Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Spring Sunshine


This is a larger, and more recent, version of the pastel I did yesterday that's included in that slideshow. I'm still tweaking and invite critique. I'm pretty happy with it at this point, but with pastel is one ever finished?

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

All Paint from the Same Photo


Our painting studio group did something different today and all painted from the same photo. It's one I took recently while I was walking the dogs in the woods and I printed a copy for each person. As you can see, the interpretations varied but everyone got the same general composition. It was fun to see them as we did our critiqué. Many people kept working . . . tweaking or ditzing, depending on your point of view . . . after I took these photos with my trusty iPhone.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Trout Lily


I grew up calling these flowers "dog-tooth violets" but somewhere along the way their name was changed; more accurate, I suppose. They also grow wild in our local woods and I took this photo a couple of weeks ago when the dogs and I were walking there.

Wild Dogwood


I actually painted this version of the woods and creek before the watercolor one below. I was particularly taken by the shadows on the water. Dogwoods actually do grow wild in our woods.

"tetrad" paintings



These were each done with four colors only. A different combination for each painting. The tree was done with sienna, turquoise, cobalt blue and magenta. The landscape was painted with a bright yellow, turquoise, magenta and a mixed purple. It's an interesting challenge to use just a few colors and I must say, I liked the landscape combination much better. I missed yellow in the other.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

White Roses


My sweet brother gave me white roses for my birthday last weekend. I took them to our art studio yesterday to share with the other artists. I've never been able to paint roses without them looking just like big blobs, so I spent some time drawing individual flowers. Then there was only a short time until our lunch break and critique time. Every now an then when I have that sort of short time I just do a quick sketch and loosely apply color and something amazing happens. I'm not sure this pastel is amazing, but it's loose and different from my usual. I used a charcoal stick and drew three blossoms from my sketches, then put the color on with the sides of my pastels (the equivalent of using a big brush with watercolor). I probably used too much pink to have the blossoms look white; I only had a limited number of pastel sticks with me and a short time. As always, I invite critiques and remind you that you'll get more true colors if you click on the image for the larger version.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

North Shore

I took this photo maybe 30 years ago in Hawaii. I'm looking for critiques.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

I think this is done now. I worked on lights and shadows, moved the person with the dog and made them a bit bigger. I'm always open for comments and critiques and nothing is really finished until it's signed and framed.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Bridge


I worked on this yesterday. It's not finished and I'm hoping others' eyes will see the little things that still need doing. It's pastel, 14 x 20", more or less. I know the figure is too small, if you can see it at all.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Nova Scotia


We went to Nova Scotia twice to paint, years ago. I took a gazillion photos and every now and then one inspires me to paint. Or pastel, as the case may be. In Blue Rocks there were a wide variety of these fishing shacks with their reflections. This is pastel on a 7" x 10" scrap of Wallis paper. I find it harder to use pastels on such a small size; it's hard to aim them to exactly the right spot.





Obviously it's been a while since I posted. The top of these three is the finished version of my abstract already posted. Then come versions 2 and 3 from a photo of a barn in Birchrunville, PA, where I used to live. I guess I didn't take a photo of version 1 which is fine; I got better as I practiced. The barns are pastel with the lavender the underpainting done with liquid watercolors.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

watercolor and collage



I worked on this yesterday with our studio group. I'm not a fan of crucifixes and it came out a bit too much like that for my taste, so this morning I played more in Photoshop. Of course, I can never duplicate what I do in Photoshop with paint and brushes, but it can give me a direction without changing the painting itself. I'm soliciting any and all critiques.

I applied paint, collaged various white papers, added more paint, etc. It's fun to do a painting this way.






Friday, February 19, 2010

Tulips


I'm really sick of snow and was delighted when another member of my painting group brought in some red tulips. That inspired me. This is all done with liquid watercolors which create wonderful, bright colors. First I scattered some masking fluid over my paper, hence the white spots. Snow?

Here's also a photo of our snow.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Snowy Village


Once upon a time I lived in the white house in this painting. Across the road was the general store and post office. It was a great place to live, to develop community and to raise kids.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

new inspiration





A friend sent me this web site: http://www.acquerello-aia.it/home/ for the Italian watercolor society and I've been studying the paintings posted there. Lots of paintings, wonderful loose styles. It's inspired me to fool around with painting as loosely as I can and leave as much white of the paper as possible while still telling my story. It's been fun and the painting goes quickly. For the tree trunk, I used only three colors: ultramarine blue, gold and magenta. They're not the standard red/yellow/blue primary colors but they are a good triad for landscapes. As usual, they paintings will look better if you click on them to see the larger version, and as usual, I always welcome critiques.

I gave Bruce, my son whose license plate is a couple of posts earlier, a print of that painting for Christmas. He laughed, then hung it on the wall. He told me that he's saved that plate.