what the light of the day presents. In 2012, he had an exhibition at the Arnold Arboretum entitled Drawn to Woods. The expressive ink drawings in that show were all completed en plein air – on site in open air/ In this new show, running May 10 – July 21 in the Hunnewell Building at the Arnold Arboretum, Olson brings his on-site observations into the painting studio to work in color, reflecting on his real world experience, but searching for that delightful sense of childlike discovery found in nature. These works on paper and canvas also feature paintings of bonsai from the Bonsai and Penjing collection. Paul Olson is an instructor at his alma mater, Rhode Island School of Design, and also teaches in the illustration department at Massachusetts College of Art. He has exhibited in various group and solo shows in the United States. He also makes pottery for bonsai and is an avid bonsai cultivator. The opening reception takes place May 18 from 1 – 3 and is free and open to the public.