Saturday, November 19, 2011
Autumn on the Moors
This was the painting I was working on yesterday when I decided to be come an abstract floral artist. Tackled it again this morning, and this will have to do. I still think I need a change: tired of painting variations of things I've already painted. We'll see what I decide to paint next.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Friday, November 18, 2011
Impressions in the Mist
I really wanted to paint an abstract floral because I've rather run out of ideas for landscapes, but I guess I ended up with an old familiar scene once again. Oh well, maybe next time.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Cherryblossom Vines and Feather Lizards
Another addition to my Archipelago of the Three Lovers series. (These 12x24" pieces have been piling up...) Besides I needed some color to balance the karma of yesterday's greys.
It's a science fiction series of paintings and/or abstract paintings with a slight nod to being something, your choice.
Anyways, imagine three planets (the three lovers) in close orbit around a point in space. They're close enough together to share an atmosphere and occasionally scrap by each other knocking bits and pieces, plants, animals and people off into this shared atmosphere and these rocks then hang suspended like motes of dust within the shifting gravitational pull of the three planets. This is the archipelago, drifting 'islands' in free fall in the space between the worlds. I seem to remember an Edger Rice Burroughs book with twin worlds and a shared atmosphere, but I think three worlds would work better. I usually some sort of winged boat in, but decided the Feather Lizards would have to do.
12x24" 30x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Fall Colors in Lansworth
Well the weather has finally turned to good painting weather: rainy, windy, snowy, so I'm painting. I've got some ground to make up since I've been rather neglecting my work lately to ride my bike in November.
Little new here: just using a lot of extra acrylic medium to get a little richer texture otherwise it's a familiar Lansworth street scene.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Rowboats in the Park Yet Again
Can't seem to leave this idea alone. I'm using a cropped version of an earlier piece on this theme for my ipad wallpaper and I wanted to try and make a similar one that needn't be cropped. This is close, but not quite.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Moon Over the Downs
The original idea was to use an almost featureless grey sky with a moon in it: something I'd seen on a recent bike ride at twilight, and use it in a scene similar to the last several. The actual scene had a line of trees on the horizon and a marsh in the foreground, and I was looking to do something like that. But the trees seemed too familiar, and I liked the idea of a featureless horizon, and the glint of the moon on water, so this is what I ended up with. I'm not into painting pretty pictures these days. I'm into seeing just how much I can push minimalism without sacrificing mood.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Sunset Along the Bike Trail
I painted this piece today to mark reaching the 4,000 mile mark (6,400km) riding my bikes this year, mostly along the abandoned railroad converted to a bike trail. Ten miles in the morning, and again in the evening, and if I'm bored, another 10 -14 mile ride mid-day. It adds up.
I actually used a photo I took (below) as reference for this piece. Not my usual practice, and as you can see, I took my liberties. For one thing, I could not find that orange, so I toned everything down. And as you can see, this is very much a sketch. I feel that if you're going to paint realistically, you've got to be really good. I'm not that good or that patient, so I have to make sure people realize I'm not really trying to paint realistically by being very unrealistic. Of course, most people don't like that, but oh, well.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Well the differences in color sort of bugged me, after I posted the painting, that I decided to see if I could fix it . What a disaster. I've had to redo the whole painting several times just to get the painting below. This is why I hate to do commissioned pieces - and won't anymore. Meeting a specific target, in this case my own, and making it good enough for me, the customer, and the price is just too stressful. I'm not going to do this again. I'm just going to make things up...
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Autumn in the Tall Grass (revised)
Yes, it's revision time again. The only thing done is change the foreground, any other changes in tone are just the difference between two photos and how they get processed. I think the foreground is now more in sync with the sweeping nature of the composition.
Saturday, October 29, 2011
Autumn in the Tall Grass
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Autumn in the Heather
Yesterday's work, with a little high lighting today. I'm coming around to believing that I should always go back the next day after the paint has dried and add more highlights to an acrylic paintings. Acrylics dry darker than they appear when you first paint them, and it is especially annoying when the brighter spots are not brighter the next day. In any event, this was meant to be a rather overcast day, so it is not too much darker than I had intended.
The nice thing about not turning painting into a business is that I can paint a picture like this that has zero market appeal, and not worry about it at all. If I like it, it's just fine. That makes painting so much more pleasant.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Autumn on the Heath (Rev.)
This revising thing is getting to be a habit, one I don't like. But I guess it's necessary. Anyways, I decided that the foreground had too much of the night scene still in it, and well, the color shift of the acrylic paint didn't do it any good either, so I've gone back and repainted it today, a little more heatherly this time around.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Autumn on the Heath
My intent was to paint a night scene, creating the sky by using a series of washes and layers using extra acrylic medium to see if I could create a sense of depth and richness in the sky. Big problem. Well, two big problems. First, I didn't know what I was doing so I tried this and than and this and that didn't work. And secondly, I was forcefully reminded that I hate to paint that way. I don't like doing art projects. I like to paint, as in painting a study or a sketch. That's how my talent works. I never use a study as a basis for a 'studio' or finished piece. The study or sketch is it.
Anyways, I painted a more conventional night sky last night and started doing the foreground when I realized that wasn't going to work either, so I changed the course of the painting to a day scene by more or less painting over the night sky and here's were we ended up. A bit gloomy, but I don't paint all that many gloomy paintings, so what the heck.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Monday, October 17, 2011
A Lane in Lilyfield
Just something I wanted to paint. Probably need to be a bit more daring here. Oh, well: good enough. (Which is not really a good enough attitude, but it is good enough for today.)
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Saturday, October 15, 2011
The Farm at Lilyfield
Another rather unproductive week painting. Indian summer left us midweek, and I've spent the last couple of days working on this piece. Way to long, since it's nothing to write home about. I would have given up on the scene except that I hadn't the faintest idea of what else to paint... Good painting weather is here, so hopefully I figure out something to paint.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Monday, October 10, 2011
Green Banner Boat
The latest addition to my Archipelago of the Three Lovers series. It's a science fiction series of paintings and/or abstract paintings with a slight nod to being something.
Imagine three planets (the three lovers) in close orbit around a point in space. They're close enough together to share an atmosphere and occasionally scrap by each other knocking bits and pieces, plants, animals and people off into this shared atmosphere and these rocks then hang suspended like motes of dust within the shifting gravitational pull of the three planets. This is the archipelago, drifting 'islands' in free fall in the space between the worlds. I seem to remember an Edger Rice Burroughs book with twin worlds and a shared atmosphere, but I think three worlds would work better. Since it's actually weightless in the archipelago, the 'wings' of the various crafts are moved like oars to move the boats amongst the floating islands.
I tried using additional acrylic medium with a little paint to try to get more depths into the painting, with a little success. Maybe.
12x24" 30x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Indian Summer in Pangone 2
Well, I made my week's quota. Nothing to write home about, but what the heck: it's an hour or two on a Friday night. (Truth is that this is always the way I do things.) They say there's another three or four days to go for this spell of 70's weather, so I expect I'll be painting at night for a while yet.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Friday, October 7, 2011
Indian Summer in Pangone
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Saturday, October 1, 2011
Friday, September 30, 2011
Sheds at Lilyfield
This is today's version of yesterday's The Barn at Lilyfield. There are three types of paintings, ones that are 'it', ones that aren't 'it' (but might be, if things work out) and ones that are never going to be 'it'; which most paintings fall into. It is this last category that makes being a painter so damn hard since you have to decide if they're good enough or not. Yesterday's version was not good enough, today's... we'll see how it strikes me tomorrow. The one thing it has going for it is that it has so much paint on it that I'd not like to paint over it again... The thing is that this would have been a very nice 12x16" piece. It might be just too big.
18x24" 45c60cm acrylic on hardboard.
Thursday, September 29, 2011
The Barn at Lilyfield
Well here's today 's painting as it looks today. Never sure these days how done I am. I had an image of a high horizon painting going into this, but only this, the afternoon version actually went in that direction, mostly because I could not get any buildings to look anything but clunky so I wanted to crowd them out. I petty much just roughed this barn in and left it as it. Buildings are not my thing.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Lilyfield Meadow (revised versions)
Above is the final (ha!) version of this painting. I've cut back the trees on the left: opening up the painting and making it less unbalanced. In addition I added a bit of highlight to the wall and a bit more detail to the house.
Below is this morning's first revision. I had decided to take the trees up to the top of the painting and lighten up the sky to get more of a milky light look rather than overcast. The fact that I have this photo says that I was ready to go with this version, but it never quite felt right. It was just too unbalanced. This is pretty much how I paint: if it looks good, it is good, but I have to get there by looking at it and changing it until it looks good. I don't have a picture in my mind to paint to or a plan except to start painting in the upper left hand corner...
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Lilyfield Meadows
I just wanted an extravagant painting today. I scooped out extra acrylic medium to get a lusher brush stroke, grabbed a big brush to make sure I didn't get fussy and went at it.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Friday, September 23, 2011
Autumn Arrives in Lansworth
Not the most productive of weeks, but I did get my budgeted two paintings out. So what the heck.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Rain in Kimla Gardens
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Grimshaw Road (revised)
Lordy, I'm getting fussy in my old age. I decided that the original version had a too closed in feeling and that the walls took up too much space. I've tried to correct those errors with this morning's revision.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Saturday, September 17, 2011
Grimshaw Road
Poor Rowboats in the Park, always fated, it seems, to be painted over. This is what I painted over the most recent of rowboat paintings. I spent all day getting nowhere, and then last night, I just painted this before going to bed. In part it's inspired by what was left on the board of all the scenes I tried before and scraped off. The name of the road hints at the painter who's work, I was thinking about: John Atkinson Grimshaw, recently (mid-Sept. '11) in a Telegraph.co.uk picture feature of a collection of Grimshaw's paintings:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturepicturegalleries/8762559/Atkinson-Grimshaw-Painter-of-Moonlight-at-the-Guildhall-Art-Gallery-in-London.html?image=5
I really like the November Morning 1883 piece. I'm going to have to explore those colors more.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
In the Wilderness of Dunes
Today it's another light and space...and umbrella painting. Don't ask me. I'm an intuitive painter and when my intuitive says 'now paint a lady with an umbrella' I go: 'Huh?' and paint a lady with an umbrella. Must be channeling Jack Vettriano today. Still, it works for me.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Rowboats in the Park (again)
Wanted to give the idea one more try today. I thought painting it on a smaller scale might work better, but it didn't, so I turned the board upside down making the sky water instead: channeling a bit of Whistler. On a smaller 12x16" board, it is easier to let something iffy like this slide than on an 18x24" board so I'll likely keep it.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Edge of a World, Edge of a Day (Revised)
Fussing with this painting last night: the lady took off her jacket so that she would be more readily visible in the painting, put more highlights in the foreground grasses, messed around with the sky and cloud, and processed the resulting photo a bit better so that the yellow in the sky does not quite glow as much as in the first one.
This painting is a bit more literal, that is to say more realistic, than I care to paint as a rule. Just sort of happened that way, though when I start using several smaller brushes to get details, I should know I'm in trouble. Still, it pretty much expresses the feeling I was looking for, so I guess I'll not complain too much.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
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