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Painting at the San Clemente Dam Site. The first step pool...

6/26/2015

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This painting is a work in progress. It was created over the course of three visits to the site, June 17, 18, and 23. I will be adding the workman creating the first step pool. There are fifty-one step pools to go. I understand they are  bringing in 6000 boulders to create these step pools! It is quite fascinating to watch the process and the person operating the excavator. It sometimes looks like the excavator is doing a graceful dance the way the operator moves it!
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Plein Air Magazine's Plein Air Collector Newsletter:                                                     Freeing a River - Painting the Progress

6/10/2015

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Click here to read the full article




You have a good body of work. Your passion for the area comes through your paintings. You have lent your romantic soul to the area.  - Arlene

Thank you, Arlene! I appreciate your insights into my work.  - Paola

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Carmel Pine does story on paintings documenting the San Clemente Dam Removal Project!

6/8/2015

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Painter uses brush and easel to chronicle San Clemente Dam’s final days    By CHRIS COUNTS 
 June 5 -11,2015

PLEIN AIR painters seem to be everywhere in Monterey County — even at the remote site in Upper Carmel Valley where the San Clemente Dam is being removed. 


Painter Paola Berthoin has been charting the progress of the $83 million dam removal project with her brush and easel for nearly a year. With the blessing of project contractor Granite Construction, she has made more than 20 trips to the site, which is located 18 miles upstream from the Pacific Ocean. 


After visiting the site as part of a tour Granite Construction was leading, Berthoin asked project manager Bill McGowan for permission to paint the stages of the removal of the dam, which will come down this summer. 


“He didn’t really hesitate,” recalled the painter, who lives in Carmel Valley. “He said, ‘I think we can make this happen.’” 

When Berthoin first learned about the project — and the massive impact it would have on the valley — she was wary of it. 


“When I read the environmental impact report a few years ago, I was skeptical,” the artist said. 


But after spending so much time at the construction site, Berthoin has accepted it. 


“While the action to cut out a large section of mountain to reroute the river is philosophically hard to accept, it is a small excavation relative to the benefit to the river in the long run,” she explained. 

Still, Berthoin is feeling a little melancholy over the dam’s impending demise. “It’s a beautiful structure that was built by a lot of people by hand,” she said. “I feel a little bit of sadness that it’s coming down. But if it helps the river, that’s a good thing.” 


Using oils on canvas, Berthoin has painted the project from a variety of perspectives — in fact, she has even set up her easel on top of the soon-to-be-demolished dam. 


“To see this excavation up close is dramatic and mind-boggling,” said Berthoin, who’s looking forward to painting the site again once the dam is removed and the area is restored. “I consider myself very lucky to be doing this. It’s an interesting experience.” 

The artist hopes her work will help the public better understand why the dam is coming down — and how its removal will benefit the environment. 
“It is a unique opportunity to observe and paint the changes first-hand, and use the paintings to educate people locally and beyond about the dam removal,” she added. 



So far, Berthoin has completed eight pieces, including a diptych and a triptych. The public will have its first opportunity to see Berthoin’s dam removal paintings up close when the visitors’ center at Garland Ranch Regional Park unveils an exhibit next month.

The show will be on view from July 12 through November 2015. A formal opening will be August 9.
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Hiking to the Source of the Carmel River...almost!

6/7/2015

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Marie Butcher and I hiked in the Ventana Wilderness last weekend to go to the source of the Carmel River, 4,500 feet in the mountains. While we did attempt to climb the last part up a very steep hillside (45 degrees), we were unable to get to the seep in the ground where the water comes from deep in the earth. Twelve years ago I did get there as the land was more open. This time there were trees and rocks and boulders that impeded our climb. 


Nevertheless, we were able to enjoy the creek at about 4,000 feet as evidenced in the photos below.Given it was a relatively warm day and the hike in was a challenge, the cool waters were most welcome. How lucky we are to be able to hike there and take in the refreshing gift of the mountain.
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Photo©Marie Butcher
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This is the stream, that is the Carmel River, that flows through taps and hoses.
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This moss covered stone was perfectly placed in the small rivulet of the Carmel River's gentle beginnings.
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Looking from the Pine Ridge Trail south into the Church Creek Watershed. The Carmel River Watershed is to the north
Lovely photos! Yes, we touched the waters from the source and found a green heart to greet us, beckoning to learn the river's ultimate origin....
Marie B.

Thank you, Marie. It was a beautiful time to be at the trickling source of the Carmel River...resting our weary feet in the cool water!

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Ebb and Flow Festival - Santa Cruz

6/6/2015

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You can learn more about the Ebb and Flow River Arts Project here
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    Author
    Paola Berthoin is the designer/creator/publisher of  Passion for Place: Community Reflections on the Carmel River Watershed. Her focus is inspiring and educating people about the natural world through the arts. She is available to design your book, create (illustrate and write) interpretive materials for your watershed community, consult for healthy gardens, paint a commissioned painting of your favorite place in the Carmel River Watershed and beyond!


    When we allow wildness, our own spirit, to flourish within, we can also respect and allow nature’s spirit, the wild outside, to exist.
             - Paola Fiorelle Berthoin
                                                                                                                                                               

    Blog photographs, land art, and text © Paola Berthoin, unless otherwise noted. 
    All Rights Reserved.

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    Photograph © Marie Butcher

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