Tag Archives: still life

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 #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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Irrational Exuberance ~~ Painted Mushrooms? Or Toadstools?

OK.  So, the leeks turned out well, aaaannnndddd ~~~~ I got sassy & decided to paint some portobello mushrooms the next day.

Bad idea!  There’s not much ‘there’ there.  Dull colors & shapes, arranged (by me) in an overly simplistic composition.  Certain artists could make a good painting out of such drab components (Morandi?), but my first effort at ‘shrooms falls short.

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Painting Leeks at Home in the Aftermath of Artin Workshop!

I was so pumped up after Wendy Artin’s workshop that, after a day of R&R, I pulled out my paints and a couple of elderly leeks from the fridge and painted another watercolor in the manner we had been practicing during the workshop.  Here it is.

Leeks at Home. Watercolor on Paper.

I was tickled that it turned out nicely.  Maybe I’ll have to do more!

 

Eeeeek! Bad Cropping, Facebook!! Gasp. Here’s Something Better to Look At!

Sorry sorry sorry, y’all!  My last blog entry contained paintings of two full length nudes, neither of which was ‘out of bounds’ (IMHO).  So, I was aghast when I checked to see if Facebook had re-posted it and found that the images had been sliced and diced in an unexpected manner (to say the least).  I hope you clicked over to my blog to get a better sense of the overall paintings!

In any event, here’s a ‘palette cleanser’!  It’s one of the radishes I painted during the Saturday afternoon session of my Wendy Artin workshop, followed by one of Wendy’s gorgeous still life watercolors — also of radishes.

Radish 1. Watercolor on Paper.

Wendy’s radishes — again, quite a difference:

Radishes, 2001, watercolor on cotton Khadi paper, 11″ x 12″

New iPad Images: Buzz Lightyear and Friend

I haven’t done much iPad painting over the last year (carpal tunnel issues), but every now and then I see a subject that’s compelling enough so I can’t resist.  These two pieces were inspired by grandson Max’s toys:  Buzz Lightyear (perched on Max’s dresser) and a red robot whose name I never got.  Do you know who he is??

As with all of my iPad art, fine quality prints are available at reasonable prices.

Buzz Lightyear

Buzz Lightyear. iPad.

Red Robot

Red Robot. iPad.

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A Year-long Painting Project is Completed!

After struggling (really, procrastinating) for over one year, I have finally finished a large oil painting, Mary’s Orchids. 

painting of orchid and pots

Mary’s Orchids.  Oil on linen, 2′ x 3′.

My sister Mary asked me to paint this work, requesting orchids, cherries, and a piece of pottery by Walter Anderson, the wonderful artist who lived on the Mississippi Gulf Coast near our home.  She also asked for it to be sized at two feet by three feet.  Gulp.

I bought the canvas panel, arranged the elements in dozens of compositions before settling on this one, roughed out a drawing on the plastic wrapper of the panel, and then STOPPED.  I was intimidated by the difficulty of the composition and its sheer SIZE.  I hadn’t attempted anything that large since the portrait I did of our dad for his 90th birthday three years ago.

I have at least four pots of yellow orchids hanging around the house.  As each orchid lost its flowers, I’d buy another pot in the expectation that I’d be starting ‘soon’.  This went on for so long, the original orchid re-bloomed!  So I decided I better get cracking, especially after passing the one year mark.

Finally it is done, about to be varnished and shipped down to Mary in Houston, TX.  Whew.

If you’ve got an extra minute to spend, check out the site of the Walter Anderson Museum of Art in Ocean Springs, MS.  It’s a fabulous museum, built with my dad’s help, honoring a fabulous artist.

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Blessings for Christmas and All Other Winter Holidays — and Happy New Year!

My husband and I are just back from a lovely Christmas in California. We visited with family in Oakland, Lincoln and Healdsburg before returning to Oakland for a final visit with grandboy Max and his parents.

Here are the two iPad images I made to use as Christmas cards, followed by another image for those of a different religious tradition or for use as New Year card.

The Baby

The Baby

I have to give ‘The Baby’ top billing — though I was inspired to paint this rendition of a statue after painting the two statues below. (I fondly think of this vignette, based on an antique shop window I saw in New York, as ‘Two Marys and the Baby’.)

Two Marys and the Baby

Two Marys and the Baby

And this cheerful sunflower may be just what we need to banish all wintry gloom and guide us into thoughts of the New Year and new Spring coming around the bend. I hope each of you is enjoying this special time of year. All my best!

Sunflower

Sunflower