Sunday, February 23, 2014

Small pieces of time

I had eye surgery to remove a cataract from my left eye....as they say, very easy, very fast! As luck has it, I didn't lose much time from my easel either....perhaps 2 days at the most. So with all that's going on I'm left with little bits of time.

Getting bored silly I picked up from my last painting with the idea of doing another version of the sun....again on a 20x20 because of time. At the last minute, I decided to use a few wild ponies in my foggy dawn pasture setting.

891 The Sentries 20x20 oil on linen (2-21-14)

After adding the ponies, the concept and arrangement worked for me, but from 30 feet my central horse shape feels off.....I spent an a inordinate  amount of time working on it before throwing in the towel as a lost cause.

The following day with a fresh eye, I could see the error of my ways - no point not fixing it so out with my scraper and red marker!


I have (2) issues circled in red; my far horse head is too small and my central horse hind section needs to be made lager and extended. His hoofs need to line up better (perspective is off).

BEFORE
AFTER

Much improved darkened distant pony added some needed contrast - extending and bulking up my central pony was on target....especially when viewed in full context below.

FINAL VERSION

Note: All the above images were taken indoors - the final image below was outdoors in morning filtered sun light and accurate to the original. Like my images above sometimes I can't sort it out with Photoshop.

891 Sentries 20x20 oil on linen (2-22-14)

I'm thinking it rates a move up in size...perhaps a few more ponies. This is like an extension of Dawn Passage completed in 2012......neat painting! Dawn Passage was not a small painting either, at 48x56 it ended up over a mantle. It was a really good size, enough elbow room to get in and work it!!

742 Dawn Passage 48x56 oil on linen (10-19-12)


The floater frame used worked well........anything much larger could work against the space and painting. A vertical format would have worked well here too.....perhaps my 1st choice. Once a hanger is installed it will be off the mantle and make more sense....it needs a little air at the bottom to break the horizontal molding line on either side of the mantle wall.

Later.....

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

LOL.....You gotta love failure to excel in this game!

It causes you to become more determined to raise the bar and makes success even more appreciated!

My 1st attempt at Venice commission was remarkably OFF! Clinking back and forth on my blog images this morning it's even more glaring how off target I really was!......I know a credible second version is within my ability as a painter. It's in my nature to dig in when confronted with something I know I can control the out come of.....like this!

Regrouping, I spent the day stretching canvas and ended with some time left to paint this little 20x20 Sun painting below. It's a view of the Belle Isle Quarry in the middle of the James River. This is a typical sunset there and very much like a sunrise I see from my studio windows overlooking an old farmers field. Back in 2009, I did a 15-Minute Sunrise series of 8x10 En Plein Air paintings. It was perhaps one of the best learning curves I ever experienced while painting.....of course morning fog always played a large part in my reason to do it in the first place.....in combination with the sun, very impressive stuff! My view is not that exciting so I drop in different views like below. Turned out to be a good move because now I can apply the sun and the experience to any subject I choose to paint. If you were to review my painting history as I did last night, one could say it became the foundation of what I paint today.

 LITTLE TIME TO PAINT
890 Quarry Sun 20X20 oil on linen (2-18-14)

Today, I go in for cataract surgery on my left eye; an annoying problem for a daily painter as I am. It's not a colour thing so much as a smear on my eye that can't be corrected with glasses anymore. Something I didn't know, they also put in a corrective lens; so perhaps tomorrow I'll see better and without glasses! How cool would that be:=)

Later....




Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Commissions...gurrrr

I got bogged down, knew it would be testy at best......always a serious challenge repeating oneself. Occasionally I like trying my hand at it. Although not exactly a commission requirement......only the colour and soft nature of this painting was. However, this was the painting they wanted but was too large for their space over the mantle. I fear anything else will be a disappointment. So getting the feel is important!

BASELINE

550 Merging of light and water 72x60 oil on linen

COMPARISON TIME......Oops!

 889-6a Session Six (morning) 48x44 oil on linen (2-16-14)

My side by side quickly revealed how off colour I am......however, not this obvious in the flesh - in fact from 30 feet it seemed on target......my suns location is more left and intersecting the Salute...perhaps marginally acceptable. What is not acceptable was the use of Alizarin Orange - it never occurred to me how much impact it would actually have. The more saturated cerulean blue, which I liked very much, was acceptable. 

I inadvertently used a relatively new colour for me, Williamsburg Alizarin Orange. It got in the mix and I limited a very important one, Williamsburg French Ultra Marine, an unusual tone which the original revolved around......on the surface, not earth shattering, but it was. 

SOME QUICK MOVES

 
889-6b Session Six (afternoon) - modified sky

After some very quick afternoon modifications to my sky, using Williamsburg French Ultramarine Blue, was definitely back on track. But, it would require repainting some of my moves which have to be done wet-in-wet......harder in a repaint. Knowing that, and my misstep, I can get a better result with a fresh canvas, than meddling further with this painting. Don't get me wrong, it's not a clunker, just not the painting my client was expecting. 

I'll sleep on it; perhaps make a few subtle improvements, stretch a new 48x44 canvas or two.....hard to say here. After all, this is a commission, predicated on client expectations. As a designer, I know the rules; all my furniture was manufactured, custom designs. Any complicated or new design, we always made two; one to work out the kinks, the last for the client. We never gave them R&D......if you do, it never works !

Back to it!

Later.....

Saturday, February 15, 2014

More Venice painting

The same day, right after finishing my last painting, I did this 20x20 (same subject/view). I had some time and wanted to work on my sun a bit more using this particular view again. The parked gondolas normally found at this location were omitted to keep it simple. The painting didn't actually need them.....plus I was running out of time and light.

   888 Morning Promise 20x20 oil on linen (2-8-14)

MY NEXT PROJECT

My next project is a Venice commission based on a painting I did in 2011, one of the largest at the time, a 72x60. It was painted as a center piece for a gallery show and more importantly to break the 10k barrier using size as a weapon and give them a deal they would find hard to refuse. No question it would be too big for a lot of collectors but that didn't stop them from hovering. It didn't sell at that show but did at another one in 2013 for a more substantial price. What was interesting about it, more than a few where apparently following it around from the first show.

If I could point to a "best wall" painting that had genuine "jump factor" this is it!

550 Merging of Light and Water 72x60 oil on linen (7-5-11)

It's going to be fun and it's going to be a challenge!

Later....

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

A weeks worth of paint and canvas

Time for a break. I'm pleased with my figure painting progress; I stayed on plan. And certainly glad I did, because I'm not remotely ready to tackle a more ambitious painting yet. In the mean time the real world beckons. If I want to keep my galleries happy and if I want to sell, its time for a break from R&D. However only a small break, because I intend staying on track until I get what I'm after.

After a few years you get an idea what sells and what doesn't........right! Well in truth, that's an open book, but it's a clue and one of the reasons to paint. It keeps the game moving in multiple directions and by default keeps the game fresh. That being said....time for the "money makers". Actually I like doing them because generally these are the ones, at least for me, refereed commonly as so called "zone paintings"; you know the score, you play the music at your best. In my case it's atmosphere!

 VENICE FIRST STOP!

Canvas 887 Venice 30x30 - Sienna wash

 Sun reference - Delaware sunrise experienced last summer

Stage 1 - horizon stopping point

 887 Morning Rush 30x30 oil on linen (2-7-14)

HISTORY  CHECK

I thought this was a new view for me but as it turned I messed with it back in 2010 using the actual sun as my reference (plein air). Might be fun to see if there's any progress?

236 - 8x10 actual sunrise using Venice as my setting

237 - 11x14 studio off the 236 study

Mmmmm....I'm thinking perhaps the little guys are better. My little guys have air, clearly defined shapes - can't say that about my latest because my gondolas are too close together...I have some basic decluttering left so with that in mind back to it!

Crop of crowded gondolas - like paintings on a wall, they need air too!

Revised - better with more air and definition

Final version

Much happier with my revised version, certainly time well spent. I'll be more careful next time!

Later....



Monday, February 3, 2014

More doodling and practice

I want another pose to play with reflections.  For me it starts out with a stock photo and my sketch pad....basic doodling with shapes, shadows and light. The reality is, it might be easier for me to do this in paint but I  kinda like doodling, even though it can be aimless, frequently it forms into a real idea. The standard of this is the business lunch napkin.......those of you who have experienced it, know!

 MY STARTING POINT

 dwg 6
dwg 8
dwg 10
dwg 11
dwg 11a
dwg 12
Enough doodling, not going anywhere - I need to get back to it!

DIRECTION CHANGE

 dwg 13
(I had two failed oil attempts on this one - total wipe outs!)

INTERESTING 19TH CENTURY ARTIST

 
 Arthur Hacker - Pelagia and Philammo c.1887 - Accidentally came across it while searching for the info on the image below.
My actual drawing reference - hard to resist not making a drawing of it.

 Dwg 14 - added head wreath
 886 Silk Velvet 20x20 oil on linen (2-2-14)
I liked the drawing so much I decided to use it as my main reference. My choice of a different head didn't cause as much difficulty as my arm arrangement did. I like the suggestion of a hand receding in the background  - clearly it's no improvement on Hacker's original pose nor was it meant to be - I needed a body to go with the head and arms I really wanted to paint....its also where I needed practice.  All-in-all the painting has promise.....a good stepping stone.

The painting still needs some quick moves - even if I loose it!

 MODIFIED
 886 Silk Velvet 20x20 oil on linen (2-3-14) - final!

It feels better even if it's not. The neck and hair line needed interruption creating interest and flow...plus I darkened some highlights to more shadows.

The more detailed I get, the more difficult it is to keep it fresh....especially the face. Partly due to the small format and wrong brushes - I used larger brushes than required so refined detail can suffer.

Later...