The Living, Evolving Work of Gary Clark
February 27 & 28 | Friday & Saturday | 4:00 - 8:00pm | 936 Oak Street, Orlando 32804
Dining Room
The Dining Room presents a group of landscape paintings based on places in central Florida. Roads, waterways, and shoreline scenes are rendered with loose brushwork, softened edges, and layered color. Together, the works emphasize observation and the physical handling of paint rather than detailed description.
River Road, 20x16. #1511. This painting presents a wide, open road near the St. John’s River in Geneva, Florida, leading toward dense vegetation in the distance. Vertical palms and softened reflections shape the composition through gesture and color.
Lake Ivanhoe, 36 x 48, #1512. This landscape presents Lake Ivanhoe in the College Park area of Orlando, Florida, with the downtown skyline faintly visible in the distance. Soft transitions of color and fluid brushwork emphasize openness and spatial clarity.
Beached, 24 x 18, #1504. This landscape depicts a quiet sandy shoreline along Lake Harney in Geneva, Florida, with a small boat subtly positioned within the scene. Loose, expressive brushwork and layered color allow land, water, and sky to soften and merge.
St. John's River Bywater, 22 x 28, #1510. This landscape offers a subtle impression of a narrow waterway along the St. John’s River near Osteen, Florida. Soft brushwork and layered greens suggest foliage and reflections, with light filtering through the scene.
Road to Lake Jessup, 30 x 24, #1509. This landscape presents a winding road near Lake Jessup in Oviedo, Florida. Expressive brushwork and shifting color create a sense of open space and distant light.
To Lake Jessup, 30 x 24, #1503. This painting depicts a dirt road leading toward the waters of Lake Jessup, framed by dense Florida vegetation. Layered brushwork and luminous color suggest depth and approach without sharp detail.
Druid Walk, 30 x 24, #1520. This painting depicts a shaded path along a quiet street in Maitland, Florida, near the artist’s home. Layered greens and softened edges create an enclosed space beneath a canopy of trees.