6"x 9" oil study Scenic View White Pass Trainride, Skagway, AK AP
Perhaps one of the most life enrichening experiences was taking the White Pass train out of Skagway with my wife. We were on a cruise thru the Inside Passage, our second cruise, and teaching plein air workshops.
We had been given a heads up to take the last rear car, because then one could go out the car door and stand on a gated balcony and see as well as photograph the whole experience. The trip for us was about 37-40 miles before having to return, and I stood for perhaps 80% of that. Quite breathtaking...
Retired from the physical art instruction classroom; retired from moderating eight art forums as one of the original staffers on Wetcanvas. Travel and teach plein air paint workshops, (am available). Have eBook & GO TO MEETING materials, Oil Painting DVDs available- North Light Books; and On Demand Courses with Artist Network University. Other than that, I just paint paint paint...and play my music! Life is Good!!!
Friday, April 20, 2018
Thursday, April 19, 2018
Peeking Sunlight...oil on cardstock...
A study that took some personal sticktoitiveness and goading on, as we just got hit with another 18" of snow our third week into Spring...and was almost hard not to feel some weariness with the season...hahaa...but, I did finish. Had to remind myself, it is "just a study..." so no need to labor and render beyond the necessary...
9"x 6" Peeking Sun AP
After the painting is finished...I tape them to the side of one of my bookshelves. When one side is done...the first few are dry, get pulled off and put into a bin with wax coated paper sheets to separate one painting from another, and stored. Eventually I take those out and put them in black art portfolios, which make it convenient to take an armload of paintings in one binder form to share.
9"x 6" Peeking Sun AP
After the painting is finished...I tape them to the side of one of my bookshelves. When one side is done...the first few are dry, get pulled off and put into a bin with wax coated paper sheets to separate one painting from another, and stored. Eventually I take those out and put them in black art portfolios, which make it convenient to take an armload of paintings in one binder form to share.
Wednesday, April 18, 2018
Inspired by a lot of time on Lake Michigan fishing with my father, both of us serving in the US Navy (on what my dad called "the Big Pond!") and Lake Superior not too far north of our home in NE Wisconsin, just below Upper Michigan. Love surf...time on the water, being around water. Painting at a number of events. I have done my share of plein air work up in Marquette, Michigan off Wetmore Landing, Presque Isle, and so forth...and over in Grand Marais, MN (about three hours north of Duluth). This study is much like my normal painting efforts to simplify the complexity of water, reflections, transparency, rocks, bottom, light penetration. Fun stuff...
6"x 9" Cow Elk in Morning Conference AP
Some of my wildlife art past emerges every so often...and these are quick and simple studies. Using the largest brush, a flat possible. I am a brush wiper...meaning instead of a separate brush for color, values...I will get mileage from one, the largest I can paint...and exhaust what is possible with that one larger brush before moving to the next smaller brush. It helps me focus on essential suggestive brushwork and constrain temptations to detail.
6" x 8" Calling the Herd of Cows AP
Hardly anything more majestic than hearing the series of calls made by a bull elk echoing thru a mountain valley. To see the vast numbers in a herd cover ground in quick haste, is beautiful...
7"x 5" study of a Muley Buck head AP
6"x 8" Pines of Ontario AP
4"x 8" Study of Oregon Sundown Shading the Bottoms AP
7"x 9" Black Angus on Oregon Mountains AP
*clicking on images brings up larger view...and "AP" are those works that remain in my or the "artist's possession"
Saturday, April 14, 2018
And again more cardstock studies...oil
Just about caught up sharing my latest cardstock oil studies. Using Thunderbolt 80# acid neutral paper, a warm brown in tone.
There next few are from Grand Marais, Minnesota...
5"x 7" Harbor as Seen From Mainstreet *spoken for
This is the mainstreet view, businesses and eatery/taverns to the right, and the view in the last (above) painting is off to the left near perpendicular...
5"x 7" Grand Marais Mainstreet- a Nocturne AP
4"x 6" Night's End Sunset AP
4-1/2"x 9" Callin' It a Night AP
This ends my cardstock studies thus far of the Grand Marais area. Hoping to hear I'll be back plein air painting this coming fall. *now remember...clicking on the images will bring up a larger view. Thank you...
There next few are from Grand Marais, Minnesota...
5"x 7" Harbor as Seen From Mainstreet *spoken for
This is the mainstreet view, businesses and eatery/taverns to the right, and the view in the last (above) painting is off to the left near perpendicular...
5"x 7" Grand Marais Mainstreet- a Nocturne AP
4"x 6" Night's End Sunset AP
4-1/2"x 9" Callin' It a Night AP
This ends my cardstock studies thus far of the Grand Marais area. Hoping to hear I'll be back plein air painting this coming fall. *now remember...clicking on the images will bring up a larger view. Thank you...
Friday, April 13, 2018
More cardstock oil studies...what I like to refer to as my wetland series...
I have long had this love affair for the mundane here in northern Wisconsin. Plein air events which gather artists from around the country is fun...but for new participants to that event and location, every scene appears as eye candy though local residents have likely well accustomed to shutting out the normal.
I like to imagine were a local...what things would I be sensitive to in my daily passing, things that have long become passive and the mundane.
In northern Wisconsin where I live in a national forest, are 1200 lakes, rivers and streams and many many waterfalls. Perhaps 80-90% of my paintings tend to have water in them in some form. I grew up on water fishing Lake Michigan with my father, and then like my father served in the US Navy or what we liked calling, "the Big Pond!"
I like to imagine were a local...what things would I be sensitive to in my daily passing, things that have long become passive and the mundane.
In northern Wisconsin where I live in a national forest, are 1200 lakes, rivers and streams and many many waterfalls. Perhaps 80-90% of my paintings tend to have water in them in some form. I grew up on water fishing Lake Michigan with my father, and then like my father served in the US Navy or what we liked calling, "the Big Pond!"
But...I have come to enjoy the design I sense within chaos of simple things like dead matted grasses of early Spring...bits of green emerging to promise warmer days. I like the chaos of many vertical grasses and tag alder stems and branches. It is fun to attack the negative space (space in-between and thru) which will define with much greater ease the suggestion of the complex without laboring to depict actually each thing.
8"x 6" Spring Overflow AP
So much around us in nature carries a natural asymmetry (informal visual balance) that may need a little fleshing out to see it. But one task of artists is to take the complex and simplify it so others might see again for the very first time...
5"x 7" Three On Post AP5"x 7" Dialogue of Spaces AP
5"x 7" Overcast Beautitudes AP
5"x 7" Flooded ATV Trail AP
6"x 8" Fores'lections AP
6-1/2"x 9" A Little Left Leaning AP
Hope you enjoy these...they are much fun to paint. Its funny when I set up and paint such on location (plein air), and I get someone in a pickup truck drive by giving me that "what the )!$_!# is he doing?" After all, flooded roadsides, edges of wetlands are so common as to be put completely out of mind.
As always, if you click on the images, you will bring up a larger view to see. Thanks
Wednesday, April 11, 2018
More oil studies on Thunderbolt cardstock...
8"x 6" Emma...granddaughter AP
8"x 6" Addie...granddaughter AP
I enjoy painting portraits, have done many over the years. I have always found it interesting and even amusing people thinking of the artist as one thing, say a wildlife artist...are then surprised and will say something like, "OOOoohhh, didn't know you could paint portraits TOO!!"
As an artist, well aware we operate with a visual language of shape, color, values, line, texture, space, form...I make it my point when painting to concern myself with the color of light, the shape I need to pay attention to an put down, and the proper values (light and dark) and then let the viewer recognize the what of what I am painting. I have often been asked because of my experience painting water scenes, "how do you paint water?" and tongue in cheek, yet quite serious, I respond, "the same way I paint someone's nose"
Think about it...what is it we see that is not a shape, does not have color and value? Armed with such simplistic philosophy, I paint without fear that because I am unfamiliar with a subject I ought not be able to paint it. Because I AM FABULOUSLY EQUIPPED as an artist to see, and recognize the visual language of what I am seeing.
I have often painted myself over the years, which is a habit of many artists. Sometimes more flattering, sometime not so much. Without my beard now at 63yrs of age...I appear about ten years younger. My hair is still relatively dark, though is streaked now with gray hair. With a cap on...the white beard or gotee seen only advances my appearance of age. I am prone to become bored with my appearance. My hair grows uncharacteristically fast. I can have my hair short for the golf season (as I did coaching), and then not cutting it til the next golf Spring season...grow enough hair to put it up in a ponytail. I am not stretching the truth by any at all.
The artist intensely studying...looks intense, sometimes appears angry, eyebrows furled, low...and in this quick cardstock study...I appear even tired and overall older. But, such studies are about being truthful and putting down what you see. I come off here I think...looking like a grumpy old man! hahaha...
10-1/2"x 8" self-portrait AP
6-1/2" x 9" Ken AP
I have a proven past...where labored many hour works endlessly rendered and detail turned out hyper realistic paintings, but starting to paint plein air in the mid 90s more or less began my change. Nature is not mindful, doesn't care that you are painting...and the light is often very fickle here in northern Wisconsin...not like the long days of endless summer Alaska light, or hot days of Arizona and the Southwest. We have a saying in Wisconsin that if you don't like the weather, wait around for fifteen minutes.
Thus, the power and efficiency of each brushstroke became critical...no paint a stroke...go back and fix. I have put out videos and taught workshops on brushwork alone. My creed when I determine it...which is most often, is how I view "alla prima" which means to "start and finish in one sitting"...is that a "brushstroke laid is a brushstroke stayed"...thus, getting mileage out of the intended brushstroke to suggest, with the precise color and value you intend.
With "studies"...I have no agenda to prove myself, only to gather and put down. With "Ken"...I could have striven for a more perfect likeness...but such was not my goal. It was to put down shapes, color and value squinting the eyes with immediacy and a sense of urgency. Were I to opt...photo references as well as studies depicting color, light, the moment in a study could reproduce a larger in-studio more labored and rendered work.
As it turns out...as I have found, many have put it to me that my attempts to get things down urgently and efficiently in a study are an art in and of themselves. I do enjoy them...
6"x 4-1/2" Another Study of Addie AP
This study of Addie...was self-assigned to use the largest brush to hold control and efficiency, a flat...and with a towel to wipe the brush quickly put down the color of light. A fun effort...
6"x 4-1/2" Kicking Bird AP
This is another quick small study from Dances With Wolves, which is one of my favorite movies depicting the West...
Since I posted Kevin Costner earlier, I will add a closeup of this small work...and again aiming for a strick perfect likeness is not the point of such a study, but the color of light...and the shape those colors take to create form...
6"x 4" Study of Costner in DWWs AP
7-1/2"x 6" study of my father AP
From this study, I did a larger studio painting on linen of my father to give to my mother at her 80th birthday. My father passed away in 1991 from cancer, that was initiated by his presence as a sailor on board a ship with many others exposed to the atomic tests at the Bikini Atolls of the Marshall Islands. It was quite an emotional effort...so you can appreciate how a study then translates to a larger studio effort, I will include that work now here...
My portraits extend to include dogs, such as my Sook' (short from her Finnish name Suklaa Kahvi- meaning, "Chocolate Coffee")...here are a number of studio studies that led to a more serious larger studio oil on a self-made linen panel...
very young pup, my first study AP
10"x 8" Study of Sook' at One Year of Age AP
As always, clicking on an image will bring up larger view, thank you
8"x 6" Addie...granddaughter AP
As an artist, well aware we operate with a visual language of shape, color, values, line, texture, space, form...I make it my point when painting to concern myself with the color of light, the shape I need to pay attention to an put down, and the proper values (light and dark) and then let the viewer recognize the what of what I am painting. I have often been asked because of my experience painting water scenes, "how do you paint water?" and tongue in cheek, yet quite serious, I respond, "the same way I paint someone's nose"
Think about it...what is it we see that is not a shape, does not have color and value? Armed with such simplistic philosophy, I paint without fear that because I am unfamiliar with a subject I ought not be able to paint it. Because I AM FABULOUSLY EQUIPPED as an artist to see, and recognize the visual language of what I am seeing.
I have often painted myself over the years, which is a habit of many artists. Sometimes more flattering, sometime not so much. Without my beard now at 63yrs of age...I appear about ten years younger. My hair is still relatively dark, though is streaked now with gray hair. With a cap on...the white beard or gotee seen only advances my appearance of age. I am prone to become bored with my appearance. My hair grows uncharacteristically fast. I can have my hair short for the golf season (as I did coaching), and then not cutting it til the next golf Spring season...grow enough hair to put it up in a ponytail. I am not stretching the truth by any at all.
The artist intensely studying...looks intense, sometimes appears angry, eyebrows furled, low...and in this quick cardstock study...I appear even tired and overall older. But, such studies are about being truthful and putting down what you see. I come off here I think...looking like a grumpy old man! hahaha...
10-1/2"x 8" self-portrait AP
6-1/2" x 9" Ken AP
Thus, the power and efficiency of each brushstroke became critical...no paint a stroke...go back and fix. I have put out videos and taught workshops on brushwork alone. My creed when I determine it...which is most often, is how I view "alla prima" which means to "start and finish in one sitting"...is that a "brushstroke laid is a brushstroke stayed"...thus, getting mileage out of the intended brushstroke to suggest, with the precise color and value you intend.
With "studies"...I have no agenda to prove myself, only to gather and put down. With "Ken"...I could have striven for a more perfect likeness...but such was not my goal. It was to put down shapes, color and value squinting the eyes with immediacy and a sense of urgency. Were I to opt...photo references as well as studies depicting color, light, the moment in a study could reproduce a larger in-studio more labored and rendered work.
As it turns out...as I have found, many have put it to me that my attempts to get things down urgently and efficiently in a study are an art in and of themselves. I do enjoy them...
6"x 4-1/2" Another Study of Addie AP
This study of Addie...was self-assigned to use the largest brush to hold control and efficiency, a flat...and with a towel to wipe the brush quickly put down the color of light. A fun effort...
6"x 4-1/2" Kicking Bird AP
This is another quick small study from Dances With Wolves, which is one of my favorite movies depicting the West...
Since I posted Kevin Costner earlier, I will add a closeup of this small work...and again aiming for a strick perfect likeness is not the point of such a study, but the color of light...and the shape those colors take to create form...
6"x 4" Study of Costner in DWWs AP
7-1/2"x 6" study of my father AP
My portraits extend to include dogs, such as my Sook' (short from her Finnish name Suklaa Kahvi- meaning, "Chocolate Coffee")...here are a number of studio studies that led to a more serious larger studio oil on a self-made linen panel...
very young pup, my first study AP
7"x 5" Lil' Sook' AP
This last study here was used to create a 6"x 6" work that was accepted in last year's Randy Higbee national exhibition.
6-1/2"x 9" Sleeping Sookie AP
This study then led to a much larger linen work that was entered as one of several works in the 2017 AIS (American Impressionist Society) exhibition. Another work was chosen, and I may yet enter this in some other competition as I really like it...
18"x 24" "A Hard Day's Play" AP
As always, clicking on an image will bring up larger view, thank you
Monday, April 9, 2018
More cardstock oils...smaller...
5"x 7" Walk Along Old 8 AP
I love painting painting with putting down marks of negative space to suggest foilage, brush, branches and grasses, as well as sculpting the illusion of trees.
9"x 6" Ten Minutes Til' Dark AP
5"X 7" Rainy Day Grand Marais AP
4-1/2" x 8" Nutha Rainy Day- Grand Marais AP
6"x 9" Old 8 Haybales AP
8"x 10" Sandy Creek AP
10"x 8" Round the Bend AP
4"x 6" Northshores Grand Marais AP
6-1/2" x 9" Peshtigo Reeds AP
Do remember to click on the image to see larger views, thank you...
Saturday, April 7, 2018
More cardstock studies...in oils
Painted a series of Oregon studies from my travels...this past Fall...
5"x 7" Seven Mile Walk AP
Calling this "Seven Mile Walk" because our off road vehicle appeared at the time to have quit running, and were this far from where we needed to get back, none too long before it would get dark. Beautiful view in Oregon
4"x 8" A Good Climb Up AP
Getting my first ATV quad run down how to ride, my son figuring my past years riding motorcycles would be enough that I'd catch on. He was right...but it was also my first time taking such a vehicle (that was on site and not mine), and trust I could handle it going nearly a mile down the mountains to a creek bottom below. The final stretch was a severe sharp angle having to keep it in low first gear all the way, careful not to hit the front brakes to flip end over end. My son went before me...which gave me some confidence, still I was in the moment looking for evidence to hold confidence in "myself!" I admit...I was nervous...but, I wasn't NOT going to do this. Lots of good memories out in Ontario and the mountains...
6"x 8" Lake Wallowa AP
This is a large freshwater lake near St Joseph's, Ontario where Chief Joseph is buried.
5"x 7" Montana Ride AP
Thirty hour drive out...and thirty hour drive back. Long long drive, but plenty of sights to keep an artist engaged!
5"x 7" Looking Across Sunset AP
The state of Washington lies across the deep cut valley, a river at its bottom. Always the breathtaking views...
6"x 8" Mountain Side Pines AP
Some say I am something of a colorist in my paintings, but I feel that painting is really depicting the color of light. So, it is more my honest go for the jugular feel what I am seeing and experiencing. From books I have an current sciences, it appears that the eye of women are physically structured to be sensitive and see color better than men. I admire many women painters...and feel for myself, color requires more a conscientious and intellectual intent. It may be so as well for my female artist peers, no different than I...but the joy so many wonderful women painters flow I wonder if the science is not right, and I think so many are just fortunate to have that color sense "edge..." I feel I have to work for what I manage.
5"x 7" Ponderosa Sunset AP
Working one's way around the trails in the Oregon mountains was both beautiful and yet mindful of the potential danger. If caught away from camp, the temperature drop comes quick. We saw cougars at one point. But so enchanting. I want to go back and spend a couple weeks just painting with my Strada paint box and gear...
5"x 7" Shadow Side AP
The sun continually paints interesting changes upon the landscapes, one rising peak casting its shadows upon another, down into valleys. Just beautiful..
6"x 8" Oregon Sunset AP
Another beautiful end of a day working our way thru the mountains. Up on the mountains, the lay of the land leveling itself off does not represent how high one really is. In fact, there were steer grazing up on top of many of these flats or lesser inclines, until one gets to a drop in edge and reality strikes home!! hahaa...
5"x 7" View of Wallowa Lake AP
Last one for today...one of the views along the road leading out of St Josephs, Oregon and wraps around this beautiful large fresh water lake...
*notes worth repeating... "AP" means "yet" in my possession or "artist's possession" and may be available as I feel led. As studies they serve for my interests to work into larger in-studio linens. I am intending (a project in the works) to put most of these studies in a DIY online coffeetable type book, the last number of pages showing steps in my process and painting.
One other note...is a reminder that if you click on an image, you will bring up a larger view to enjoy. Thank you..
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