This is a series of fifty plein air paintings completed during the pandemic. The title comes from the setting, Old Fields, West Virginia. Vetus Agri is Latin for “old fields”. During lockdown, I found refuge at a cabin on family-owned, mountain land. The term old fields refers to fields that indigenous communities once cultivated. I chose Latin words to further describe Western European colonialism. Place names are harbingers of human history. I acknowledge that my ancestors belonged to the culture that took this land from it’s inhabitants.

Vetus Agri, 2020-2021

The earliest indigenous cultures we know of were the Adena people, who were mound builders. Several thousand members of the Huron tribe occupied present-day West Virginia during the late 1500’s and early 1600’s. The area around Old Fields was inhabited by the Tuscarora tribe in the 1700’s. After that the area was controlled by the Iroquois confederacy and used as hunting grounds. A probable indigenous mound can be found at the highest point of our property. Nearby is a stand of native prairie grass called Sorgastrum Nutens. This grass contributed to the diet of bison that native peoples managed and hunted.

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Toombs Hollow | 2021

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Barns of Shenandoah (Horreum) | 2017 - 2019