Tag Archives: l. mawby

Project 24: Where a Passion for the Land, Wine and Art Collide

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Shazam … and Project 24 is off and running.

It was four years ago that I started painting the Michigan wine trail, and the first vineyard I visited was L. Mawby. And so it was that I launched Project 24 at the same vineyard with the same gracious host, Larry Mawby.

 

This morning, as Larry spoke of his love for this peninsula, the land and his winery, a prevailing thought was about helping people connect to and the experience land. Wine, like landscape painting, is in fact about nature: every vine, tree and blade of grass. When you care for and tend the vines, or set up your easel and study the land, you experience the beauty intimately, on a deeper level — a level you hope to share with others. That is the premise of Project 24, and likewise, it is also the hope at L. Mawby’s vineyard.

Walking through the vineyards on a sunny early summer morning, as Larry talked about which grape varietals were planted where and why,  with the first vines dating back to 1973, it was truly a “pinch me” experience. I love this history, the beauty, the land and the graciousness of my host. Walking through the vineyards, one foot in front of the other, taking in each detail. Becoming — if just for a moment — part of the landscape, feeling the heat of the sun, the wetness of the grass, the vines beginning to bud. It takes me deeper into the painting experience; the desire to paint is strong.

And so … I spent the afternoon painting plein air, and did a few sketches and studies. It is with great enthusiasm that I look forward to diving deeper into that breathtaking  landscape. Truly its beauty rivaled by none.

As I was packing up my paints at L. Mawby, the rain began to softly fall. And so any hopes of photographing, videoing and painting at my next stop, Bel Lago, were thwarted. However, that didn’t stop us from having a rockin’ little time in the cellar, barrel tasting.

Tasting the wine that comes from the land does, after all, inspire art. Winemaker Blake Lougheed took me inside the passion and process that he and owner Charlie Edson put into creating their wines. Truly, it’s an art form tended to with care and a lot of heart.

I’ll have to save painting at this winery for another day, but my experience there today was rich with fodder for inspiration!

Project 24 is off to a great start, and I’m loving every minute on the Michigan wine trail!

Art, Wine and Be Merry

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Have you ever thought about the art of wine? For instance, in wine there is the art of the grape, the art of nature, and the art of the winemaker.

Think of the grape as a canvas. Every fall, unfolding as a lush pastel of taste, they hang from the vines full and ripe just waiting to be picked and turned into something different, something say, for your holiday table. The result is part of a cycle that began in the spring with buds bursting and will end in your living room when you uncork a bottle of fine Michigan wines.

In the art of nature, every fall the trees give us the most glorious backdrop and artists flock to the wine regions to record the splendor. It’s also the time for the harvest of the grapes, which have seasoned in the heat of day and cold of night, absorbed the runoff of spring, the rains of summer and the mists of autumn, and then there are the minerals of the soil and sunlight turned to nutrients in the elegant fruit that becomes drink. It isn’t coincidence that Mission and Leelanau Peninsulas are very close in proximity to the latitude of France and their hills and closeness to warm waters make them perfectly suitable for this other form of art – the art of making a fine wine. Like all art forms, the cycle is only completed by the viewer or, in this case, the wine drinkers – and that’s you.

It starts with the wine maker, the creators. Winemakers are fun, interesting people. You never meet a winemaker studying for a degree in accounting or law. They have found their place and live happily in it. I have interviewed a dozen of winemakers, and each one sees his craft and creative process differently but honors the sacred process of creation. What struck me as I was learning from them was how much my process as a painter was parallel to their process as winemakers.

Larry Mawby of the renowned L. Mawby Winery said, “You can hear the land, the wine, and what it’s telling you.” In the studio it’s the same: The canvas and paint reveal to you what they want to become, you are just the vessel. Larry is also a poet; he writes beautiful little seductive gems for each of his creations. The poems appear on each of his sparkling wines, deepening the link between art and wine.

I read on Silverleaf Vineyard and Winery’s website that they take an artisanal approach to wine making. When I meet Mark Carlson, proprietor and winemaker, it was no surprise that it was he who crafted the giant silver leaf sculpture that sits outside the tasting room on Michigan’s Leelanau peninsula. I was not surprised because I have found winemakers to be very artistic people with creative outlets, from musicians, landscape architects, to cooks and, in Mark’s case, he has even tried his hand at painting. At Silverleaf, they planted the grapes themselves and have their hand in every bit of the process – a true artisan approach!

Winemaker Brian Ulbrich of Left Foot Charley fame says making wine is about “living with the seasons, the cycle of a year in a bottle.” When you visit his winery in Traverse City, you will find plenty of wooden barrels and stainless steel, where the wine lives and the palette of science with creativity turns the glorious grapes of harvest into the wine you share with loved ones.

Coonraad Strassen can be found creating for Brys Estate. His wines have taken the industry by storm and he has quickly risen to his place in the fabric of the Michigan wine industry, even winning international awards. Coonraad is interested in “what I can do with the land” and sees his room full of barrels as his palette of color for getting creative.

Mark Johnson at Chateau Chantal is one of the original winemakers who got the idea to let Chardonnay be what it is with out oak: clean, crisp, and steely. Inventing, creating, and redefining, seeing what can be done.

Like a painter, each winemaker is pushing the boundary of what has been done, but looking forward to what can be done. They look to history while forging into new and better ways to create. True artists.

As you eat, drink and be merry this holiday season. I urge you to think about the wine you uncork as a piece of art, and think about the process it went thought to become wine, the land from which it comes and the choices made in the process of creation. Uncork and enjoy the art of the vine.