Thursday, October 3, 2024

Carousel Horse - Done At Last!

 24"x36" oils

This has been a long time coming. Back in June of 2021 I posted about this carousel horse. This is the large version that has been on my easel since August of 2020. I have dabbled with it on and off for over 4 years! So much experimenting! So many different color combinations! If you have clicked on the June of 2021 link you know that the original photo was black and white so the sky was the limit for me. My imagination could take over and do what it wanted. Well, I'm not great at skies being limits. I need boundaries. Haha! That is why it has taken me so long to just get it done.

Here are some of the directions I went in. Mind you, these are all the same canvas. I just kept changing my mind. It would sit for about a year and then I would paint over the top.

August 2020


June 2022


Also June 2022


April 2023


June 2024
Here I took an old toothbrush, loaded it with a light, creamy color paint, and flicked it all over the canvas.


Still June 2024
This is where I got excited about it. I really liked this. But, I kept changing things because this piece had become one huge experiment.


July


August

Okay, so now I'm second guessing myself. Did I go too far? Looking at these, I wish I could go back to August. Oh well. Still, a painting I'm happy with. It's for sale for a million dollars.

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Sunday, August 18, 2024

Anniversary #34

5"x7" oils

This is a small painting I did to commemorate my 34th wedding anniversary. My husband and I went to Glen Miller Park in Richmond, Indiana. This is from a photo he took of me. We had a nice picnic spread that attracted a few too many squirrels, and took a walk through a beautiful rose garden. A lovely day! 

 Here are a few of the steps:

The idea sketched out in acrylics in a repurposed book.


Step one on the canvas -laying it out.
This was a wrap around canvas, by the way. So, I had to paint the sides as well.

Step two

Step 3 The fun step.
Adding the flowers and making things sparkle.

Then step 4 at the top. Simply more details.

Here's a photo to show part of the wrap-around.


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Monday, August 12, 2024

Water Park



 "Water Park" 8 1/2 x 11" graphite and bleach (with a little bit of colored pencil) on gray paper, 
with a black and white filter.



Below is the original. The bleach turned the gray paper yellow. I just went with it. What do you do?
I knew I could just pull up a black and white version. But, how cool is bleach?! I dipped a small paint brush in bleach and ran it down a ruler for the streams of water, then grabbed an old toothbrush, took the drawing to the bathtub, and started flicking bleach all over it. After it dried I added some more graphite and a bit of colored pencil. 




Before the bleach:

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Friday, July 19, 2024

Negroni


 Negroni - 12"x12" oil on canvas

This one has been hanging around my studio since I started it last September. I was doing a nice amount of painting last year and then life got a bit wonky. Good wonky, but I got distracted, busy, and stopped spending time there for a while.

Here's the first couple of steps from '23:



Both of these steps are in acrylics, just to lay out the composition. I didn't take it much further than this before I lost interest in it. I'm glad, though, that I didn't completely give up on it.

Starting back with the oil paints in June:


Once I added the Florence Duomo in the background, I got more excited about it. (The Negroni is said to have originated in Florence). The detail on the bottles was a challenge. You just have to have patience to copy labels like that. I also elongated the rocks glass in the foreground. 

Shout out to my son, Dylan, the bartender. He introduced me to the Negroni and it's one of my favorite cocktails!

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Monday, July 1, 2024

Wineglass Study

         


8" x 10" study in oils

Hi! I shared the photo for this in my last post. As I was painting this small piece, I was thinking about how to do it bigger and better. I like the simplicity of the color palette but next time I'm going to add a small hors d'oeuvre plate, or grapes? I'll experiment more with the compostition.

Here was the first step in the process of this 8x10. This is in acrylic. I like to get the composition down in one day if I can. 

This next one is after working over the acrylics in oils for a couple sessions.



I'm happy to be painting again! Gotta keep my creative muscles strong!

"Don't wait for inspiration. It comes while working." - Henri Matisse


Thanks so much for stopping by! Cheers!






Sunday, June 9, 2024

Time is an issue - or is it me?


This is an approximately 4.5" x 6.5" oil painting on canvas paper. I did it because I had to paint something! Time gets away from you. It flies, it passes, it marches on, etc. It's always moving and I'm trying to get with the sands. (Of time - wink wink).

I would say I'm trying to get back to a younger version of myself, the one who was hanging paintings in exhibits and local art shows. But that's not really true. Time has passed and I'm different. Although I haven't stopped painting entirely, I did an over-ten-year-long zig-zag of learning more about being an illustrator. So, that's what I did. I didn't become an illustrator, I learned. A LOT. Possibly more than I would have if I had simply kept painting. Maybe I'll go back to exhibiting, but my work will be different. Hopefully, better. 

Time (life) takes you down so many paths, it's inconceivable. Some of them you choose, some are chosen for you. But if there's something you love - something you just have to do to stay alive - you have to make the time for it. It's all about time management. Figuring out how to put yourself first. I have a habit of putting my art on my daily to-do list and then saving it for last. That hasn't been working out for me.

I haven't even been thinking like an artist for a long while. Shame on me. When I say thinking like an artist, I mean noticing a beautiful object, or the way the light plays on something, and saying to yourself, "that would make a cool painting." I had stopped doing that! But . . . look what I noticed a couple of days ago:



Look how pretty the reflections! - all the stripes from the blinds and in the glass! I've already started a small painting of it - a study to maybe turn into a larger version. Yahoo!

Here's a couple steps along the way to the hourglass piece. Notice how the bottom right of the hourglass in the bottom image looks like it is lower than the left side. Turning the piece upside down when you're working on it, can help you see and fix mistakes like that more easily.




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