‘A Tortured Land’
JOEL MARTIN | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 8 months AGO
Joel Martin has been with the Columbia Basin Herald for more than 25 years in a variety of roles and is the most-tenured employee in the building. Martin is a married father of eight and enjoys spending time with his children and his wife, Christina. He is passionate about the paper’s mission of informing the people of the Columbia Basin because he knows it is important to record the history of the communities the publication serves. | September 3, 2025 3:00 AM
MOSES LAKE — Central Washington artist Don Nutt will return this month to the Moses Lake Museum & Art Center after a long time away, according to an announcement from the museum.
“It’s been over a decade since we had the pleasure of showing his work in our space,” Museum Communication Coordinator Natalia Zuyeva wrote in the announcement.
Nutt’s show, entitled “A Tortured Land,” will open Sept., 12 with a reception at the museum. Refreshments will be served, according to the announcement, and patrons will have a chance to meet Nutt in person.
Nutt has been an artist since he was 5 years old, he told the Columbia Basin Herald in an interview last year. He sold his first painting in 1974, and has been painting full-time for 19 years, 17 of those in his Cariboo Trail Studio in downtown Coulee City. He has also organized the Coulee City Art Walk for several years, in which local artists set up in local businesses
Nutt works mostly in oils, and his favorite subject is the country around him.
“The coulees, lakes, and creeks of the Columbia Basin, the Waterville Plateau, and the mighty Columbia have been a source of inspiration for me for more than half a century of painting,” he wrote in the museum’s announcement. “I have roots here. My great-grandfather homesteaded west of Coulee City, and my mother’s family farmed during the origin of the Columbia Basin Project. This connection to the land and the history of the Big Bend provides an unparalleled source of inspiration for me.”
Nutt gets his inspiration from hiking around the area and sketching what he sees, he said, and then taking those back and turning them into full-fledged oil paintings. He used to paint on location, he said, but found that unwieldy.
“The thing about a four-foot-wide canvas is, it’s a sail,” he said. “It’s really hard to anchor those down enough to (paint on them). I used to do a little bit of plein air painting, but I changed techniques and it makes it very difficult. What I do now is a lot of transparent glazes and I have to let the paint dry in between layers. I usually had three or four paintings going at once. But I've been doing that for so long now that it's actually kind of difficult to go out, paint plein air and try and get a painting done.”
Now he mostly works from sketches he makes while hiking around, he said, or sometimes from photos.
“But at some point or another, I kind of discard the photo,” Nutt said. “I don't want a painting of a photograph, I want a painting from something I experienced. So I wind up changing the color range quite a bit, usually in the painting, from what I see in the photograph. I'm trying to paint what I remember more than what's in the photo.”
Along with the exhibition opening, the reception will include Art After Hours, an adults-only craft time. Participants will have a chance to use watercolors to paint their own masterpiece of stacked stones, Zuyeva wrote in the announcement.
“This collection of oil paintings portrays many of my favorite views of Big Bend country, as well as some abandoned places, some of which no longer exist,” Nutt wrote in the announcement.
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