Tag Archives: Redwood National Park

Grove of Titans – Save the Redwoods League


The winding road of life sometimes loops back to the start. In the 1980’s, I was commissioned to paint a mural of Mill Creek in Redwood National Park near Crescent City, California. It was my first piece of public art for any national park, and it opened my eyes to what might be possible for my future. That project made me see the value in painting for a bigger cause than simply art for people’s walls. That idea has remained with me ever sense.

After that first effort, I was soon painting for other parks and some for The Save-the-Redwoods League in San Francisco, which, at that time, was the front line in trying to stop commercial logging of the last 2% of the Coastal Redwoods. That’s right, 2%! I painted a lot of redwoods in those years.

And now, some 40 years later, I was just asked to paint some more redwoods for Redwood National Park. When I did the first painting (seen at the bottom here), no one realized the importance of this area in the Mil Creek Valley of Jed Smith Redwoods State Park. Now we know it’s home to some of the tallest and biggest redwoods on the planet, the Grove of Titans. Save-the-Redwoods League has partnered with Redwood National Park to build a very impressive elevated boardwalk to save the shallow roots of the trees there, and these three new panels with my art will be on that boardwalk. It’s within a few hundred yards of the site of that first painting!

Here’s a reference photo of that grove, you can see similar elements in the big panel at the top. Thanks to the Save-the-Redwoods League for hiring me, and thanks to EDX Exhibits in Seattle for yet another chance to paint nature. Neither of these folks realized my history here, but I somehow got the job anyway! Thanks to Deborah at SRL and Beth and Michael at EDX. You guys are wonderful to work with.

Above is a photo of the Grove of Titans. You can see where I got the design for the larger forest panel.

And here’s the original painting of Mill Creek, a watercolor on a full sheet of mat board. I’ve certainly changed my style in 40 years.

And another painting from that same era of the Smith River that Mill Creek joins. I painted this for Six Rivers National Forest, my first Forest Service piece of art dated about the same time. It was painted for the Discovery Museum in Eureka, CA.

This was a very fun project for me, to go back to my park-roots and remember all these redwood paintings I did in some other life, hundreds of them – at that time, I was the struggling artist.

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Larry Eifert

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NEW: Secrets of the Old-growth Forest Poster

A new Larry Eifert poster is now available, an 18″ x 24″ companion piece to the Old-growth Forests poster I recently blogged about. While we’ve printed a jigsaw puzzle of this image before, there was never a poster. The best part of this is that we had the printer roll them – yes, ROLL THEM (how modern can we get) so we didn’t have to do that. Yes, the warehouse is somewhat stuffed at the moment, so help us out.

The poster back is sectioned off into four areas that can easily be photocopied by teachers to develop a lesson plan. We encourage this as it makes for a really good teaching tool. So, help us pay this stupid printing bill: You can buy this poster here.

The original painting is installed in the Prairie Creek museum in Redwood National Park near Orick, California. Next time you’re there to see one of the truly great forests on the planet, stop by and see the painting. Redwood NP has many Eiferts, including three murals and something like forty other paintings scattered around on exhibit panels and waysides. It’s like a big art gallery in the forest.

The forest at Prairie Creek: it has 10 times the biomass of a typical tropical rain forest, and holds the most living or once-living organic matter of any forest on Earth. No wonder I like it, no wonder it’s a park.

Thanks for reading this week.
Larry Eifert

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Click here to go to our main website – packed with jigsaw puzzles, prints, interpretive portfolios and lots of other stuff.

Click here to check out what Nancy’s currently working on with her photography.

Click here to go to Virginia Eifert’s website. Her books are now becoming available as Amazon Kindle books.