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John Williams Digital Paintings

Painting with a mouse and keyboard. These are digital sketches to be used for finished works of art.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

West of Port Angeles Washington

Posted by John Williams at 1:28 PM 1 comment:
Labels: Macintosh G-5 Artrage 2.5 Paint Program

Saturday, February 7, 2009

East of Park College Parkville Missouri

Posted by John Williams at 7:54 PM No comments:
Labels: Macintosh G-5 Artrage 2.5 Paint Program

Osage River Float

Posted by John Williams at 2:26 PM No comments:
Labels: Macintosh G-5 Artrage 2.5 Paint Program

Creek Lexington Missouri Battlefield

Posted by John Williams at 2:21 PM No comments:
Labels: Macintosh G-5 Artrage 2.5 Paint Program

Columbia River

Posted by John Williams at 2:18 PM No comments:
Labels: Macintosh G-5 Artrage 2.5 Paint Program

Monterrey

Posted by John Williams at 2:14 PM No comments:
Labels: Macintosh G-5 Artrage 2.5 Paint Program

Colorado

Posted by John Williams at 2:11 PM No comments:
Labels: Macintosh G-5 Artrage 2.5 Paint Program

Muir Snowfield Mt. Rainer

Posted by John Williams at 2:06 PM No comments:
Labels: Macintosh G-5 Artrage 2.5 Paint Program

Friday, February 6, 2009

Golden Leaves

Posted by John Williams at 8:39 PM No comments:
Labels: Macintosh G-5 Artrage 2.5 Paint Program

Klaloch Beach Digital

Posted by John Williams at 8:35 PM No comments:
Labels: Macintosh G-5 Artrage 2.5 Paint Program
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  • Landscape Painter John Williams
    Working From a Digital Sketch.
    8 years ago

About Me

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John Williams
Born in Independence Missouri in 1953, Studied painting at the Kansas City Art Institute, Penn Valley Community College, State Fair Community College, and the University of Central Missouri. A lifelong Kansas City Resident until 2003, when I moved my family to the Missouri Ozarks. I am married and have 5 children. In 1975 I hitch hiked to Anchorage Alaska from Kansas City Missouri, a distance of 3,523 miles. Hitch hiking in those days did not carry the stigma it does today, and was a fairly common practice.The Alaskan Highway was not paved as it is today, it was 1,500 miles of gravel and mud. I am believed to be the last climber to climb Mt. St Helens, from base to summit, before the historic eruption on May 18th 1980. I climbed with no climbing experience, and no companions. I entered the restricted Red Zone set up around the mountain, by hiking around the roadblocks. I reached the summit of Mt. St. Helens on April 30th 1980, just after noon.I experienced numerous earthquakes while on the mountain. I photographed the crater, then came home. My adventure is mentioned in Richard Waitt's Book, 'In the Path of Destruction' University of Washington Press 2015.
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  • ▼  2009 (22)
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      • Early Morning Rush Hour Southwest Trafficway
      • North Kansas City
    • ►  February (20)

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