Friday, December 21, 2012

Oak Hollow Farm



















This painting is a nice fantasy. I painted it in the middle of a 30 hour snow storm that dumped 20 inches of snow on us. The reality is not fun at all, at least when you get old and have a long driveway to shovel by hand. Winter sucks.

18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on watercolor paper

Of course, after the wind stops howling and the snow blowing and four hours of back breaking work clearing a path to the street and the sun comes out, things look a little prettier.



















The end of the shortest day of the year, after a storm.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

The Farm Buildings at Haltin Lea



















Not a whole lot of sugar coating on this winter painting. I put some warmth in the coloring of the sky, but otherwise, a dull, monotone winter's day with maybe just a hint of the low lying sun breaking through. This is a large painting (for me) and it actually works well because you can't do everything at once with these paintings, so that I can work off and on - 15 minutes, half an hour here and there - over a couple of days, unlike with my more impressionist pieces that are the work of one sitting - if they work at all.

18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on watercolor canvas

Monday, December 17, 2012

The Stone Barn
















I had my act together this time, technique wise, so this one is a little more polished than my first effort. I'm not sold on the composition, but it is different from my usual. These are sheets of canvas and because they are fabric,  it will tend to shrink a bit because of the water used in the painting of it. Taping it down with masking tape was always hit and miss. This time I tried glueing the edges down to my formica drawing board using acrylic medium and that worked great. I was able to peel it off without a great deal of trouble, though I'l have to experiment on just how little acrylic I'll need to keep it down.

12x18" 30x45cm acrylic on watercolor canvas

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Winter at Crofton Grange

















A bit out of practice painting in my old watercolor style. One of my headaches in painting in my somewhat unconventional watercolor style was keeping colors from bleeding into each other and creating a muddy, ill defined painting. Winter scenes solve a lot of those problems with the snow keeping objects isolated. For example, the rocks on the right are crisp and distinct. But if this was any other season, I would have to put some sort of colors between then which could (and did, often) make things blurry and muddy. This, by the way, is painted with acrylics on the special watercolor canvas that came out a decade ago. It has its pluses and minuses but on the whole, I like it with acrylics. Watercolors, not so much. The great thing is that you can put repeated washes over the acrylic image without much worry about lifting the old levels, so that you can build up an painting's tone step by step. And you can fix mistakes by scrapping and/or painting over... because acrylic whites will actually cover things, unlike watercolor whites... This is half a 18x24" sheet, so that it could be cropped 2" on the ends to make a more agreeable shape.

12x18" 30x45cm acrylic on watercolor canvas

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Pines and Snow Study

























Just pushing paint around here, folks.

8x6" 20x15cm acrylic on hardboard

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Way of the Grey Crane in Snow



















Wouldn't you know, as soon as I start painting snow scenes, it snows. I knew I shouldn't be tempting fate. I had the earlier Way of the Grey Crane painting in mind, but not in front of me when I painted this. This has a little more of the pine tree look that I wanted the first time around but didn't get. This ain't much, but I'm settling for it anyways.

12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard

Friday, December 7, 2012

The Moorland Gate and Moonlight



















After doing a few little pieces that tried to look big, what we have here is an 18x24" piece that looks small. After my first snow study piece I decided to mash up the moonlight paintings with snow and ended up including my coastline study pieces as well in the mix.  I'd actually started out painting an alley scene, but that seemed neither very original nor very interesting and too big (or rather the idea was too small for the size of the board), so after that it was a matter of improvising. I ended up going with simplicity and mood.

18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard

Thursday, December 6, 2012

First Snow Study



















This is both my first snow painting of the season and is meant to be a painting of the first snow of the season as well. We've had nothing more than a few flakes blowing in the wind around here, which is great, I feel that I've hand my lifetime supply of snow already, but I thought I'd risk tempting fate and paint a snow painting because I didn't know what else to paint. I considered making a large painting of a scene like this, but opted for this little study last night instead, just to see. That's what studies are really for... and as far as I can see, I dodged a bullet in not trying a big one. Still, the painting over the fireplace is getting old and out of season, so I'll have to think of another winter scene to paint...

6x8" 15x20cm acrylic on hardboard

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Coastline Study 9



















Still on the moon light theme. I have used shades of green for night skies in the past, and while not realistic, they seem to work pretty well. As I have mentioned in the past, I consider myself a mere student of painting, and what I am doing is exploring how to paint. I think you have to put in several decades of doing this before you can really master it, and seeing that I'm not even halfway there - with painting in thick paints like oils and acrylic, at any rate -  I'm not yet concerned about where I'm at in the process today, or how each painting turns out (as long as it meets certain vague personal standards). I bring this up only because I realize I've painted variations of this scene, a dozen times: justifiable only because, you see, I'm just practicing...

6x8" 15x20cm acrylic on hardboard

Alley in Moonlight

























I painted a number of different scenes on this board yesterday and none of them worked. Last night before going to bed I did this, just to play around with the colors. The fact that this is another small piece means that I can just say, 'oh well' and not worry about how unoriginal it all is. Which is nice since it is all I could come up with yesterday...

6x8" 15x20cm acrylic on hardboard

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Coastline Study 8



















Oh, where to put this little piece? I added just a glimmer of water so that it can fit into the Coastline series.

6x8"15x20cm acrylic on hardboard