I have known Jeff Jones for 20 years and have been a fan of his work for about as long as I can remember. I count
myself lucky to be able to call him a friend.
I was in my first year of art school when I met Jeff at a New York comic convention, and after showing him some of my
work he graciously invited me and Kent Williams to join him for landscape painting in upstate New York. For us this was
tantamount to painting with Rembrandt and we lost no time in hustling up there.
What a time we had. At the crack of dawn Kent, J Muth, Bernie Wrightson, Dan Green, Allen Spiegel, Jeff and I would
pile into various cars bristling with easels and drive to a location Jeff had picked out a week or so before. Mist shrouded
the roads that wound up the Catskill mountains and we’d tell ghost stories as we drove along, scaring each other pretty
well. Scarier still was watching Jeff work.
He opened my eyes to the true joy of painting. He never taught, but over the years dropped nuggets of information,
crystallizing everything I had been struggling for; miniature bombshells that had me convulsing in artistic fits for weeks
afterwards. He took the time to look at the work and respond to it in a positive way, which meant the world to me, and I
grew. What I walked away with was the idea that art is a spiritual journey of the heart.
__George Pratt
This is one of the reasons I love to paint landscapes. It takes problem-solving out of the work. In the studio there’s a lot
of problem-solving that goes on because so much of it has to come out of my head. I have to make it work, because it
doesn’t exist and you can’t go out and look at it. When I’m out there landscape painting all I need is right in front of me,
and there’s nothing that needs to be in my head. It’s like a vacation from my studio. It’s rejuvenating in the same way a
vacation is.
I had to get used to it, because it wasn’t familiar, the wind and the bugs. I’d put a paint rag on the end and it would blow
off, all those kinds of things. I finally realized they were only excuses not to be landscape painting; they weren’t really
reasons at all. I didn’t want to come here in the first place, so look at all the excuses I can make up not to be here. What
would happen if I came out because I wanted to? Funny thing… I didn’t find any excuses!
Nobody has to see it and you know it. If you like it, you like it; if you don’t, you don’t. That’s the end of it. There’s no
deadline, no patron, no nothing. I wish everything could be as fun as a landscape, but everything is not. The more fun
I'm having, the more I want to paint and draw.
__Jeffrey Jones
But what about Jones’s interest in landscape painting? Does landscape painting really matter to the artist, or am I just
making stuff up?
Whether they know it or not, plenty of people, especially fans of imaginative fiction of the 1970s, have seen book-cover
paintings by Jeffrey Jones. Only a select few, however, even among Jones’s most ardent admirers, have had an
opportunity to view examples from the artist’s growing body of work in plein air landscape painting in oil. The main
reason for this gap in our knowledge of Jones’s work is that the landscape paintings have not been featured in any
significant way in any of the books that have been published about Jeffrey Jones’s art. And, of course, the main reason
for the inattention to Jones’s landscape paintings, in print, is the nature of commercial publishing, i.e., when readers
know an artist as an illustrator, most publishers who step forward to publish books on that artist tend to want their books
to focus on what the artist is already known for, rather than on whatever unpublished, personal work the artist would like
people to see — and even more so when the unpublished, personal work in question is consists of pure landscape
paintings! (No offence intended, landscape painters!) Fortunately for you, however, this blog is not governed by any
commercial considerations whatsoever. Thus, here is a selection of small image files of landscape paintings by Jeffrey
Jones that were posted on the artist’s old Web site.
__ragged claws
http://www.raggedclaws.com/
now seen here:
www.jeffreyjones-art.com