August 25, 2012
August 21, 2012
More From Maine
I ended up painting only what I could see from the house. You can see why I feel like it's endlessly wonderful to be there from these paintings -- the harbor is the view from the East side of the house; the back barn is on the West side; the rock beach is to the south; the ferry and lobster boats are past the harbor; the rose hips are from the front lawn and set up on the porch in the still life of rose hip tea. Usually I also paint the house itself, a beautiful 1880s Victorian Maine classic, and I also like to paint the Adirondack chairs on the front lawn before the beach. No time this year.
August 18, 2012
Maine Lobsters
I love to paint in Maine and there's no subject for a painting that interests me more than lobsters. The painting of a live lobster has to be a quick one -- both because the lobster needs to either be cooled off or cooked and because they like to move. As models go, they are a steal at $3.50/pound and they hold that "cooked" pose until hunger strikes. This year, I painted lobsters with painter friends who are used to taking a bit more time and exercising a bit more control in painting -- and their paintings were fantastic. Here's mine.
August 4, 2012
Painting from a Study
In the background, there's a smaller, 16 x 20, view of early morning sun streaming through the trees at Great Falls that I painted a few years ago. It's a painting that embodies a lot of what I love -- a combination of abstraction and a view of reality, a lot of color and a feeling of intense sunlight. I've been meaning to use it as a study for a larger painting, but haven't had the time. This morning, I found that time (let's just say that there's only one short downstroke of type between A and P. .. I missed that my intended 10 AM departure is actually at 10 PM, a 12 hour "find" of studio painting time).
I've spent time l looking at how other artists have used studies painted plein air to create larger studio works (and I did that for my Washington monument painting I did in late winter). Already, I can see how the color is cleaner since I'm in the studio and have more time to mix paint, I have more clean brushes on hand and I have a much bigger range of paints than I usually bring on when I'm out. The larger painting is 30 x 40. I think it's going to end up in my September show.
One thing you might be wondering about -- what's the thing resting on the easel tray below the painting? It's a level and I'm finding that I'm looking to it a lot to make sure that my paintings are being painted squarely.
I've spent time l looking at how other artists have used studies painted plein air to create larger studio works (and I did that for my Washington monument painting I did in late winter). Already, I can see how the color is cleaner since I'm in the studio and have more time to mix paint, I have more clean brushes on hand and I have a much bigger range of paints than I usually bring on when I'm out. The larger painting is 30 x 40. I think it's going to end up in my September show.
One thing you might be wondering about -- what's the thing resting on the easel tray below the painting? It's a level and I'm finding that I'm looking to it a lot to make sure that my paintings are being painted squarely.
August 1, 2012
Studio Cleaning
Today I took a large number (a painfully large number!) of canvases to the transfer station. That is the local euphemism for dump. I loaded them in the car along with some beat up furniture, a badly mangled snow shovel and other junk and they are now gone. Some of the work was unfinished, others not successful and some, well, I just didn't feel like they represented the vision I see for myself now. My hope is that a cleaner studio will lead the way to some great painting this fall.
I rescued the above painting, which was at the back of a closet. This painting was done at Riley's lock where the canal meets the Potomac River, probably in 2010. Here's what I like about it: the depth of the space; the way that you can see both arches yet you are drawn to look through the arch on the right; the warm abstraction of the intercutting of stone, tree branches and light on the far right and the cool light on the far left.
I rescued the above painting, which was at the back of a closet. This painting was done at Riley's lock where the canal meets the Potomac River, probably in 2010. Here's what I like about it: the depth of the space; the way that you can see both arches yet you are drawn to look through the arch on the right; the warm abstraction of the intercutting of stone, tree branches and light on the far right and the cool light on the far left.
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