Showing posts with label meadow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label meadow. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Time Passage


"Spring Wallows"
8x10 
oil on panel


Has it really been almost four years since I've posted both a painting and a musing here? As improbable as that seems to me, the more fantastic an idea is that, as I was looking through the blog here (trying to re-familiarize myself), I noticed I still had followers. 

I'm kind of assuming that even though their profiles still are listed, they've probably moved on long ago....but in case they (and you who might be reading this) haven't, "Hello again!"

I won't bore anyone with what has been happening for the last four years that has kept me away from the easel -- there will be plenty of stories to tell going forward. For now, I will simply say that it's nice to be back; both here and especially at the easel. You'll probably notice going forward that this blog will change a bit. For one thing, I'm more long-winded than I used to be. 

For some time, I've wanted to return to writing something more substantial than random rants on Facebook or whatever could be squeezed into a Twitter or Instagram block. this old school blogging may not be the trendiest platform, but I feel the longer format demands something that the others don't: thoughtfulness. Formulation of more coherent ideas, and cogent discussions, than can be summed up with an animated GIF and a pithy comment. It's something that seems to be a bit of a lost idea in 2019. 

Art will still be the focus. Along with it though, I hope to include discussions and thoughts on the business of being an artist working in multiple disciplines and how the changes society and our culture have gone through have affected the arts. Enough of that for now....

About the painting (this is a bit of a long one. Sorry.):

Roughly 4 years ago, I was invited to be in an art festival in Northeastern Oregon in the Wallowa Valley. It was a beautiful festival run by incredibly nice and generous folks and my wife and I had a lot of fun. During the course of the week, we wandered around painting and photographing an area that, being a native Northwestern and having grown up in Oregon, I was embarrassed to admit I knew virtually nothing about. I kept returning this particular meadow and painted probably a dozen different views...strangely enough, this was the only one that showed the mountains.

A few nights ago, as I was pulling my old materials and gear out to kick start a return to painting, I found this study I had done, and the entire day came back to me like it was just last week. The clouds had been covering all of the peaks the entire morning and I had simply been concentrating on groups of trees around the meadow. Without warning the clouds broke, the sun came out, and these mountains still dusted with spring snow gleamed like diamonds. 

In my haste to move my setup, I knocked over my cup of brushes from my easel and ALL of them landed bristles first in the soft mud at my feet along with my turp cup. My wife had taken the car and gone off in search of more photographic subject matter, and taken along with her all of my back-up gear. With no way to satisfactorily clean my brushes, I was left with only my painting knife to render this entire painting -- not something I've ever had to do before. I muddled through, put the painting in one of my carriers, and figuring it was a loss, forgot about it....until the other night.

When I looked at it through the prism of several years, I actually liked the energy with which I had been forced to push the paint around that day using a tool that wasn't very comfortable at the time. I touched up a few of the flowers in the foreground and broke a static line in the fence, but other than that, it's pretty much the painting I panicked my way through that morning in the Wallowas.

Saturday, February 9, 2013

"Winter Display"

Always amazes me how many colors are still on display in nature during the winter....
"Winter Display"
8x10; oil on panel

Friday, February 8, 2013

Friday, February 17, 2012

Inscape III - Morning sequence....

Surprisingly, I've had a few people ask me about my painting process -- which actually cracks me up, because I rarely feel like I've got a handle on what I'm doing day to day, let alone describing it to others ---

Anyhoo...here we go...
This is the initial sketch I worked from; 8x10.....

First off I tone a 16x20 panel with a light wash of burnt sienna color; then a loose sketch to draw in the major elements; at this point I also a looking at spatial relationships in the drawing...often drawing lines around elements to see if I'm happy with the negative spaces as well.

Initially, I lay in the darks first as I have a tendency to lose my darks quite quickly. I work from a three-color palette -- Ultramarine Blue, Alizarin Crimson or Cad Red Medium, Cad Yellow Lemon, and Titanium White. Also at this point in my development it helps me think about working with the shadows. Working loose and thinly with a mixture of Ultramarine, Alizarin Crimson (my chosen red for this painting), and Cad Yellow Lemon.

Still looking at spatial relationships, I decide that another grove of trees helps balance the composition a bit and helps establish more of a feeling of distance by creating what I think of as a secondary middle ground.

Once I feel pretty good about the drawing and my placement of darks, I move to the sky and block in the color from a mixture of Ultramarine, Alizarin, White and portions of my left over dark mixture -- the foreground and water will also be derived from these colors in one proportion or another. I also go back to my trees and horizon lines to adjust edges, blend, and re-establish some darker shadows.

Completing the initial color pass, I lay in the middle value colors of the trees, foreground and reflections. Up to this point, everything has been done in one sitting, working wet-into-wet. I'm trying to pay particular attention to color harmony and edge relationships before letting the painting "set-up" for a bit.

After letting the piece sit overnight (if longer than overnight, I will often give the piece a very light coat of Liquin or Neo-Megilp to unify the colors and create a wet-into-wet feeling), I start to work in more local color on the trees and foreground, tighten up any details that I want to add in the center of interest, and generally make sure my value relationships are where I want them.

After this stage, I will set the painting aside and place it in a frame before going back over it for any final adjustments -- for me, this is now the hardest stage....

Inscape III - Morning; 16x20; oil on panel

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Friday, January 13, 2012

Alpine Spring....

"Sunlight"; 8x10; oil on panel
Eating out today for my wife's birthday, I asked about the seasonal ale selection. Shay (!) informed me that it was a Spring ale.........???? It is still January.....isn't it?

Sam Adams Alpine Spring Ale -- pretty darn good any time of the year......oh.....and the glass the company advertises with the little laser-etched thingamabob on the bottom of the glass.....it actually works.......try it

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

The Blind Side.....

"The Blind Side"; 6x6; oil on board
Okay gang, I went two days without trumpeting this repeatedly....but I couldn't hold out any longer.......

The Oregon Ducks are Rose Bowl Champions for the first time in 95 years!!!!

Friday, December 30, 2011

"Highway Meadow"; 6x6; oil on board
Today, I debated for awhile on what to write about....it was a toss-up between a conversation I had with my wife concerning "common-sense" and an incident I observed while standing in line at Starbucks for what will likely be my last Gingerbread Latte of the year (I have a problem and need to police myself).

In the end, the two actually went together in a weird way....but I chose the latte....er, latter.

First off, you should know that I don't generally spend an inordinate amount of time "checking out" members of the opposite sex. For one thing, I'm happily married to my beautiful wife Kim for 17 years and secondly, I tend to be somewhat absorbed in my own little world as I move around the planet with most of my energies being focused on not being a nudge to everyone else. This is just as true in art as it was in music....

Anyway, back to the story here....I was standing at the barista counter waiting for my latte to be completed and happened to glance over at the order counter. In a rare moment of awareness, I noticed what was undeniably a very attractive young woman ordering -- what else -- a soy latte, sans Ginger-anything. Taller than average, very shapely, and wearing the tightest of skin-tight tights. Ironically, this Venus only held my attention for minute -- it was the yutz behind her, thoroughly engrossed in the text message he was reading/writing that demanded my notice. So immersed was he that this post-pubescent hormone factory didn't even notice the scantily clad girl eighteen inches in front of him.

REALLY?!? Even I saw her.The female barista saw her. Half a dozen guys walking through the store saw her. The soccer mom behind the yutz saw her -- and stared daggers into her back.

But not this guy. Why? Because he was texting...TEXTING.....

Is it possible that the combined cabal of Apple, Verizon, and Facebook/Twitter has figured out how to undo half a million years of reproductive instinct with the wave of an emoticon?

Or is it just the death of common sense?

painting count: 15