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Journey to the Tracks: Industrial Landscape Paintings and Sketches of Oakland, California

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Journey to the Tracks: Industrial Landscape Paintings and Sketches of Oakland, California

Contributors:

By (Author) Asha Carolyn Young

ISBN:

9781543906028

Publisher:

BookBaby

Imprint:

BookBaby

Publication Date:

2nd January 2018

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

58

Dimensions:

Width 222mm, Height 285mm, Spine 10mm

Weight:

498g

Description

The industrial, western waterfront of Oakland, California is brought to life by Asha Carolyn Young in this book, which shares images and a story. From 1991 to 1995, Young lived in a work-live space overlooking the train tracks, Schnitzer Steel buildings, and the Port of Oakland shipyard. From her studio window, she studied this vast landscape and portrayed it in various mediums, including chalk pastel on paper, and oil on canvas and board.

Young's story tells how she came to live near the train tracks after the devastating Oakland Hills Firestorm of 1991, describing the magnetic pull industrial terrains had held for her since childhood in Bangkok, Thailand. Through her account of life near the tracks, and through images and colors of her paintings and sketches, Young depicts this dynamic part of Oakland.

This body of artwork, a result of plein air painting and sketches Young was able to produce from her studio windows, shares a part of Oakland not often portrayed. The harsh environment of this industrial setting is forbidding to many plein air painters, making these expressions truly unique. (Many of these paintings now hand in the Emeryville Business Center, just north of Oakland, where the public can view them.)

With a poetic voice, Young describes the magnetic pull industrial regions have held for her since her childhood in Bangkok, where, as a first-grader, she rode a school bus past industrial terrains. Years later, as an adult riding the subway from the East Bay to San Francisco for work, Young daily gazed on Oakland's western industrial region from her window seat. But it was not until the infamous Oakland Hills Firestorm of 1991 devastated her neighborhood that Young and then-husband Malcolm Clark were somewhat forced to move to a work-live space overlooking one of the most active and massive shipyards in the world, as well as the famous and very active metal recycling complex, Schnitzer Steel. From her studio windows, The vast panorama Young saw from her windows included the spires of San Francisco.

Young's account includes commentary on the artistic process, addressing such questions as why artists often choose to depict the same scene repeatedly, and how artists identify subjects that deeply inspire and motivate them to create.

Author Bio

Asha Carolyn Young was born in Chiang Mai, Thailand, to American parents. For her seventh birthday, her father gave her an oil painting kit and cautioned, "Just don't eat anything." Her first focused art study as a teenager was with a Chinese brush painting master when her family resided in Vientiane, Laos.

During fourteen years of living in the East Bay and four years in San Francisco, Young wrote and taught. Serving as staff and grant writer, she worked with grassroots, Southeast Asian refugee agencies in the San Francisco Bay Area. She taught English as a second language for Berkeley, Oakland, and Alameda adult schools; she worked as a freelance teacher, writer, and editor in the Bay Area. She also worked as a bookseller for Cody's Books.

In 2011, Young became caretaker of paintings created by her close friend, the late Hari E. Thomas. In 2015, she published a book about him and his paintings, Carry Your Own Joy: The Abstract Paintings and Life of Hari E. Thomas, A San Francisco Artist.

Young holds degrees in History (B.A., University of California, Los Angeles) and Cultural Anthropology (M.A., University of California, Berkeley). She studied art at Laney College in Oakland, and she undertook five years of private group study with Japanese brush painting master, Kayoko Bird, in Berkeley. She has been recipient of the Robert Lowie Fund Grant (UCB), Graduate Humanities Research Grant (UCB), President's Undergraduate Fellowship for Research (UCLA), and the Justin Turner Award for History (UCLA).

Young lives with her husband, Ron McMath, and their pet family in Northern California.

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