Laing-Malcolmson, Bonnie2015-05-122015-05-121991https://scholarworks.montana.edu/handle/1/7201Between the subject and the final painting lies a middle ground, a place of memory, response, process, and risk. My intent is that my paintings grow from this middle ground. My paintings are born of temporal things, a protracted drive through our wide western landscape may lull me into a state where a cloudburst slamming into a mountainside evokes a sharp flash of memory. Transformed, I relive a vivid moment of my life; the glimpsed landscape becomes a visual equivalent for the evoked memory. By reliving a moment of life I am more alive, simultaneously inhabiting present and past. William Carlos Williams wrote in his poem The Descent: "and no whiteness (lost) is so white as the memory of whiteness.” The mind released from the present is an intense world. I aim to capture that intensity in paint.enArt--ExhibitionsPaintingNatureMemoryPaintings and monoprintsThesisCopyright 1991 by Bonnie Laing-Malcolmson