“Artist at Tamanowas” appears in Patricia Hagen’s one-woman show, “Into the Woods.” The exhibit, at Northwind Art’s Jeanette Best Gallery in Port Townsend, is designed to feel like a walk on a forest trail. (Patricia Hagen)

“Artist at Tamanowas” appears in Patricia Hagen’s one-woman show, “Into the Woods.” The exhibit, at Northwind Art’s Jeanette Best Gallery in Port Townsend, is designed to feel like a walk on a forest trail. (Patricia Hagen)

‘Into the Woods’ to offer a forest walk inside an art gallery

PORT TOWNSEND — This is the time, the artist believes, to come into the forest. Listen for the owl’s wings. Stand close to the trunk of a fragrant cedar, and breathe.

“To be out there,” painter Patricia Hagen said, “there’s something it does to your soul.”

“Into the Woods,” Hagen’s new one-woman show, opens Thursday at Northwind Art’s Jeanette Best Gallery, bringing together 40 of her most recent paintings. Many were done en plein air, so Hagen will put up a map in the gallery that shows where she started painting them — places including the forest near her home in Port Townsend, and on the trail near Tamanowas Rock in Chimacum.

The public is invited to explore the show — designed to feel like a walk on a forest path — at the nonprofit gallery at 701 Water St. Gallery hours are from noon to 5 p.m. Thursdays through Mondays.

A celebration of “Into the Woods” will be part of First Saturday Art Walk from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. June 7, and then Hagen will give a free artist talk at 3 p.m. June 8. The exhibit will stay on view through July 7.

Together with the Jefferson Land Trust, Hagen will guide two family plein air art classes in Chimacum’s Valley View Forest. The class will be offered at 10 a.m. June 14 and again on June 21. For more information, visit saveland.org/events.

Hagen, who moved to Port Townsend four years ago, is a native of the Northwest, and spent part of her youth in Portland, Ore. She earned two art degrees, a bachelor’s at Ohio’s Miami University and then her master’s at California College of the Arts’ Oakland campus. And she’s been walking, playing and painting in the woods for a good long time.

With her art, Hagen hopes to help people connect with the natural world — a balm for when we feel stressed and alone. Her own walks, on the Peace Mile Trail at Fort Worden State Park, in Chimacum’s Valley View Forest, and on the trails just beyond her doorstep, fill her cup with inspiration.

Paintings such as “Night Watch,” “The Fawn,” and “New Year/New Growth,” reflect that, with their images of forests, sky, bodies of water, birds, deer, humans and other animals.

Yet Hagen doesn’t shy away from the reality of destruction. She faces it in her art. She also paints regrowth, often with a human in the frame.

“The figure may be autobiographical, or a kind of every-woman,” said Margy Lavelle, who shows Hagen’s work at Edison’s i.e. gallery in Skagit County.

“The person is in nature, observing or communing, sometimes dwarfed by the setting, the grandness,” Lavelle noted.

“There is both intimacy and witnessing taking place. There is solitude but never aloneness here. The deep connection is what Hagen is reminding us of.”

Hagen said she does fear for the survival of the trees. She’s heartened lately, though, by the Jefferson Land Trust’s work to preserve the forests and farmland around us.

The artist has explored those places, hiking the public trails and marveling as though she just arrived here.

“The essence of my work is an exploration of this delicate dance between humanity and nature,” Hagen said.

We are not mere observers, she believes. It’s high time for us to be protectors.

“Nature reveals itself,” she writes, “as both nurturing and commanding, whether viewed from a mountain peak or an ancient forest path.”

Patricia Hagen’s one-woman show, “Into the Woods,” includes “New Year/New Growth” and about 35 other works. The exhibit, at Northwind Art’s Jeanette Best Gallery in Port Townsend, features plein air paintings made in local forests. (Patricia Hagen)

Patricia Hagen’s one-woman show, “Into the Woods,” includes “New Year/New Growth” and about 35 other works. The exhibit, at Northwind Art’s Jeanette Best Gallery in Port Townsend, features plein air paintings made in local forests. (Patricia Hagen)

More in Entertainment

Students to lead Studium Generale discussion

The fall series of Studium Generale lectures will finish… Continue reading

“Christmas Girl” by Jennifer Rose is part of the Blue Whole Gallery’s December exhibit, “A Silver Lining.”
Gold-themed event to highlight First Friday Art Walk

The First Friday Art Walk will celebrate with a gold-themed… Continue reading

Santa’s elves during a recent rehearsal of “Sugar Plum Done.” From left, back row, are Piper Bruch, Sapphyre Billman and Sterling Ward. From left, front row, are Jessup Coffin, Rai Warzecha and Zade Harris.
Port Angeles Community Players to stage ‘Sugar Plum Done’

The Port Angeles Community Players will kick off its… Continue reading

Queen of Hearts, from left, includes Karen Laura Peters, Thomas Jennings, Tara Chugh and Carrie Jennings. They will perform at Studio Bob on Friday. (Brittne Lunniss)
Queen of Hearts to perform at Studio Bob

Queen of Hearts will perform at 7 p.m. Friday… Continue reading

Peninsula College to host free murder mystery reading

Peninsula College will host a staged reading of “The… Continue reading

Peninsula College jazz ensemble to host fall concert

The Peninsula College jazz ensemble will present its fall… Continue reading

Auditions set for Port Angeles Community Players production

The Port Angeles Community Players will conduct auditions for… Continue reading

David Louis.
Comic finalists to stand up together at Field Hall

Competitors will be from Canada, Deep South, Brooklyn

Holiday bazaars slated across Peninsula

Holiday arts and crafts fairs will be conducted across the Peninsula this… Continue reading

Flower farmer Laurie McKenzie of Dragonheart Flowers will teach a “Winter Evergreen Wreaths” class Dec. 3 at the nonprofit Northwind Art School in Port Townsend. (Laurie McKenzie)
Nonprofit art school offers arts and crafts workshops

Artist Martha Worthley walked into Northwind Art’s classroom to… Continue reading

Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News
Supaman performs a "Men's War Dance" to a full house on Thursday at the Port Townsend High School auditorium. Supaman, whose real name is Christian Parrish Takes the Gun, is an Apsáalooke rapper and fancy war dancer who grew up in Crow Agency, Mont.
Song and dance

Supaman performs a “Men’s War Dance” to a full house on Thursday… Continue reading

Music on the Straight founders James Garlick, left, and Richard O'Neill, performing at Field Arts and Events Hall in September. The two will return, joined by pianist Jeremy Denk and cellist Efe Baltacigil Nov. 25. (Alex Bodi Hallett)
Concert to honor violist

Quartet composed of Peninsula-borne talent