Showing posts with label daily painter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label daily painter. Show all posts

Sunday, November 16, 2014

INCREDIBLE $59 HOLIDAY SALE

THE HOLIDAYS ARE COMING

ENCAUSTIC MIXED MEDIA

Below is a small sampling of the Encaustic Mixed Media paintings available.

Are you familiar with Encaustic?  
Encaustic painting, also known as hot wax painting, involves using heated archival beeswaxThe liquid wax is applied as a final coat to my mixed media, collage stye paintings.

This is an incredibly fun type of art and one that involves scavenging the house and craft stores for three dimensional objects, paper, ribbon, ink and much much more.

Cherish the Memories
$59

Ephemera
$59

What's To Know
$59

Pearl of the Sea
$59

This sale runs through December 20.  There are also wonderful gifts in the painting  collection

PETITE PAINTINGS UNFRAMED
All petite paintings come with a display table top easel!
Cardinal on Cedar

A WONDER OF GIFT IDEAS
Let me know if you would like your purchase gift wrapped and shipped to your recipient.

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

ViILLA ACEQUIA GARDEN WALL plein air painting

Villa Acequia Garden Wall

Villa Acequia Garden Wall
6x8 FRAMED oil on gessobord
Click here to purchase

Painting outdoors cooperation with the Corrales Garden Tour, this plein air painting shows a newly created garden wall including a doorway, arch and bell....a magical touch for a villa built in the 1860s.  Corrales is a rural quaint farming community on the outskirts of Albuquerque.  

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

VILLA ACEQUIA en plein air

VILLA ACEQUIA

Villa Acequia
painted outdoors on location
FRAMED 6x6 oil on gessobord
Click here to purchase

For my beloved non spanish speaking friends
Villa Acequia
simply means house on the irrigation ditch

This Villa was constructed in the 1860s and has been used as a winery, courthouse, private residence, dance hall, art gallery and as the social hub of the village of Corrales.  The Corrales Village is unique in its traditions, way of life, history and agricultural roots.

On June 8, plein air artists were invited to paint at eight different garden locations in conjunction with the garden tour.  The entire event was very successful.  It is such a joy to paint outdoors in beautiful weather and on this day, it was only in the eighties while the previous few days had been hotter.  I was so grateful!

I will post a second plein air painting from this event soon.



Wednesday, June 4, 2014

SAILBOARDS ASHORE

SAILBOARDS ASHORE


Sailboards Ashore
Oil on canvas covered cradled board, FRAMED
Click here to purchase

Many years ago I had a time of my life windsurfing off Kihei, Maui, Hawaii.
I was a pro.

Just a few years later I went windsurfing off the coast of
Cozumel, Mexico and for the life of me couldn't catch the wind
without
dumping myself in the water.

What happened?

It is just as well these sailboards are parked
on the white sand beach
in Perdido Key, Florida

A younger sister lives in Florida
Maybe she will help me relearn this skill?????


Monday, June 2, 2014

VENTURA HARBOR IV

VENTURA HARBOR IV

VENTURA HARBOR IV
12x12 oil on gessobord
Click here to purchase

Besides painting en plein air in Ventura I also took many photographs so that once I returned home to New Mexico I could continue to paint the boats, water, harbor, and buildings.  I got a very good sense of the setting, could smell the salt water and feel the humidity so missing here at home.

I love the color the paddle and surf boards, flags and canvas sail covers add to the scene.  Adjacent to the building, there are many umbrellas under which to enjoy a fish sandwich or a spicy Mexican meal.

If you haven't been to Ventura you would be missing something.  There are quaint shops, hotels, restaurants and even a weekly flea market.  Ventura is fairly quiet with not a lot of traffic, my kind of place.

Thursday, May 29, 2014

AT REST

AT REST

At Rest
6x8 FRAMED oil on canvas
Click here to purchase

Framed with black frame outside measurement 11x13", charming boat painting of two dinghies at rest in a harbor.

I continue to be on a roll with water, boats, harbors, and seascapes.  My heart is on the coast where I will soon spend two weeks plein air painting in Andrew Wyeth country in Maine.  I want to smell the salt water, to study boats more in depth, to understand coastal industries and to eat fresh fish daily.

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Harbor Sunrise

HARBOR SUNRISE

HARBOR SUNRISE
10x10 unframed oil on museum quality board
Click here to purchase

Painting boats, ships, harbors, ocean, and water is a favorite genre of mine. A few years ago I was in Ogunquit, Maine at Perkins Cove. Ogunquit has a sandy beach, and more than a mile of picturesque rocky shore. It is a popular place for artists. I recommend the Barn Gallery there.

Monday, May 19, 2014

Downtown Dining

DOWNTOWN DINING

DOWNTOWN DINING
14x11 unframed oil on gessobord
Click here to purchase

 Downtown Natchez, MS is a fun place to shop, dine, have coffee and visit with the locals.  You can find unique merchandise....and this very quaint restaurant hidden (hardly since it is painted bright red) in a deep alley.  This looks so European to me.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Natchez Poppies

"NATCHEZ POPPIES"

"Natchez Poppies"
6x6 unframed, oil on gessobord
Click here to purchase


This rich, happy painting is suitable for framing or displaying on a tabletop easel.  The poppies growing along the Mississippi River were planted by a resident who loves this flowers and tending them.

Monday, May 12, 2014

NATCHEZ AZALEAS

NATCHEZ AZALEAS

Natchez Azaleas
6x8 unframed oil on gessobord
Click here to purchase

No matter where I go in the world I will find flowers.
I search them out and take hundreds of photographs
or
set up a still life in my studio
In winter, flower shops and cut flowers are available
Summer flowers are endless

Spring is probably my favorite time of year for flowers
Summer heat sometimes can be very hard on them
especially in NM

Last weekend I planted eight hanging baskets
I cannot wait for them to totally fill out and spill over

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

READING ROOM

READING ROOM

Reading Room
8x6 unframed oil on museum board
Click here to purchase
I am a homebody, probably a closet introvert.  Since Fourth Grade I have loved reading.  Other than PBS and documentaries on television, I don't watch it. Reading takes me places, informs me, and entertains me.  BOOKS, books and books.  In fact just yesterday I went to a book exchange and came home with twenty new books to read.  

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Pears in the Cupboard

PEARS IN THE CUPBOARD

6x8, unframed, oil on museum quality board
Click here to purchase

I have a cupboard with glass doors JUST FOR SHOW.  Though everything in here can be used, nothing is.  I just love it the way it is!   I painted this nearly two months ago, as well as "Color in the Cupboard".  It is time to tell you about it!

Don't you love the color transparency and reflections of the red glasses?

Monday, May 5, 2014

Color in the Cupboard

COLOR IN THE CUPBOARD

8x6, oil on canvas covered board, museum quality
unframed
Click here to purchase

I see this colorful painting as both still life and an interior scene.  This is my cupboard, the doors are glass, the pieces are all colorful!   When I remodeled part of my kitchen, this particular cupboard was designed to remind me of the one my grandmother had on a farm in Minnesota.  This painting is suitable for framing or for displaying on a tabletop easel.

Sunday, April 27, 2014

ON MY WAY...motoring out

ON MY WAY

On My Way
12x12 oil on gessobord
Click here to purchase

There are definitely many sides of me in many areas
palette knife and brush
 desert, Europe, flowers, street scenes, buildings, architecture
still life, landscape, seascape, interiors
impresionistic, alla prima
studio artist and plein air artist


I cannot be put in a box in terms of subject matter
The world is too full of magnificent beauty

So paint I must
and
travel I must


Two more trip in 2014
two weeks each
Maine and France

Monday, April 21, 2014

MOTIF NO. 1 ROCKPORT, MA

MOTIF NO. 1  ROCKPORT, MA

8X8 oil on gessobord
Click here to purchase


You may wonder about the title but if you are an art aficionado, you need read no further.  Starting in the 19th century, Cape Ann, which includes Rockport, Gloucester and other quaint towns, has been host to many of the very best, most celebrated artists in America.  A few of those include the great Winslow Homer; impressionists Childe Hassam and John H. Twachtman; and modernists Edward Hopper and Marsden Hartley.

Perhaps the best symbol of the legacy created by the migration of artists might be the small red lobstermen's shack located at the end of a wharf in Rockport, built around the time of the Civil War.  I painted the "shack" as it looks today, but in the 19th century only the right end comprised the building.

In the early 1930's, while critiquing a group of students' paintings, several of which featured the little red shack, Lester Hornby, using a term often employed by French students to describe frequently painted sites,  exclaimed, "What---Motif No.1  again!"  His fateful words stuck and since then the little red shack has been referred to as "Motif No. 1"

Seascapes are very appealing to me and recently I have painted several.  I will soon post them here. Many more will come as I count down the months until I can spend two weeks in coastal Maine, Andrew Wyeth country.

Thursday, April 17, 2014

I am proud of this painting: VENTURA HARBOR I

VENTURA HARBOR I

12x12 oil on gessobord
Click here to purchase

I love coastal living but here I am in
the beautiful desert of
New Mexico

Within one month I have attended two workshops: one with Leslie Saeta and the other with Dreama Tolle Perry.  Their style of painting couldn't be much different, yet I love them both, style and subject matter.

I painted "VENTURA HARBOR I" with Leslie, en plein air, palette knife only.  We were set up so that the sun was not a bother.  Leslie uses a limited palette of five colors plus white:  Cad Yellow Med, Alizarin Crimson, Ultramarine Blue, Phthalo Green and Sap Green.  On the day we painted the ocean color didn't demand use of Phthalo Green though I have seen it used in many paintings, especially in the ocean paintings of Sorolla I recently saw in Dallas.  The colors I used to get the above ocean color were Alizarin Crimson and Ultramarine Blue (for a bit of purple), Sap Green and Cad Yellow Medium.

Yes, I am in love with harbor scenes and boats.  My Pinterest website has a board of gorgeous ship, harbor and ocean paintings.  You really should see it here.  My plan is to continue this thread of painting and I have already scheduled two weeks of painting in Maine, in Andrew Wyeth country near Rockland.

A photo of what I was seeing in Ventura Harbor
You can see I zoomed in and greatly simplified my painting.

Monday, April 14, 2014

My Mostly True Driving Solo Story....




NEW PAINTINGS THIS WEEK


GARDEN ARBOR
oil on gessobord  12x9
click here to purchase

SUNFLOWER IN WINDOW
oil on gessobord 12x12
click here to purchase

LAVENDER HARVEST
oil on gessobord 12x12

These paintings were done in a wonderful workshop
with Dreama Tolle Perry


BRINGING HOME MISSISSIPPI AND LOUISIANA

MS, LA, AND TX moved to NM

Trip miles: 9999
Number of Lost Times: 444
Hit by rubber from 18 wheeler blow-out: 1
Number of new friends: 27
Favorite towns visited: Vicksburg and Natchez
Number of New Hoppers accidentally met: 1

Monday, March 31, 2014

VENTURA HARBOR III

PAINTING HARBORS AND BOATS

VENTURA HARBOR III
9x12 oil on canvas covered cradled board
Palette Knife Painting
Click here to purchase

After my very recent trip to Ventura, CA, I have completely fallen in love with

PAINTING BOATS AND HARBORS
A few years ago I spent a week in Maine at York Beach getting salt in my blood.
I can't stay away from the ocean at the moment,
 nor studying famous seascape artists,
 so I have decided to return to Maine again in July, this time for two weeks.
 Of course there will be time for sightseeing,
but my main purpose this time is more painting than vacationing.

To see many awesome painting in one place
click here to view my Pinterest board on Ships, Boats and Harbors.
Click here to view my board of Seascape Paintings on Pinterest.

Monday, March 24, 2014

Ventura Beach Workshop with Leslie Saeta

PALETTE KNIFE PAINTING 
WORKSHOP 
with 

Ventura Harbor I
11x14 oil on gessobord

Avocado Halves
6x6 oil on gessobord

Ventura Beach Sunset
8x8 oil on gessobord
Carnation Beauty
6x6 oil on gessobord

Many of you have asked me about my workshop in California with Leslie Saeta. Did I like it?  Emphatically YES! Did I learn a lot? YES! The hardest part for me was painting en plein air boats and a full harbor scene.
I am completely unfamiliar with boats.
  As you would expect of me living in the desert.
 And I learned the silliest things about matching color, something I should have learned with my first ever art lesson.



THIS IS THAT LESSON

Mix the color on your palette using your palette knife (of course).
 Now hold that fully-loaded-with-color knife next to the item you are about to paint.
 Does it match in hue and value?
 No more of this "You don't know what color you have until you put it on your canvas."
Do comment but don't tell me how on earth I could have missed such common sense.



SECOND BIG LESSON
(aside from painting that is)

My very supportive husband has listened to me for years tell him I am leaving him for a few weeks in the heat of the desert summer for a cool place. (He likes heat.) Year after year after year, I ask myself where that summer place is.  Besides cool it has to be where I can't wait to paint every day. After being in California on the beach, I am now in the process of searching for my "few weeks of cool" in Maine on the beach. I have contacted someone and can't wait to hear back.

Thursday, March 6, 2014

VICTORIA

VICTORIA
18x18 Encaustic Mixed Media
Click here to purchase



What fun!

This painting took days to complete as I added elements, fused those into the hot wax with a very hot heat gun, added more elements, fused, pressed a stencil into the hot wax for texture, fused, added flecks of gold, fused,  and on and on it goes to the end. Last to be done was adding the ribbon and the 3-D Victorian elements.

This painting is done on a birch cradled panel, ready to hang and needs no frame.