Thursday, January 2, 2014

Winter in Lacy Park

Winter in Lacy Park
Hello everyone. Happy New Year!

I had a wonderful holiday season, with lots of celebrations visiting with family and friends. Thanks to all of you who were at my house and gave positive feedback on the work that I have up. It's exciting to have them on display!

Now I am glad to get back to a routine schedule. I have decided on a pretty rigorous schedule of painting.This 9x12 panel is the result of my first outing with the "Thursdays en Plein Air" group. It was a gorgeous day in the park, with warm sun and hardly any breeze. The trees are almost bare for the winter. I am happy that I was able to decide on a scene and more or less complete it in the two hours we painted. I'm not sure I'll keep this one, though. There is something about it that isn't right. I'm still not sure exactly what! Regardless, I am looking forward to painting with this group each week.

I also plan to attend Margot's workshop as I have been doing. And I will go to Sunny's weekend workshop when it starts up again in a few weeks. Sunny does more with still life and live models, which is what I need to study. My goal for this year is to put together a sizable body of completed works that I can present and sell. Between all of these opportunities, I should be able to do that.

Thanks for visiting this blog! I hope to post more frequently now (and to exercise more and lose weight and remember everyone's birthdays and ...).

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Signed, Framed, and Hung!

I have not been painting as much as I would like to, with holiday events taking up a lot of my time. However I am very excited to have framed and hung a small collection of my paintings. Each step was a choice I had to think through carefully, starting with choosing a signature. I am fortunate that Margot has Harry come by her house fairly often with a van filled with frames. I chose four 12x16's and two 9x12's. I learned how to use the drill to attach the clips, and to set the hooks for the wire.

It was very rewarding to get positive feedback from our Holiday party guests. But I will admit that I think a couple of the black frames look too severe on our walls, even though they set off the paintings nicely. This gold frame looks great against the oak paneled wall.

Even when I can't actually paint, I try to move forward in some way to improve my art.

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Early Morning Walk

Early Morning Walk

This painting was really fun to do. The backlighting was so soft and lovely in the early morning. I wanted to try to keep it to just two values, like day and night. I know that's probably breaking some rules somewhere. I might do it again, and bring out more of the subtleties in the shadows. I hope you can see it from this photo.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Ancient Gorilla

I visited my husband's office and saw this watercolor that I did many years ago. Still fun and playful. When people see my name, they ask my husband if this is a family member. They are referring to the signature, but he likes to think it refers to his family tree.

Moving Forward

I haven't posted for awhile, but that doesn't mean I haven't been busy!

I am studying with Margot Lennartz, attending a weekly workshop. Margot loves landscapes, particularly California scenes. Her career spans decades of successful painting. Her home is filled with her work, and she still enters and wins juried shows on a regular basis. She has an amazing ability to help each of her students regardless of the many different styles. It's a fun and supportive environment. I am loving it!

I also feel that I have "arrived" and can now do my own art the way I want. I thought this painting of a ranch near Cayucos was done. Now that I look again, I see several small things I still need to do. I love the overall feel of it, though.

Okay, so you want to know what I'm going to change...
It needs a small indication of a shadow to the left of the red trough in the foreground. The two trees on the left need better highlights and shadows in the branches. And I have to do something with the yellow patch in the center above the purple trough. That brushstroke has bothered me since the minute I put it on! I think the yellow color is too bright for that place in the picture, or maybe it's the contrast with the purple is too strong. I also have too much blue showing through from the underpainting - easy to fix.

I love the sky. Margot encouraged me to paint the sky yellow,  rather than the even, mid-tone blue of my source photos. (This photo of the painting makes the purple on the left stand out more than it actually does in the painting.) The yellow sky softens and unifies the entire atmosphere of the scene. Now that I have done it, I understand it. The sky area is so narrow that there isn't space to develop into the deep blue of the overhead sky. All that shows is the pale light near the horizon.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Sunny at 3Kicks Art Studio


Our term has ended at 3Kicks Studio. I wanted to sign up for the next term, but I would miss too many classes to make it worth it. Sunny has  helped me a lot. I felt so awkward and unsure of myself at the first class. I didn't know how to lay out my palette or to begin to design my painting. In the ten weeks of the class, I have definitely gained confidence as well as skill. 

I painted these flowers on the last day, getting the painting this far in one session. Actually, the vase had a pretty lopsided arrangement in it, with the flowers in a circle poking toward the outside. I added the large flower in the middle when I got home. It was just greenery and stems in life. This is a 9x12 canvas. I think the apple is the star of the show. Like many students,  I have probably painted more apples than any other subject! Doing this still life made me realize I need to paint more flowers, and fabric folds too!

Sunny helped us by commenting as we worked. He also would show students techniques by painting on their canvas, with permission of course. It really helped to see exactly how to do something. I look forward to signing up with him again in January. I love it that we can do both still life and portraits in his class.

 Sunny can make sense of anyone's painting! He goes from one canvas to the next, looking, evaluating, and moving the piece forward somehow.



Monday, September 2, 2013

Portrait of a Pensive Girl

I am really enjoying my Sunday morning classes with Sonny Apinchapong. I can tell that I am growing and learning. He believes that still life studies are the key to good portraits and landscapes. I love being able to go straight to the portrait with a live model. I learned a lot from doing this portrait. It looks a bit boring as a piece of art, but I have to recognize that this is my time to learn, not constantly evaluate. Despite its flaws, Sonny pronounced it "a good likeness".