After the Storm (2024) Drawing by Edwin Loftus

Pastel on Cardboard, 11x14 in
$1,280
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This artwork appears in 4 collections
  • Original Artwork (One Of A Kind) Drawing, Pastel on Cardboard
  • Dimensions Height 11in, Width 14in
  • Artwork's condition The artwork is in perfect condition
  • Framing This artwork is not framed
  • Categories Drawings under $5,000 Symbolism Beach
The great storm has passed and the cleanup begun. skiffs and small sailing craft are stacked for salvage or burning. Each had a crew of brave men, now lost upon the sea that gave them the means of making a living. As the old prayer goes. "Watch over them, Dear Lord, those that go down to the sea in ships. They that do labor on great waters,[...]
The great storm has passed and the cleanup begun. skiffs and small sailing craft are stacked for salvage or burning. Each had a crew of brave men, now lost upon the sea that gave them the means of making a living.
As the old prayer goes. "Watch over them, Dear Lord, those that go down to the sea in ships. They that do labor on great waters, they that see the Thy works and wonders of the deep. For Thou commandeth and raise up the stormy winds that lift up the waves thereof. Be merciful, Oh Lord and bring them home again, to we who wait upon the shore."
Along the coast from Oregon to Vancouver Island, the Northwest Coast is known as the Graveyard of Ships for the hundreds of vessels lost on its stormy and often unpredictable waters. This is one such place, but every inhabited continent has areas like this.
Modern technology has reduced the toll, it's a relief from the hundreds and thousands sometimes lost in the past. But ships still go down each year along this stretch of rocky coastline where Nor'westers blow down from the Berring Straights and meet warm airs along the Japan Current and where they meet storms brew .
I fished this coast in the 1970s on a 50-foot wooden purse seiner. We had a few close calls, and other boats lost men, and sometimes all of them.

Related themes

StormWreckageFlotsamFishermenCoastline

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Edwin Loftus is an American painter and draftsman born in 1951. His interest in art began at the age of 4 when he decided to draw something real rather than working from his imagination.  As a child[...]

Edwin Loftus is an American painter and draftsman born in 1951. His interest in art began at the age of 4 when he decided to draw something real rather than working from his imagination. 

As a child he excelled at drawing and as a teenager he began to experiment with oil painting. In college, he took courses in art and art history and realized that true art had nothing to do with the quality of the drawing or painting, but that it had to have the ambition to push the boundaries and expand the visual experience. 

He also studied philosophy, psychology and history and quickly realized that it was just another art establishment trying to defend its elitist industry and reward system. Their skills were almost non-existent, they knew nothing about psychology, perception or stimulus response, and they were extensions of the belief system that made communism, fascism and other forms of totalitarianism such destructive forces in the world. They literally believe that art shouldn't be available to ordinary human beings, but only to an elite "sophisticated" enough to understand it. 

Edwin Loftus realized that the emperors of art had no clothes, but they were still the emperors. Gifted in art, he worked hard to acquire this skill. So he found other ways to make a living and sold a few artworks from time to time. For sixty years, many people enjoyed his works and some collected them. 

Today, Edwin Loftus is retired. Even if he sold all his paintings for the price he asked, "artist" would be the lowest paid job he ever had... but that's the way it is.  It won't matter to him after he dies. He just hopes that some people will like what he does enough to enjoy it in the future. 

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