Monday, February 29, 2016

Three Lemons

Three days later and the lemons are still good. Trying to loosen up. This time on PastelMat paper and feel this is moving in the right direction.

I began with the dish in the scene, but quickly got rid of it as it wasn't adding to the composition.


Three Lemon Wedges, 4 x 5.5", pastel on Pastelmat paper.

Saturday, February 27, 2016

Sliced Lemons

While I had the lemons out, I decided to get the pastels out. I always hope to go pretty loose, but end up tightening up. Doesn't take long for the lemon to start to dry out.









Lemons

Worked in the studio this afternoon in oils painting lemons. I love the cobalt blue pottery I found at the thrift store and thought lemons would compliment it. Tried to keep it fairly loose.



Sunday, February 21, 2016

You Know You're An Artist When....

You know you're an artist when you go to the grocery store only to pickup some interesting produce to use for painting subjects! I spent some time yesterday going to thrift stores for still life subjects. I am always drawn to the pottery, but can never find things with texture so I went to the grocery!

I spied the radish bunches and even though it's not a vegetable I eat, I bought them. I soon remembered that it is impossible to mix fuschia with basic oil paint pigments. You need to buy the color in the tube. Knowing it is not a color I normally paint, I tried to come close with what I had. Didn't get very close with the color at all!

So I decided to get out my pastels which includes several sticks of fuschia! I projected the photograph of one of the radishes onto my flat screen tv. I prefer to work from life, but knew the foliage would soon wilt, so took pics and put the radishes in the frig. Process shots below:

 Alcohol wash over first layer of hard pastels.


Final painting


Wednesday, February 03, 2016

Winter Doldrums and Using Technology while Painting

I always have a lack of creativity in winter. Not really depression, just painter's block. I have at least three of these each year, and don't get too worried when they hit.

I finally got the oil paints out last night. After searching the laptop for a photo reference, I found a great way to view the photo while painting! I recently bought a new flat screen tv for the studio. (Yes, I like to multi-task - paint with either a movie on, or a podcast or book-on-tape going. Not much of a music fan...). I wanted to use the new TV for projecting my reference photos. Originally, I was planning on just hooking up my laptop to the TV and using it like a projector using the VGA cable. Then I remembered this TV also has a USB port! DUH. I know this is very common on TVs these days, but didn't think about using this feature much before! WOW what a great way to see the photo. I just loaded a few photos onto my thumb drive and plugged it in the back of the TV, and the TV recognized the thumb drive, and I opened the folder to select a photo. Much better than printing out on paper. Now that I think about it, I need to explore using the HDMI ports between the TV and laptop. Hmmm......

Anyway....Back to painting! The TV is across the room, so it kept me from putting my nose right into the image to pick out details, but the clarity and brightness on that screen far surpassed just projecting the image directly from my laptop. With the image across the room, I painted more loosely - which is a goal.

Below are progress shots of the painting. Not too bad after months of using pastels instead of oils! This is a masonite board coated with gesso and lightly sanded. You may be able to see the lines of the gesso in the finished painting, which I enjoy seeing as it adds movement to the scene. Forgive the glare from the wet paint.




"Across the Pond", oil on board, 8x10