Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Horse Wash - in progress 3

And more - the background is developing...

Horse Wash - in progress 2


First real color going on...

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Continuing with Cinder


So now I've just begun to put some color in Cinder's portrait. I started with the windows, the view through them basically a nice soft gray green; some trees, a bit of parking lot, and a grey condominium across the way. (Yes, I know, I spelled grey/gray two different ways. Generally I think of gray as a harder, colder color than grey, which to me is softer and gentler. So I guess when it's mixed with green, it's a harder gray to start with, whereas when it's these plain grey buildings, I don't want them harsh and industrial looking...) Also, I know, they look like pretty much the same color right now. That will change - a little bit.

Then, I started fooling around in Cinder's body with a yellowy gold. I think this will be a good under-color, and I'm interested what kind of a light it will cast once it's covered up.

And finally, there's the beginning of some shadow color around the pillow, just for fun.

New horse painting underway

Here in Grass Valley, we have a Draft Horse Classic at the Fairgrounds every year, for four days in September, and I love it. Big, beautiful horses, pulling carriages and wagons - farm wagons, freight wagons, old fire wagons; threading logs among trees, in the log skid, and pulling a sled piled with bags of feed in the weight pull.

Every year, along with the Classic, there's a show of horse art called "Art at the Classic." Being a lifetime horse lover, I was in heaven when I found this show, especially because the quality of the art was high. I started drawing and painting horses when I was very young, under six, and drew them almost exclusively until, somewhere in junior high, I starting branching out. I began exploring human faces and dogs and cats, and found that dogs and cats weren't built the same way as horses. Meanwhile, though, I could practically draw horses in my sleep, and whenever I wanted to try a new medium or a new technique, I'd do a horse; it was so easy that I didn't have to think about it, and I could just play with the new approach.

So, as soon as I saw the Art at the Classic show, I knew I wanted to try to get a painting of my own into it.

Here I am finally, four years later, working on a piece to enter. This horse was tied at the horse wash, amid the tall Ponderosa pines of the fairgrounds, with the sun shining through the dust.



This is oil on canvas, 30" x 38". The first thing I did, after transferring my drawing to canvas, was to paint it all blue and green. The horse is actually black, so blue as an underpainting makes sense to me for the horse, but I can't really explain why I decided to do it all in blue and green to start; I just felt like it.

Cinder: the beginnings of the painting stage

Cinder is a boxer mix whose portrait I'm working on, as a couple's gift to their son and his wife. I'm using a photo of Cinder in a window seat, full of light, with a neat pillow, and two of Cinder's stuffed animals, including her favorite (and mine too, I think): Foofer, the blue one (the one on the right - I know, I know, you can hardly see the stuffed animals at all at this point). This will be oil on canvas, 14" x 20".

This (above) shows the drawing transferred to the canvas, and Cinder, her stuffed animals, and the pillow outlined in sepia. Behind her, you can faintly see outlines of the windowpanes, and the shadows on the window seat. This is how the charcoal transfer looked after I traced the drawing (below) onto the canvas. As it was so hard to see, I painstakingly went over the lines with the sepia, keeping the original drawing right behind the canvas, as reference. Here (below) is the drawing:


And this is an enhanced photo of the drawing (same photo, but with the lines brought out):



Here's what it looked like, with the drawing taped up behind my canvas, as I was painting in the lines:

Saturday, May 17, 2008

This is my new art blog



Hey hey hey! What I plan to do here: post photos of works in progress (WIP's), state my plans and intentions, say whether I've carried them out and what I plan to do next about it, upload, post and admire paintings and stuff from my existing body of work, and grab links from WIP's and finished pieces to add to posts on Fine Art America (FAA) and other places. Hey hey hey!

It's almost 12:30 at night, and I've been spending some time, when I wasn't painting, obsessing on FAA's site, lately: checking out, commenting, posting... I need to go to bed, and I have a nice Jane Austen to curl up with and fall asleep to, since Paul's away (that's also why I've gotten away with staying up SOOO late). Made salad tonight, so I need to wash the salad bowl. Maybe I'll post on my blabbing blog soon about how I usually don't wash all the dishes after dinner, but salad bowls need to be done right away.

So. Tomorrow I want to change the bed, take out recycling (before the pile falls over), and do Jo Kata. I also need to start digging holes for two fig trees and a plum tree, and plant them. First, before bed, I think I'll add one of my favorite paintings. Which one shall it be? I think Reagan.


Okay, here's Reagan; I'll probably change the picture later, as I think it needs cropping, but for now it's okay. Lovely Reagan. (5/19: I have changed the picture to the trimmed version.)

Info about Reagan: Reagan's portrait is a watercolor, 20" x 29", done in 2000. Prints of her portrait are available on-demand on Fine Art America (see links).