Monday, September 29, 2008

Carousel Horse -work in progress

Click on image to enlarge.

6"x 6" oil on Ampersand Gessoboard.

I began this piece on Friday and worked all weekend on it. The only part completed or nearly so is the horse but I felt the need to post something to show that I'm still here. The image was taken from one of the many photos that I took last week at the North Georgia State Fair - fun stuff! A companion piece is planned for a later date painted of a different ride and they will hopefully be sold as a pair. I'll probably put this aside for a week or so before finishing it due to a little loss of interest. A fresh look later will renew inspiration and I need to work on some more ebay paintings. I just wonder if anything will sell in this tight money environment! "Starving artists" may become a reality for many of us and we will all start painting food still lifes just to dream. ;o)

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Candy Apple - SOLD

Click on image to enlarge.

5"x 7" Oil on Ampersand Gessoboard.

Kenn and I went to the North Georgia State Fair again this year and I brought this apple home to paint. I almost waited too long (only two days) because the candy part began melting even though the weather has been very cool. I had planned on painting the apple unwrapped, but due to the candy coating thinning, I left it wrapped and I'm now sure that it led to a much better painting. We make our plans and life happens. I like this piece so much I will be sad to part with it. The subject of the candy apple represents so many memories - the minute I step inside the fairground I feel like a kid again.

Kenn and I were delighted to take as many as 600 shots at the fair this time. I think I have some great subjects for some larger paintings if I can make the time.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Silver Bowl of Cherries - SOLD

Click on image to enlarge.

6"x 6" Oil on Ampersand Gessoboard.

Oooh..cherries. These where my first to paint and much harder than expected but a pleasant challenge. I was never completely satisfied with my darkest reds. Maybe after painting cherries several more times I'll get closer to my satisfaction.

This still life is a much more contemporary than my recent works. It was inspired by this strange silver bowl purchased at the local thrift store. I've seen many silver bowls like this and even own some, but this bowl is lined with a lime green enamel finish. I love the touch of green it adds to this black and red painting - just enough additional color to create interest and relief from all that red.

Note: the background of this painting is solid black at the top and on this monitor there appears a light modeling effect. I'm noticing that when I have an image prepared in photoshop, once uploaded to blogspot, the image on my blog looks faded or lighter. I've begun preparing my photos for the blog to look darker than they are so that they will load more visually correct. Even then the image may appear too light. I wonder if others are experiencing this.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Sarah's Apple (now "Apple and a Half") SOLD


Click on image to enlarge.

5"x 7" Oil on gessoed panel.

Today is October the 6th and I'm posting a revised painting. The image below shows the painting that was on ebay and not sold. I think cleaning up the natural blemishes will appeal to more people so I made a few changes. This is the final final painting!
I'm posting on ebay again tonight, we'll see if there is more interest.

Click on image to enlarge.

This is the final painting after all changes/work on the whole apple. The progression is seen below and this painting has been posted the day after the original post. This photo is the closest in color for the apple and is a little cool for the background ( the correct background color is somewhere between yesterday's final and this pic ). I've not changed the background at all since yesterday's post, what a difference in photo's!

More "farm" fruit. These apples were covered with spots and blemishes, and I wonder if rendering those spots makes the painting look dirty. To me, the natural state of these apples right off the tree is what was so appealing.

I began my painting with an oil under-painting of thinned raw umber and burnt sienna. I then painted in the background color and table.

I added spots of color to the apples and knife to be blended later. The table was further defined.

Click on image to enlarge

This background color is closest to the original, but the apple color is a little cooler
than this, more toward alizarin crimson. I may have a bit more to do to the apple later and I'd love to take a better photo although I took about ten.

I couldn't think of a name, so what do you think? I don't know a Sarah, but it seems appropriate for an old world looking apple painting. I think my favorite thing to paint in these pieces is the wood table or sometimes wooden shelf. It's really an imagined table, but I do use a cutting board to help me visualize an old farm table.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Trois Petites Poires - SOLD

Click on image to enlarge.

5"x 7" Oil on gessoed board.

I worked hard for this still life but what pleasure. I knocked on a stranger's door and asked if I could purchase some of the pears in her tree. She graciously said " take all you want and apples too!" I took the ladder, basket, and chippers out of my car and harvested these and a basket full. I have a multitude of future paintings to come out of my fruitful excursion.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

State Fair (Step by Step on poor painting decisions) nfs


September is my favorite month. It ushers in relief of the humidity and heat of the South and my birthday always falls in the week of the North Georgia State Fair. Last year my husband and I were delighted to have such a beautiful evening to stroll and take in the sights and smells of the fair and we both took lots of photos. Kenn's photos were by far the best and I've wanted to paint from some of them for the longest. With this year's fair just beginning this week, I thought I'd have some fun and try depicting that wonderful evening and neon!

Poor choice no.1 - Choosing to attempt this much detail on a 6"x 8" rough canvas panel. The last time I used this RayMar panel ( which is supposed to be their "smooth" panel) I hated it and had a very similar outcome. The choice was made because these panels were the only ones I had in my studio that were larger than 5"x 7" or 6"x 6". I think these panels would be good for loose plein air work, but not the kind of work that I'm attempting. Carol Marine uses these panels and has beautiful results with her bold , very loose contemporary still lifes.

I chose this photo (not a poor choice) and thought I would attempt a loose and impressionistic painting to capture the the mood of the darking sky with all the colorful lights and moving crowds. I covered the canvas panel with 2 coats of black gesso, knowing that this has been a successful ground for me recently on other surfaces and because it was a nocturnal theme ( I love that word- nocturnal).


Poor choice no.2 - I made a detailed drawing on the dry gesso. This set me up right away for a tighter approach to the entire painting. Making a drawing in itself is not always a bad thing. It allows one to work out proportions, perspective, and composition and is often necessary when one attempts a very complex painting. But for me, I allowed the drawing to have me forget all that I've learned this year. I didn't think about shapes, I was painting objects and people and buildings. I was basically just coloring in between the lines. I made some changes from the photo, like removing a figure and adding the swinging ship in the background, but I was "copying" a photo. I wasn't asking any of the questions one should ask oneself in the painting process. "What is the focal point, what are you trying to communicate to the viewer, how can I say more than the photo, etc?". Well, some of them I did ask, but just to make a good "copy" of the painting. I was careful to get the values correct- where are the darkest darks and lightest lights ? Is "this" darker or cooler than "that"? - and so forth.

Poor choice no.3 - Because I wanted the bright lights to be clear and bright and as intense as possible, I decided to paint in the neon and lights first right on the dried gesso. This worked as far as giving me the intensity I wanted, but because I painted individual bulbs, I was further insured to have a very tight painting far removed from my original intent. This obsession with painting light bulbs continued for a full day if I remember correctly. By this time, I realized that the painting was not going to be loose and impressionistic, realism was the change of plans.

Poor choice no. 4 - I was going to keep at it until it became a wonderful master piece. I think this is where I should have given the canvas a toss, but I hate to leave something unfinished. Many times one gets that feeling at the halfway point in a painting when doubt sets in. You keep working and the painting begins working again. I was hoping for that moment. "Just keep working a little longer and things will come together". Things were coming together alright. The painting was not loose and impressionistic. It was not a good realistic painting. It was a Grandma Moses painting without the price tag! Ugh.

Poor choice no. 5 - was to spend yet another day trying to MAKE it work! It thought that all it needed was to soften and blend edges - to make the lights glow and soften the amateurish, hard edge quality of the whole painting. That helped a great deal, but alas, I could have completed two or three other good paintings in the time I spent on this pretty fair and unsuccessful piece.

I had great hopes for it, you can tell because I took WIP shots.
So I thought I'd share my three days of work (not entire days!) with all the world to see. Maybe some poor artist out there will relate and find solace.
If anyone wants six 6"x 8" RayMar canvas panels, let me know. LOL

Note: My reds in the neon area are much more intense than seen here, but when I tried to match the painting with photoshop, the figures in the foreground became too warm and lost their correct value and coolness.
You know, the painting looks better at this small size.... I'm still wishing.

Click on image to enlarge.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Sliced Tomatoes - SOLD

Click on image to enlarge.

5"x 7" Oil on Ampersand Gessoboard.

No, I haven't run out of subjects to paint! I've had several inquiries about additional tomato slice paintings. The first one I did, "On the chopping Block", received a lot of interest and comments, so this piece is very similar. When I put it on ebay tomorrow, watch, no one will be interested this time. Yep, that's right this painting was done just to sell. Next painting I need to treat myself and go crazy! Humm.......Maybe dancing crabs! (click on "crabs" to see some dancing crabs by Rick Nilson")

Click here for purchasing info.


Monday, September 1, 2008

Victory Tokens - SOLD

Click on image to enlarge.

6"x 6" Oil on Ampersand Gessoboard.

Ah....A break from fruits and vegetables. I've planned on doing a baseball painting for a while and I was running out of time with the season almost over. I've seen some beautiful paintings of baseballs and wanted to see what I could do with the subject. But I couldn't resist putting "food" in the piece and I think it adds a lot of interest without taking too much away from the prominent ball. The piece was hard to photograph and fully capture the subtleties in the baseball, especially the highlight which is one of my favorite areas of the painting.

I've enjoyed naming my works lately and find it a challenge to assign creative but not hokey titles. I had a name for this one, but asked my husband (who is a very talented writer) if he had a better idea. "Nuts n' Balls" was his male offering. I went with my title.