Thursday, March 22, 2012

Treading Ruts

Occasionally I will go through dry spells where I don't feel motivated to paint or the paintings just don't turn out like I think they should. Usually they only last a couple of days but sometimes it will be closer to a week. Usually I decide to do something out of my normal habits to pick myself back up. With the painting above, I walked through the house and painted the first thing that caught my eye. Cristina likes to leave her shoes laying around and I see these all the time. The buckles fascinate me. They serve no purpose besides to look neat. This is just one example of how I get out of a rut. Other times I will get into my pile of doodles and do abstract paintings. Other times I will just take all of the paint on my palette and start making a design using only the colors available. Other times I will simply put my paints away for a day or two until I've gotten excited to paint.

For the past few days I've been in a rut. Today I will be doing some abstract paintings working on brushwork, color, and design. I found this bulk pack of little 4x4 canvases so I'm going to do a series of these abstracts until the rut is either so deep I can't get out or I work myself loose of it.  Until next time...

Tuesday, March 20, 2012


The more I have worked in oils, the thicker and more varied my paint application has become. The painting above is a simple design of a single pomegranate on its side. This is an extremely simple composition and it let me play with my brush work. It may be hard to tell but the paint is thicker than previous paintings (this was done back in December). At the time I was in such a rush to find a style that I wasn't experimenting as much as I should have been and this little painting helped me see that developing a style takes a lot of time. Up until this painting I was content on my application of paint and was more focused on developing my compositional sense.
Recently I picked back up my palette knife after setting it down to work exclusively with the brush. For me I need more time to experiment with as many tools as possible. The thing that was stopping me (I was stopping myself but this is my way of blaming others) was being surrounded by so many good artist here in the region that paint in a specific manner. Whether it be exclusively brushes, knifes or a mix of both, these artist have put in the time and realized what is needed to convey what they want to show people. Patience is a virtue and its something that I'm doing my best to build up. With more time and practice my technique will improve so I can get down to showing what I see.  One day perhaps I will find that elusive style that flows from me. Until then I will search under all the rocks around not knowing what it looks like, but will just enjoy flipping over rocks.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

All about Still Life


My last post was about getting back outside to paint, but I would like to make a few post about still life while it is fresh in my head. The painting above was done in the middle of what I would call my still life season. From the end of  November until the beginning of March I spent most of my painting time working in still life.

Perhaps it was the desire to work from life that got me on such a kick to paint still life or maybe too few field sketches and reference photos. Regardless, still life was the focus of the past few months and now my appreciation for artist that do good work in still life is great. I regularly follow quite a few artist that work in the subject to see what they have to say. A thing of interest for me is to see how an artist works out composition with their still life. I've seen artist that use one angle and concept to do all their work, while others will use a different angle and experiment with new (to them) concepts all the time. Here are a few of the artist that I am watching. http://www.qiang-huang.blogspot.com/, http://carolmarine.blogspot.com/, http://lisadaria.blogspot.com/. These are all artist on DailyPainters. If you follows blogs and daily painters, chances are you know who carol marine and qiang-huang are.  Lisa Daria is some one that I just noticed a couple months ago, but she has been painting much longer than that. I'm a huge fan of their still life paintings and every time they post something it is worth checking out just to do some analyzing and see what they are thinking about.

The painting above was done back in January. At the time I was looking at distorting edges. The knife in the painting has a lot of hard and crisp edges while the apple is softer and almost ethereal in appearance as it recedes into the background.