Pre-Pandemic: Significant Trees

On March 19, 2020, I did this last sketch for the Orlando Significant Trees series before settling in and isolating for the Covid-19 pandemic. This tree in Big Tree Park, (930 Thornton Avenue Orlando FL) is likely 350 to 400 years old. It is the oldest tree in Orlando. Live Oaks can live for centuries.

While doing this sketch a woman walking her dog approached to see what the sketch looked like. Because she got closer than 6 feet from me, I decided it was no longer a good idea to be doing drawings on location. The Covid-19 Pandemic had been announced on March 13, 2020 so it was rather foolish of me to have been thinking I could still sketch on location safely. Several other trees need to be sketched But I decided to wait to do these until after the new cases of Covid-19 infection level off for 14 days. That has yet to happen as new cases rise each day here in Florida.

On March 19, 2020 more than 14,200 people had tested positive in the U.S. and at least 187 had died. These numbers seem so small looking back. In California, Governor Gavin Newsom announced a statewide order for residents to stay at home. Floridians would not be asked to stay at home until April 3, 2020. The State Department told citizens who traveled abroad they should come home immediately or prepare to remain overseas. This rush back into the United States would result in a huge spike in cases in New York City as people who went untested upon return, poured into the city airports.

Projections models at the time predicted a possible 1.1 million deaths in America assuming there was little to no social distancing. A better scenario envisioned Americans embracing drastic restrictions and school closures, which would reduce the  death toll closer to the thousands as the country prepares for a grueling but surmountable road ahead. We are today somewhere between these very different scenarios with almost 2 million cases and 111,390 dead and rising.

 

Pre-Pandemic: Dickson Azalia Park

Prior to the Pandemic I was doing a series of sketches of Orlando’s Significant Trees. This was the final series f sketches I was doing before the sate wide lock down. Dickson Azalea Park (100 Rose Garden Drive) is a rare gem in Orlando. Of note in this scene are the Long Leaf Pine trees which are about 100 years old. They are extremely tall because they had to compete for light against the Oak trees which grow along the upper edge of the ravine.

The paths in this park follow a stream and the entire park is sunk because of erosion, sort of like a mini grand canyon only less orange. I have become infatuated with the pattern that tree branches make against the sky. Working with the complexity of natural forms I also have an excuse to just play with the paint, sometimes just splattering the page for pattern.

I have just 3 of these locations yet to visit, but I stopped after the stay at home order. I have no need to have my work labeled #floridamoron because I risk my life for the sake of any one painting. Instead, I stay in and paint the nightmare that is modern politics that first didn’t recognize the problem and then does as little as possible to resolve it.

On March 3, 2020 the day this sketch was done, California Governor Gavin Newsom released millions of N-95 face masks to be used in low emergency health settings. That state was mobilizing every level of government to address the impending threat of the virus. On March 3, the third case of Covid-19 was diagnosed in Florida. One was a 29-year-old Hillsborough County woman who had recently traveled
to Italy and the second was a 63-year-old Manatee County man who had
contact with someone who tested positive. The third patient, was a 22-year-old California woman, who was the sister of the
29-year-old Hillsborough County woman who was diagnosed after traveling
to Italy. On this day the Florida Department of Health first set up a Covid-19 hotline. On the day after this sketch was done Florida Governor Ron DeSantis informed Orlando residents, “that the risk of contracting the coronavirus is low for Floridians.” He was clearly WRONG, and should have been preparing for what was to come.

A few people have complained about my dark pandemic illustration series, so periodically I will just post a pretty tree for contrast with the harsh realities we face. There is good reason to someday, somehow return to a new normal. But this can not happen until our country gets serious about testing and tracing to isolate those that are infected. People are protesting the stay at home orders, but they are risking their own lives and the lives of others because anyone carrying a picket sign could be infected.

Today over 27,000 people are infected in Florida and 800 have died. The numbers don’t begin to hint at the precious lives lost and the creative potential of every person who died needlessly. One of my favorite artists, Egon Schile died in the pandemic of 1918. Who knows what he might have created had he survived.

Pre-Pandemic Major Carl T. Langford Park

This sketch is from my series of sketches of Orlando’s significant trees. An Orlando parks department map shows seven locations around Orlando of Significant trees and so I was going to each location to sketch. Carl T. Langford Park (1808 East Central Boulevard, Orlando FL) is a natural refuge near Downtown Orlando, filled with Large Shumard Oak, Swamp Chestnut and Laurel and live Oaks. I had 3 more trees to sketch before the pandemic shut the city down.

One location was Harry P. Leu Gardens which remains open daily but I refuse to enter a crowded botanical garden during a pandemic. The  Gardens are still open until further notice. All events,
classes, memorials, weddings and meetings have been canceled through
April 30. The gift shop will close starting Friday, March 20, 2020. The
historic museum remains closed due to hurricane damage that has yet to be fully repaired.The idea that this park remains open astounds me.

A photographer set up a swing on a tree and was taking family photos as I did this sketch. The mom in a flowing red dress was pregnant. She posed with her husband and her two small children.  There was so much love and hope in the photo shoot. I am hoping there was enough social distancing during the shoot. I was beginning to feel uncomfortable sketching outside, but the pandemic had not yet been officially announced yet. That wouldn’t happen until March 13, 2020.

Researchers in Washington state who are studying the spread of COVID-19,
are now saying Florida is expected to see the worst of the outbreak about April 21, instead of the beginning of May. As of April 26, 2020 there were 1074 deaths in Florida with
31,528 confirmed cases of Covid-19. Projections show between 18,000 people dying of the virus in Florida or as little as 1,700 deaths depending on how well people adhere to social distancing measures. To date, 30 people have died in Orange County with 1290 confirmed cases.

#StayHome, #StopTheSpread, #SaveLives.