Wednesday, April 29, 2015

How do you Live with Art?




I am always fascinated with how other people arrange things. All things, from the furniture in your living room to the items in your medicine cabinet.

Are they grouped by size, color, usefulness? Was it random? Did you just toss all the left overs in that drawer? Why that scarf with that blouse? Are those books arranged by who much love what they contain or alphabetically?

So, when it comes to the art you have choosen to live with and how you have it displayed, my interest is more than piqued! I am all eyes. I am beyond the curiosity that killed the cat. I want to see.

Indulge me. Show me how you live with your object d'art, your favorite painting, that treasure that no one else quite understands.

Thursday, April 9, 2015

Worth the Wait



The Good Ride
40" x 60"
Oil and Mixed Media on Canvas
7950.00


There is nothing quite like a hack through the burgeoning southern countryside in the spring. It is the warmth of the sun and the lingering coolness of the earth. The soft colours ripening into a vibrant display. Honey drifts on the air, And, if you are lucky, really luck, you have a good horse to take you over a fence or two.

It was worth the wait. This image is so sharp and clear, I could have been more pleased with the photo. I am so grateful to have a fantastic photographer who is also a genuinely nice guy. I always look forward to seeing him. Thank you Tom Alexander.

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Just wait.........




This is a painting I just finished. I took a photo of it minutes after I completed it. I am taking it to Tom this afternoon to have it professionally photographed. I will post that image as soon as I get. So, just wait.......

Thursday, March 26, 2015

The Grey





The Grey
Mixed Media on Paper
30" x 22'
1750.00



There is something romantic and unerringly heartbreaking in the soft and gentle expression of the eye of a grey horse. If you have ever had a grey in your life you understand this.

This painting is composed of watercolour, 23 karat gold leaf, ink, and acrylic paint on 300 lb Saunders Waterford watercolour paper and is currently available.

 Please contact me if you are interested in acquiring this painting.

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Irish Linen



Irish Linen
40" x 60"
Oil and Mixed Media on Canvas
Sold


A few years ago I was driving down from Virginia to Carolina Horse Park. I don't remember which event it was, but it was in the spring. The weather was that particular spring mix of rainy, partially cloudy, gusty, and gloriously bright blue skies with billowy clouds. It was all that spring can be on the drive down.

I drove down primarily on two lane roads and through dozens of small towns. The farm land was starting to reveal summer's promise. The further south I was the more vibrant and alive with color the land became.

Finally I was almost there and the last hour or so of my drive made the whole trip worth it. Horse farms where everywhere. From acres and acres with large barns and fancy arenas filled with jumps to small places with a run in shed and two horses and a pony in the front yard. The grass was verdant and against fences and next to the houses the azaleas where in full bloom. Pinks, whites, and purples clustered together, and it didn't stop there.

The dogwoods in every variety and colour and size where out doing themselves. Vying as it were, for your attention with spring flowers in yellow and blue and red. It was amazing.

However the true star of this was the wisteria. That creeping, woody vine that you either love or hate. It can be impossible to cultivate in your garden or take hold and take over. This day it was climbing up telephone poles and clothing hillsides in violet. The hues were muted by veils of cloud and rain and then would be sharply revealed in shafts of clear sunlight.The racemes of purple appeared to be almost two feet long. It was stunning. It was romantic. It was a bit of the old south revealed it her fecund splendor.

My memories of that trip are all in greens, lavenders, and creams. So when this canvas started to take shape it transported me back to that spring day. I hope it transports you too.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Day One to Twenty Three; A Brief Look at the Process






The initial drawing in charcoal is always so exciting. It is like the morning, fresh and full of possibilities.




Next I commit to the lines with paint. With this paticular painting I use acrylic Van Dyke Brown mixed with a little Phthalo Blue.




The painting process begins. At first it goes quickly.




A point is reached where every mark no matter how small, every colour no matter how subtle affects the painting. This is where the conversation between painting and painter begins.






Finally, there is nothing left to be said, at least for the moment.




This painting, "Irish Linen" is off to the photographers.

Before Day One





Before I started Day One there was the unglamorous work of creating the support.

I assembled the stretcher bars and cut the canvas.




Then I stretched the canvas and stapled it to the frame.




At this point I gessoed it, waited for it to dry and sanded the surface. I do this three time.

Then I started applying thin washes of acrylic colour. I do several times until I achieve a surface that I am ready to paint on.




This all happens before Day One.