Friday, April 3, 2009

Windy Day Reconnoiter - Coreopsis

As featured in this weeks Malibu Surfside News:

Nature's Spring Bounty and a Malibu Pioneer's Artwork Converge * Generations Are Bonded by the Desire to Share Their Love of the Area's Special Beauty


Grandpa was a spring child. His love of gardens, flowers, and landscape was powerful, and evident in his passion for painting them. Sidney Arnold Franklin, Sr. was born in San Francisco on the 21st of March 1891. However, he spent most of his adult life in West Los Angeles and Malibu.


Grandpa’s painting of the coreopsis was done in Malibu after he retired here after a 50-year career directing and producing in Hollywood. He had been vacationing in the area since the early 1920s.

My mother, also an accomplished artist, Victoria Franklin-Dillon, said about his career, “His early films are in the Library of Congress and museum collections. He worked for D.W. Griffith on “Intolerance” and made his first features under Griffith’s guidance.”

She added, “[Grandpa] had a ca
reer in the movie industry that spanned from its inception in Hollywood to his retirement, due to his wife Ruth’s illness in the early 1960s. It was then that he backed off the preparation of the production of “Ben Hur” and his friend William Wyler took over. This is when he seriously took up painting in oil.”

Franklin considered oil painting the activity of real artists. Moviemaking was more of a career and a business he served with pride and dedication. When he painted, that to him was real art, and the coreopsis painting was one of his favorites. It always hung in a place of honor in his home, and now does the same in our Carbon Mesa home.

“Coreopsis” is his rendition of flowers growing along Pacific Coast Highway, north of the county line. It was a mid-career work created from many photographs taken on his commutes to Oxnard.

Painting was an avocation that Franklin took very seriously. He studied with William Shulgold and, later, with Harry Carmean from the Art Center College of Art and Design. He studied portrait, still life, landscape and the impressionist masters Degas and Manet by copying them.

Franklin painted nearly every afternoon in his specially built north-light studio on his Trancas ranch home property. It was there that he pursued his passions for landscape design and painting for over 20 years.


From the house and studio, he had a stunning view of the Pacific Ocean that looked over his personally designed putting green and rock walls later featured in the painting of his wife, Ruth. He was continuously building rock walls around the property and also had a chrysanthemum and cymbidium growing operation, both with the help of his foreman Johnny Ysorda. This love of horticulture has continued through generations as my aunt, Roxanne Franklin-White, tends to her orchids in our Malibu home.

Grandpa’s “Coreopsis” is perhaps the loosest and most lively painting he ever did. His training was formal and classically tight, which suited his very detail oriented personality. We all have loved this painting for its light brush-strokes and attitude.



My mother said, “He was so serious so much of the time that this was a wonderful moment recorded that showed his lighter more gentle side.”
The painting is truly is a family treasure, and we are glad to share it, as I continue his tradition of making art about Malibu by photographing the spring coreopsis on Point Dume.

By Jessica Louise Dillon


As featured in this weeks Malibu Surfside News:
(Click to view issue)

Monday, March 30, 2009

Windy Day Reconnoiter - Gulls

Last week we had an extremely windy day in Malibu. I thought it was a perfect opportunity for a photo reconnoiter. I began up at Leo Carillo State Beach just south of County Line and moseyed my way down to the Point Dume Headlands, one of my favorite photographic spots in Malibu.


A flock of seagulls over Leo Carillo with windblown sand entering the tide pools. I have several in this series, I just love the random patterns nature creates, here the gulls circling in the sky.


This is my favorite shot of the gulls. The patterns here are created from the different motions of their flight, rather than the differing directions as in the first photo. Both create an amazing sense of motion.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Dramatic Vantage Points



One of my favorite techniques is doing extreme close ups from low vantage points. What looks like some otherworldly terrain is actually just a sand formation formed by the rise and fall of the tides on Carbon Beach.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Ocean and Sky Abstracts


Recently I've been exploring a more simple subject matter: Ocean and sky abstracts. It is amazing to see the kind of beauty that can be produced by varying combinations of light, air, and water. I often use a telephoto lense to zoom in creating interesting and suprising abstractions. Here are a few of my recent favorites. All shot in Malibu of course.





Wednesday, March 11, 2009

The Pier and Point Dume

The silhouettes of The Pier and Point Dume create a very interesting juxtaposition as seen through the sunset warmth. View from Carbon Mesa. 23 February 2009. My apologies for the late posts, still catching up.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Malibu's Hockney

Malibu's Hockney. Digital Collage. 2007.

Western Ireland on Point Dume

Rocked Reverie-Beautiful algae covered rock formations are exposed during low tide on Big Dume Beach. It is interesting to see how the interaction of land and water can create similar phenomena in different parts of the world. These formations are amazingly reminiscent of the dramatic landscape found on the cost of Western Ireland and an obvious reminder of the unity of all life on the planet, something that is often forgotten by its inhabitants. Volume 36 Number 17. 26 February 2009.

More images from the shoot: