Painting with Soil—Jan Lang's Images of the
Lewis and Clark Expedition
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Instructions on making "soil paints"
Click on the paintings below to see larger images.
  
  
  
  
 
After working 14 years as a Technician in the NRCS National Soil Survey
Laboratory in Lincoln, Nebraska, Janis Lang began to think of soil in a whole
new way. In the laboratory she had always noticed the many beautiful colors of
the soils that she analyzed from all over the country and the world. Lang had an
idea, -- why not use soil to paint scenes from the Lewis and Clark expedition?
What better way to celebrate the expedition's recording of our country's natural
resources, especially our landscapes and soils?
Soil samples are put through a very fine sieve and mixed with a clear
acrylic to create “soil paints.” Using these, she painted scenes from the Lewis
and Clark Trail on watercolor paper. She says, “The trick with painting
landscapes is that it is hard to get the color right. When I paint with soil,
the color comes from nature and it is exactly right.”
Lang took her inspiration from photographs she had seen and from descriptions
of soils and landscapes that NRCS soil scientists had discovered in the Lewis
and Clark journals. Lewis and Clark had specific instructions from President
Jefferson to report on factors of the land that would show its potential for
agricultural uses. The President wanted the explorers to describe "…the soil &
face of the country, its growth and vegetable productions, especially those not
of the U.S.”
The Natural Resources Conservation Service plans to show copies of these
paintings in exhibits along the Lewis and Clark Trail. Through “Painting with
Soil” workshops and hands-on displays, Janis Lang and soil scientists of the
NRCS and the National Cooperative Soil Survey will share their appreciation of
the soil other natural resources that the Lewis and Clark Expedition experienced
200 years ago. Lang says, “I’ve always been fascinated by Lewis and Clark. It’s
been a lot of fun to research their trip and recreate these images.”
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