Monday, November 30, 2015
"Laguna, 2015," is 30x30", liquid acrylic on canvas. Not much to say except I love any excuse to paint water. This piece took about 12 hours to complete (4-5 sessions). I got some good basic compositional content from an image I found online but went off-photo for the last session in order to model the water more and give it more dimension and movement.
Monday, November 23, 2015
Monday, November 16, 2015
I attended a short art workshop this weekend with a local abstract painter named Joe DiGiulio. He has a wonderfully loose and spontaneous approach to abstract work and I am always looking for new abstract techniques. I find his method particularly suitable for organic subject matter such as trees, flowers, rocks... I had an hour to create a couple of small pieces in the class and these are what I came up with. They are quarter sheets (15x11" acrylic on watercolor paper). I think next I will do some botanical subjects using this strategy.
Thursday, November 12, 2015
"Umstead Reflections, 2015," is a large acrylic on canvas painting at 48x60," another installation in my Umstead Park series. The darks are not quite as heavy as they show in the photograph but it's close. This piece took about 15 total hours to complete. I started it half a year ago and then set it aside to work on other projects. This week I had a chance (and the right mindset) to work on it again. I don't know yet where it will end up. Happy Thursday!
Monday, November 9, 2015
"Autumn Cascade" is pastel on sanded tinted paper, 26 1/2 by 19". I know I'm not alone when I say I get inspired by the amazing fall trees here in central NC this time of year. I particularly love how the golds pop against a silvery gray sky, even better when there's been rain. When I started this piece I knew I wanted to capture that glittery feeling but I didn't want to render a realistic tree. I wanted to do something more stylized and graphic. Working with pastels on a dark paper gives quick and dynamic results and moves the painting in a very definite direction. I ended up carving out my forms using negative shapes (the spaces between things), and I left parts of the dark background showing through to add interest and clarity. I wanted the image of the tree to break free toward the top so there's a lot of the paper showing there. Here is a snapshot of the process.
I haven't posted in a while but I have a couple of paintings that are close to completion. They'll be posting soon. Happy Monday!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)