Tag Archives: representational art

Painting #16. Painting Smoke Outside the Kitchen Window

We’ve got a beautiful fluffy pink smoke bush in our front yard.  It’s only a few years old but it’s grown huge.  Its color is very interesting.  Not ‘PINK pink’, but something fairly indescribable.  I can show you better with my brush than with my words.  I also give you a few photos below to get a sense of what I was looking at when I painted this one live.

Touching Up an Oldie-but-Goodie ~~ a Favorite Painting from a Long Ago Workshop

Some years ago I took a workshop from nationally known artist Carolyn Anderson.  One of our tasks was to paint an interpretation based on one of her stash of photos that she uses for inspiration.  I selected the one I liked and did a nice start, I thought.  I’ve always liked that old painting and decided to finish it up last week.  It only took a few minutes.  Ahhhhh.  That felt good! Here it is and below that, its state before the touch-up, as well as the reference photo.

The ‘7 Palettes’ Kicked Off a Summer-long Exhibit Yesterday!

Yesterday, some friends and I, who collaborate on all things art as The 7 Palettes,  opened a new exhibit in Bethesda, Maryland.  Our art — some 40+ pieces — will be displayed for three months at Maplewood Park Place on Old Georgetown Road.  Come see our pretties, please — any day between now and August 24, from 10 to 4 daily.   And congratulations to Sara Becker, whose large abstract painting sold during the Opening Reception!!  Way to go, Sara!

 

Painting #15 Maple Leaves from Life — an Experiment with Rubber Widget

Last week I painted purple irises atop leaves from the Japanese Maple out front.  I focused on the irises rather than on the leaves in that one.  After the irises faded, the lovely tangle of leaves and stems continued to hold my attention.  So I painted them – or tried anyway.  The leaves are mostly very dark — deep reds and greens, so I wanted a light background, but what color?

I tried one color; nah.  I tried another; nah. The next morning, I covered it all up with a creamy yellow/white and didn’t like that either.  In frustration, I picked up a rubber wedge tool and scraped off the top layer of background, trying hard not to wipe off the leaves themselves.  I was left with all sorts of interesting marks around the leaves.  They’re weird but I like them and thought I’d keep ’em.  Let me know if you like them or hate them!

#16. Tangle of Japanese Maple Leaves in a Pitcher. Oil on Arches Oil Paper. 10″ x 8″.

The leaves and vase I painted (from life).

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Painting #14 ~~ Screaming Red Hibiscus!

This is another beauty from our garden, continuing the ‘big flower’ theme for a bit.  Fortunately our three hibiscus plants made it through the winter and we might have more of these later in the summer.  Yum.

Painting #14. Screaming Red Hibiscus. Oil on Primed Arches Oil Paper. 10×8.

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Painting #12 – Another Yellow Flower (Squash Blossom) & Friend

I decided to try another yellow flower — even bigger this time.  I took the reference photo in our garden one morning — I couldn’t believe that the bee posed long enough for me to lean in for such a closeup.  I was pumped.  And I guess I got pumped up again while making this painting — it’s one of my favorites of the daily paintings so far!  Hope you like it too.

#12 Yellow Squash Flower & Friend. Oil on Primed Arches Oil Paper. 10×8

Reference Photo

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Painting #11 Yellow Lilies

For my next painting I decided to channel friend Helen Gallagher with some BIG flowers, painted from life from a bouquet a friend sent me for Mother’s Day.  Haven’t ever done any large scale, straight-on flowers.  I don’t think I captured the color of the shadows very well.  I’m also not crazy about the composition, but it was a good experiment.  I used the palette knife a fair amount, but not for everything. . . .

I painted from life rather than the photo below — which I snapped to record what I was generally looking at while painting.

Yellow Lilies. Oil on Primed Arches Oil Paper. 8×10.

Reference Photo

Painting #10 – Cauliflower in Watercolor and Gouache

One of my collectors has bought three of the veggie watercolors I painted last year as a consequence of a workshop with Wendy Artin. And she wants a fourth so she can group them in her kitchen. What to do? A pretty cauliflower was in our fridge so this is how I spent my evening in front of the TV. . . .

I made a few mistakes since I was painting it direct — without a pencil sketch, as Wendy had taught. So I resorted to a bit of gouache so I wouldn’t have to start over!!

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Painting #9 – Flag Irises from the Garden

One of my grandsons and I harvested some flag irises from the garden on Sunday to decorate our Mother’s Day table.  I decided to paint those from life for my Monday painting.  I didn’t like the outcome – especially the background, which was pretty awful, so I tweaked it later in the day — and then tweaked it again today!!  I’m including the first and second ‘drafts’, which illustrate my changes in scale as I reworked the thing.

#9 Flag Irises. Oil on Primed Arches Oil Paper. 8″x10″.

#9 Irises from the Garden. Oil on Primed Arches Oil Paper. 8×10

Initial Composition

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Painting #8 — Under the Sky and Water (More Koi)!

This is what I did yesterday — Mother’s Day.  I’m very proud that I managed to do this AND have a celebratory brunch with Pat, Will, Mariam and grand babes Will and Maya.  AND have a crab imperial supper courtesy of Pat.  AND a nap!  Woohoo!  Hope you can tell that that light blue is pond water reflecting the pale blue sky, accented with the dark shadows of nearby leaves, which allowed us to glimpse the true colors under the murk. . . .  Hmmm, looking at it again this morning, I probably should have darkened hat blue a bit more.  Oh well.

Koi #3. Oil on Primed Arches Oil Paper. 8″x10″

Reference for Koi #3.

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