If I learned some of my aesthetics from the spare simplicity of sumi-e ink painting, I also learned some from the intricacies of rock assemblages. I studied geology in college, and I’ve always found stones and rocks to be fascinating. From the large – mountains scratching the roof of the sky to the iridescent colors of a rock slice thin section under microscope – the shapes and textures have always fascinated me. And sandstone, in particular, has a peculiar magic. It is soft, and it weathers in lumps and hollows and spires and arches that seem a cross between an imagined Martian landscape and a Seussian panorama played out in muted reds and greys.
Which brings me to Salt Point State Park – a point of land on the northern California coast. The wind and waves and fog play against the rocky coast there – rocks made of sandstone laid down as beaches once and now eaten at again by that same sea. It is not, truly told, a place where you’d often find an idle picnic. The weather is chilly and damp. The wind blows salt spray from the waves up over the bluffs and into the scrub and forest beyond. But that wind, and the waves and the salt spray work the sandstone into the most amazing shapes. They work at the stone, sculpting little holes, riddling the surface with cracks and hollows and knobs. It is, perhaps, an environment only a geologist could love being in – cold, wet, and hungry, in the name of … something.
For me, that something is the joy of spending hours with the rocks, finding their infinite variations. The complexity of their nature is played out in the endless ways they succumb to the elements. Some are egg cartons of cubbies on the rocks face, some little villages of caves. Some seem smoothed, almost as if polished by a river or a tumbling barrel. And some seem alien growths on a terrestrial surface. They speak to me in a language not just of geologic phrases, but also of time, weather, and solitude.












