I am working on a portrait series of several neighbors, hoping to improve my portraiture skills. My across-the-street neighbor, Rita, has been my first subject. And what a subject she’s been. I’m very happy with the outcome and am happy that she likes it too. Thanks, Rita!
Category Archives: Art Work
Portrait Gallery Figurative – in the Window Seat, #1
During a recent visit to the National Portrait Gallery, I saw two marvelous women, each sitting in one of the deep window seats that back up to the courtyard. I decided to be bold and ask if I could take their pictures for painting purposes. To my delight, each agreed. Here’s the first – a petite little lady perched on the long cushion, resting her feet. Another palette knife attempt.
Catching Up on Recent Paintings ~ Somber House
I’m kind of a housebody (take after my grandmother Ceci), so I don’t often paint ‘plein air’. While my art buddies were out painting in the hot summer sun, I decided to paint what I see out of my back door window daily.
I’m thinking that lovely blue sky is too cheerful for the mood of the painting. What do you think??
A Second Painting for the Writers Center Exhibit
Here’s another of my paintings to be featured at the Writers Center exhibit, opening in late June. A ‘plein air’ painting (done in the great outdoors) painted along S Street, NW, DC, in a workshop offered by Carol Rubin, another wonderful artist.
Another Upcoming Exhibit ~~ Ten Paintings at the DC Writers Center!
The wonderful DC-area Writers Center regularly hosts art exhibits in its large space, featuring the works of local artists. Ten of my paintings will be included in the next show, scheduled to open in late June. This exhibit is organized around the works of those who have painted with Gonzalo Navarro, a fellow teacher at the Yellow Barn Studio in Glen Echo, MD. I have enjoyed Gonzalo’s teaching expertise — it’s always good to practice skills under the tutelage of an expert in portraiture and figurative painting. It’s great to have Gonzalo at the Yellow Barn, as well as Maud Taber-Thomas, supplementing the excellent portraiture teaching of Gavin Glakas.
Here is one of the paintings I’ll show in the upcoming exhibit. More to follow.
Upcoming Juried Exhibit – Second Year Selected
I’m honored to have been selected again for inclusion in the second annual Hill Center Regional Juried Exhibition. The judge this year is Philip Kennicott, Art and Architecture Critic for The Washington Post. Here’s my painting, one of 65 works selected from over 450 works submitted by almost 100 artists. I must admit – I was surprised!
Painting/Padding the Neighbors’ Weeping Cherry Again
Beautiful Memorial Day weekend, leisurely breakfast at the kitchen table, spotting a bird flitting away from the weeping cherry next door. Just had to do a quick celebratory iPad painting of the tree — now decked out in its full greens, beautifully offset by the juicy dark shadows under the flowing branches. Have a good, peaceful and remembering weekend.
Paint the Kitchen Table. Paint the Kitchen Sky.
Yesterday I read an interesting post by Daniel Gerhartz about the hubris of ‘needing’ to paint a grandiose image, while neglecting the “profound, staggering elegance of the subject right before my eyes”.
He’s talking my walk. I love looking at everything in my path. Right before seeing Dan’s post I had been mentally composing an image based on the condiment bottles before me on the kitchen table.
The sunlight was falling ‘just so’ on the tops of their caps, making stair-steps of light down through the bottles shaded by the window will. It would make the perfect line drawing or a juicy value painting.
And looking up and out the window I noticed that distant treetops were the same yellow-brown-green as my neighbor’s weeping cherry, now that its flowers had fallen. And gorgeous clouds were slowly sweeping across a strong blue sky.
In honor of Dan and the daily, I decided to grab my iPad and make a few sketches of the loveliness at my fingertips. I also took some pix of the stair stepping bottle tops — they deserve a painting on canvas!
Drawing the Line
With some of my 7Palettes friends, I’m studying plein air painting with Carol Rubin this Spring. Last week, it was too chilly to paint outdoors, so we made line drawings of a complex still life Carol had assembled. Here’s a ‘line drawing’ made of oil paints. Our warmup exercises follow.
Two 30 second drawings.
A minute-long ‘continuous line’ drawing — made without taking the pencil off of the paper.
A ‘blind contour’ — made while keeping eyes on the object. NO looking at the paper! (Well, maybe we got to take three short peeks. . . .)
And finally, as depicted above, we made complex line drawings in black paint and then brushed thick white paint over selected areas to ‘erase’ lines as needed to make the ‘drawing’ more accurate or more interesting. A fun day. I did more at home using my own props. Will post those next time.
Portrait Workshop with Bill Schneider
I recently studied portrait painting with Bill Schneider. After he did a wonderful demo, Bill had us emulate Nicholai Fechin’s gorgeous ‘broken color’ style, by copying (on a larger scale, so we could practice our facial measuring skills) some Fechin portraits.
First I copied one of Fechin’s beautiful women. And then this precious child.
The next day we painted from a live model, attempting to apply the broken color method on our own. Quite a difference in beauty, eh? (Just keeping it real!)
I ended the weekend workshop with lots to practice and mull. Thanks, Bill!