Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Painting a day so far
All 6x8" 15x20 cm acrylic on hardboard
Just doing one small painting a day to try to get back in the swing of things. The last two are more or less the same scene, just using different sized brushes.
Saturday, November 15, 2014
New Work
Paddock with Sheep 18x24" 45x60cm
Autumn Idea 12x16" 30x40cm
Untitled 6x8" 15x20cm
Untitled 6x8" 15x20cm
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
The End
And so it ends in static. I've found it increasingly hard to paint -- and to paint something I haven't painted before -- over the last year or two and I must admit that the pool of inspiration I was drawing on seems to have run dry. Whether or not it's spring fed and will fill again remains to be seen, but for now I think it's time to give painting a rest. Maybe I'll try some other type of art. At the moment though, writing is what I'm enjoying doing. Painting with words. I'm posting the first five parts of my open ended science fiction story, Captain of the Lost Star on my deviantART site (link on the right) and will post some other stories as well. I'm finishing up the second draft of part six, and will be starting part 7 shortly. I might try my hand at illustrating them, but we'll see. In short, still feeling creative, but not in a painting way.
Thanks for looking in over the years. You can keep tabs on what I'm up to on my DeviantART site.
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Early Morning in Winter, Bayport Road
Besides trying to get away with the least possible work or thinking, the main purpose of this piece was to explore the differences in colors between the sky and the shadows on the snow. I was up when the sun was just coming up the other day and noted (again) how the lightest of blue-green skies contrast with the dull blue grey of the snow in the shadows. This piece is an attempt to capture that effect. I was using a small brush to make the sky less boring, but that didn't work as well as I wanted. And well, this is one of those paintings that doesn't photograph well either, so this photo result is less than accurate. I had to go out into the snow to take the picture and it was snowing, so I didn't feel like trying it again. That's my story anyways. But you get the idea.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Saturday, January 11, 2014
The Old Woman and Her Dog
Oh, why not? Hardboard and acrylic paint are cheap enough. Really this is more iffy than the last post, but it does have a nice simplicity about it.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard.
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Moonlight and the River at Wovenlay Park
This is a somewhat more tamed version of last night's painting. It's a little more literal interpertaion of what the title describes than the original version. The place comes from a previous picture somewhere in this blog, and was more or less what I was aiming to paint at some point in this painting, though far from what I started out to paint.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Winter in the Lane
Same old same old, but I still had a fall painting on the wall in this size so I had to do a winter one quick. This is it. It was quick.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
The Factor's House
Last night I painted a much more, well, not realistic, but more crafted version of this scene. It didn't seem to work when I looked at it this morning; too stiff and to easily mistaken for a painting that someone was try to paint realistically and failing.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Friday, December 13, 2013
The Farm of Covervale Lea
Started out with the idea of doing something like "Farmyard in Early Winter" but that wasn't working so well, so I decided to change the coloring to something more like "Frosty Morning in Sparrows Sq." and this is what I ended up with.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Frosty Morning in Sparrows Square
Old theme, old treatment. Different shape. I've now used up my backlog of 12x24" pieces, which are left over from cutting two 18x24" boards out of a standard 2x4' hardboard sheet.
12x24" 30x60cm acrylic on hardboard.
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
Farm Yard in Early Winter
Open spaces, now closed spaces. The challenge was to make the buildings as casual as the trees.
12x24" 30x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Field of Snow
I like my don't care attitude about this painting. It's simple, stark, creates a mood, and I like it.
12x24" 30x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Monday, December 2, 2013
Brook in Early Winter
It's that time of year again. And it sucks. Might as well paint it.
12x24" 30x60cm acrylic on hardboard.
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Quad Blade Boats
A little return to steamimpressionism. Mostly an excuse to paint clouds and sky. Also wanted to find some better sort of air-boat. I don't really want to paint blimps, and I can't really get very detailed either. A problem.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Last Light on the Heather
This piece is all about sky. I spent several days working on the sky and in the end, scraped it down to assorted past layers, touched it up and called it a day. I then had to decide if it was morning or evening. It was morning right up to the end, but when I was finished I decided it looked more eveningish. And it follows my policy of almost always looking north to paint; morning sunlight from the right, evening sunlight from the left. (For no reason except that's what feels right and you never have to paint the sun into the painting.)
18x24"45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Afternoon Along a Forest Road
The interesting thing about this piece is that I used the same pallet of six colors & white that I used on the previous two paintings. I pretty much can get by with these six colors; Ultramarine blue, burnt umber, cadmuim yellow light (hue), burnt sienna, alizarine crimson, and Atelier's red gold (PY74 PR175. I like manganese blue for skies and shadows, plus I use beige and pastel yellow as well as white. Every other color I own I could get by without, and don't use much at all. Most were just picked up on a whim.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard.
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
Golden Afternoon
Another small brush painting, and probably the last. I find that it doesn't make much difference, I still paint the same way with a small brush as with a larger one, the painting just looks a little grainer. I had to try very hard not to make this look too Kinkadeish, with only limited success.
12x16" 30x40 cm acrylic on hardboard
Monday, November 4, 2013
The Arbor Gate
Another painting using a small brush. Actually I don't really paint any differently with a small brush; same strokes only smaller. It does make everything look more fine grained, however.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Friday, November 1, 2013
Dawn on the Thames
Another painting using only a small brush. Still, don't expect any details as I never learned how to paint with thick paint. When I switched from watercolors to oils, I never really had the training or patience to learn how to manage the thicker, stickier oil paints. Luckily I like impressionist paintings, so I never had to force myself to learn.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard.
Thursday, October 24, 2013
A Day on the Downs
This piece's sole claim to fame is that I used a small brush -- which I rarely do -- to suggest that this piece is larger than it really is. The image I'm seeing on my screen is very blotchy, so the sky may be more subtle than what it appears on screen. Anyways, this was mostly about making a sky, the land is just there because I needed it.
12x24" 30x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Cloudy Day Studies 1 & 2
Our almost summer like weather has gone and I can no longer stay outside, so I've no excuse for not painting. I am, however, in painting these little pieces, avoiding working on a larger piece that I don't quite know what to make of. Hopefully it will show up on this blog sooner rather than later.
8x6" 20x15cm acrylic on hardboard
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Rainy Day Studies 1 & 2
Rainy day studies as in it's raining outside and I found some little boards I had around that matched my ambitions, so I improvised these moody little pieces with a four colors and white.
8x6" 20x15cm acrylic on hardboard
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Alley Abstract
One of the benefits of painting on hardboard is it's affordability. I paid less than $4 for a 2x4 foot sheet of hardboard the last time I bought some, and since I can get six boards this size out of it, I have less than $1 invested in this piece of artwork, paint included, which I will gladly sell to you for $100K; a nice Apple-like margin. The real value, however, is that I can paint a piece like this; basically just playing around with paint without worrying about wasting a much more expensive canvas on it. I suppose it could be argued that without having to think about the cost of materials I'm given license to put out slapdash rather than thoughtful paintings, but then slapdash is my style.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Saturday, September 21, 2013
Shaded Alley
This time around I'm giving shade pride of place. At least in the title. I can't paint light without shade nor shade without light. But I think shade is where it's at in this piece.
12x16" 30x40cm acrylic on hardboard
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Misty Morning in the Lane
A rather simple painting, but I decided I'd just keep it that way. What the heck.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Thursday, September 12, 2013
Monday, September 9, 2013
Glow of the Day
An old familiar scene painted with a slightly different technique.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Late Summer Along the Bayport Road
A little cooler pallet this time: more greens less yellows. I've also raised the horizon line, closer to the classical 1/3 line than I usually do. Like the previous painting, I've done most of the work with a larger bush using a small one for the house and distant details.
18x24" 45x60cm acrylic on hardboard
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Mars in the Abstract
I worked off and on all summer on this piece, spending more time on it than any 20 other paintings. And it doesn't show, of course. Hell, I might not even be done yet. But now that I took the photo I'll put a few coats of varnish on it and see what I think. My 5 year old granddaughter spent several weeks visiting and we worked on this together; she giving me her opinion and I teaching her the concept of "it", as in all those other previous versions were certainly not "it" even if she liked them. I'm far from certain this is "it" yet, but I've about given up hoping to finding "it" in this piece, if I haven't already.
24x36" 60x90cm acrylic on hardboard
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