Wednesday, September 09, 2009

New Frames Arrived!

Actually, it isn't that big of a moment. My order of new frames arrived. These are to help out for the busy month of November 2009. In that one month I will be participating in the Artist Studio Tour here in the Santa Ynez Valley. That has become a very good event for me. I get to meet many of the people who buy my work and many that don't. Many of the people have lots to say about the art, framing, painting and interesting stories too. We put out food and drink and it is really like a gathering of people all interested in art. Very fun, very laid back and the sale or two sure doesn't hurt. The event is put on by the Wildling Art Museum in Los Olivos.

November will also bring the Faulkner Winery Fall Art Invitational which I will be participating in. It is a 2 day plein air painting event and the winery will be having wine tasting galore....more to come on both of those events.
I will also be the Featured Artist for my local Guild, The Artist Guild of the Santa Ynez Valley. We show our work at Gallery Los Olivos in Los Olivos California. The gallery has a Guild section and my work will be featured on one of the walls there for the entire month of November. I am not an artist member of Gallery Los Olivos anymore, I am showing my work there in the Guild Featured Artist show for November.
...by the way, Gallery Los Olivos has some really great artists in there and if you are ever in Los Olivos you have to go in there and check out their work. I know most of these artists and they are a great bunch of people.
Gallery Los Olivos
2920 Grand Ave, Los Olivos, California
Phone-805-688-7517
If you find yourself in the sleepy little town of Los Olivos in November please stop by Gallery Los Olivos to see a nice collection of my work. There will be many small pieces that will be affordable and make great Christmas gifts!
Give the Gift of Original Art this year!!

Santa Ynez...Evening Light

"Evening Across Santa Ynez"
12" X 24" Oil on Canvas
I love the last light hitting the mountains. It always gives off this wonderful reddish glow up here in the Santa Ynez Valley. If you are around earlier and are just a bit away from the mountains they have this fantastic light blue color...drives me crazy. I'm from Pasadena and that's a more desert environment than here...lower elevation of course. as I was growing up down there the San Gabriel mountains had the same wonderful pinkish-red color...shifting to violet as the light grew dimmer. I love the San Gabriels...harder than heck to paint though.
Anyway....this was the view one night from the eastern part of town in Santa Ynez looking towards the south side of the valley. I was after that pink glow and nice shadows.
a detail of the painting.....

Thursday, September 03, 2009

While at the BBQ....

" Calkins Road Vineyard"
12" X 16" Oil on Masonite panel.
Linda and I went to a BBQ at a friends house over on Calkins Road just north of the sleepy town of Los Olivos. Their house is actually a cutting horse ranch and while we waited for the charcoal to fire up I grabbed my camera and strolled the grounds looking for reference material. Not oddly enough or this area there was a vineyard next door to the ranch so I walked over and started snapping away. They had this old wood shed at the end of the rows so I decided to paint an angle with the shed in it since I hardly do structures.
This is the result of that BBQ spare time.

Tuesday, September 01, 2009

Moon Over Kansas

" Moonrise Over Kansas"
12" x 24" Oil on Canvas
OK...I can't sit and paint vineyards non stop. I've been wanting to paint this scene of a field of Brome hay on the farm next to where my Army reunion was at. The farm is owned by a lady who is an Artist. She's built a small studio on the property with plans to open her own studio there down the line. The studio looks like an old cabin nestled under some huge trees...very cool looking but at this moment very hard to find because she does'nt really have a road leading to it, more like a dirt trail and it's overgrown now from the hay. The next time I go out there I hope to meet her.
This scene is looking away from the cabin towards another farm next to hers. The sun was setting and the moon was on the rise. The moon looked so small compared to the massive sky it was floating in. This is type of painting is totally one of just enjoying the moment, the moonrise, the light...a very tranquil moment. One thing about Kansas...it really slows a person down and gets you in tune with things you only glance at record speed here in CA. In Kansas there was plenty of time to sit and watch a sunset with all of it's changing colors, the clouds floating by and really enjoy the show. I suppose that's what we do on vacation. I did that every night for 5 days and haven't' had the time to do it once since I've been back home. I suppose that was the enticement to paint this one, to see that sky again.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Vineyard, Lucas and Lewellen

" Lucas & Lewellen Vineyard"
12" X 24" Oil on Canvas
This vineyard is right up the highway from where I live. I don't know how many times I've driven by with my camera pointed out of the passenger window snapping away trying to get a good reference photo. I've captured this scene a few times with the camera anddecided to go ahead and paint it today. I started to do it Alla Prima but when it was most of the way finished I had to stop. We are having a heat wave here and this studio of mine is a converted garage but it still gets really hot in here by midday. I finished it off later this afternoon when it began to cool down. A little different from my previous vineyard painting.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

A New Gallery

I've been wanting to put this on here for a while now. I was approached by a gallery a while back but wanted to wait until things were more definite before posting it. My work is now officially being represented by Galerie Gabrie in Pasadena, Ca. This gallery has been in business for years and represents some wonderful artists. The owners are some very nice people and very serious about the art they offer from their gallery. At our last meeting I left a couple of paintings with them but more will go down there soon. If you are in the Pasadena area please stop by to visit the gallery and see the great art they have.
597 E. Green St. Pasadena, CA 91107
Phone : 626-577-1223

Friday, August 28, 2009

Vineyard Alla Prima

"Kalyra Eve"

12 X 24 Oil on Canvas
I'm going to do a Plein Air show at the Faulkner vineyard in Temecula. The Faulkner Winery Fall Art Invitational is on November 7 & 8. ( click here for info on that...http://www.faulknerwinery.com )

I'll be painting both days in their vineyards along with many very, very good artists. If you can make it please stop by...it is their Barrel Tasting Festival during harvest time down there.



To brush up on that type of painting I will go do some plein air pieces locally at our vineyards. Before that though I decided to do a few Alla Prima pieces to work some things out and get my speed up to snuff (Alla Prima - to do a painting in one sitting). This painting is the first of those and was done this morning in about 2 hours. It is 12"x24" oil on canvas. Not blazing speed but I'll get a little quicker before November. I'll post the upcoming alla prima pieces and plein air pieces as they roll off the easel...by the way, I finally bought a French easel to try out. Looks pretty cool and after rubbing on more wood conditioner it looks even cooler!

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

A Meadow at Evening

Meadow at the Mission
9X12 Oil on Linen panel
This tiny meadow is over at Mission Santa Ynez and overlooks the valley at the eastern end of the mission. At the end of a sunny afternoon you start to get nice looking long cast shadows from the pepper trees that line the entrance. This scene captures the various shades of earth colors as they weave an eratic pattern in that field of dry grasses.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Critique

...And another good thing about joining and Artists Guild are the fringe benefits. One of them would be the occasional free critique sessions we have. I'm sure most artist guilds have these. A critique is a great way to get an idea of where you stand with your work and helps you to develop thick skin...you'll need that if you ever show your work anywhere! There is always someone who has a comment to make about your work...don't get mad, listen-think about it-catalogue it in your mind-and use it to do better work.
I had an art teacher in a design class back in college who would rake you over the coals if your work had a problem...people dreaded turning in work to be critiqued in that class. That teacher was tough if you had problems in your work but there was one very important thing...he was honest and didn't mind telling you if you screwed up. That tends to make most people mad and maybe even walk away from art. You just have to suck it up and keep your cool. In a half an hour you'll see what they saw and maybe realise you could improve your work so hang in there and listen to what's being said. Humble pie...it will keep your feet on the ground where they should be. I can't impress upon you how easy it is to just get mad. Art is very personal and it's like someone pulling your heart out and stepping on it when the critique gets ugly. Just keep your cool long enough to let your eyes and ears teach you.

We had a great turnout of about 40 artists from beginner to experienced. Artist James Armstrong did a great job of critiquing the work. James teaches at Santa Barbara City college as well as having his work represented by various galleries
My friend Becky Gomez's work under fire, hahaha. Becky is a very good artist and is also a participating artist in our Studio Tour. Becky always has a great presentation with her work which is also important in a critique...frame well or you'll hear about it. If you get a chance to get your work critiqued go for it. You can only learn from the process.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Vacation

This post has nothing to do with art except that while in Kansas I took a boat load of reference photos. I attended an Army reunion with some of the guys I was stationed with back in Germany with the 1/37th Armor...1st Armored Division in Katterbach Germany. Needless to say we all had a great time. While there we were allowed to tour Ft Riley and the tank simulators they have. We were a tank unit, Gen. Pattons old unit that fought at the Battle of the Buldge to be exact, and we had the old M60A2 tanks. The simulators at Riley are of the new M1 Abrams tank you see fighting in the Desert Storm and Gulf wars. Too cool to fire and drive these newer tanks.
We stayed on a ranch owned by one of the guys just north of the town of Alta Vista, Kansas. We BBQ'd, drank beer, rode horses fished on his lake...lots of fun hanging out with these guys who really are like brothers to me.
The view from the front porch...lots of beautiful sunsets in Kansas.
This is the lake on the ranch where we had a small fishing derby.
My friend Dennis and I talked our host Steve into letting us drive his tractor and moves some of the bales of hay....or hay wheels. That's me driving and yes with cowboy hat on. The sun was scorching us all.

Dennis and I on an M60A1 tank we found in a park in Council Bluffs, Kansas. Felt good to be on a tank after 30 years.

This is what the inside of one looks like...very cramped with lots of stuff to bang your head on. Dennis in the Tank Commander position and me down below in the Gunners compartment.


I have a lot of fond memories of my old Army days and you develop really close relationships with the guys you served with. It was 30 years since most of us had seen each other but after 5 minutes it felt as if we had all gone home for 30 days leave and had just got back....we sounded exactly as we did back then, we got along just as we had back then in 76-79...it was great.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Twilight

"Twilight Finale"
12" X 16" Oil on canvas
Both of my daughters were here this weekend so it was a mad house. Once everyone settled in for bed I came into the studio to poke through my reference material. I was looking for something close to twilight and came across a photo that looked good enough to work. These pink clouds are actually in the photo and I've been working on those lately so why not do another. The foreground in the photo was very dark so I lightened it up a but...too much I think, but it shows the grasses here so I like it. Most of this was finished last night but I needed to tweak things this morning after the girls left.

These skies are fun to do and I've figured out that there are two ways to do them. I did this version as if doing an alla prima painting. It works putting the light pinks over the blues but you lose some very nice details if done another way. I had painted the blues, both the light areas painted with Cerulean Blue/White and that duller shadowed area that is a mix of Ultramarine Blue and Alizarin. That is the shadow color for the clouds where the light isn't hitting them. If I left this part sit ovenight to tack up then adding the pink highlights of the clouds would be much easier and keep from blending with the blue mix which dulls down the pinks very quickly. The thing about doing it this second way is that it is way easier to control the intensity of the pinks and the amount of spread and softeness to the edges. It would also keep the blues cleaner and not dull them down with the pink mixture....just some thoughts on it.
Here is a detail of the hillside....

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Carpinteria Show

Urban Scenes, the latest show put on by the Carpinteria Valley Arts Council, starts tomorrow...Saturday July 25 at 10 am. I was very fortunate to have 3 of my paintings juried into this show. The work of this show was to depict Urban scenes and I managed to have just a few of them in the studio so why not! I really do not do urban art very much simply because they take too long. I also have a very bad habit of veering to the side of adding too much detail and sharper edge work and that's due to my pen & ink background. In pen & ink I went for accuracy in reproducing what was in front of me and rarely produced more "painterly" drawings. This sort of bleeds over whenever I do streetwork, as I call it, in paint. I often find myself going back over edges and lines smoothing or softening them out.
"Bookstore Flowers" ...."Myrtle Avenue, Monrovia"...."Santa Barbara Streets"

Here are the details of the show....
Show runs from July 25 to Sep 14
855 at the Arts Center gallery
855 Linden Ave, Carpinteria, CA.
10 AM - 4PM
Gallery Phone 805.684.7789

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Clouds

"March Skies"
16" X 20" Oil on Canvas
We get great storms coming through here that bring the most amazing cloud formations. I always wait for the storms to end but before the clouds roll out to run with my camera and get good shots of these clouds. This painting was created from some of these clouds. Blue skies above but some wonderful pinks being lit up inside the cloud formation. I've got some images that get so fantastic looking that that's exactly what people would think of them if I painted them....he let his imagination run wild. If you want to see how fantastic nature can get go check out your local skies after a storm...or before one.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

More Eucalyptus Trees

Thumbnail sketch for this painting....
I wanted to throw the type of sky I have been doing lately with a scene of eucalyptus trees across a big valley. I sketched this one out in a small thumbnail sketch and then began painting. The only prerequisite to myself was to keep the foreground dark. After finishing up I now wish I had gone with a darker sky and even darker foreground....I'll leave that for another painting down the road.


"Evening with the Giants"

12"x 24" Oil on Canvas

Monday, July 13, 2009

Moonrise Near Foxen Canyon

"Moonrise Near Foxen Canyon"
16" X 20" Oil on canvas
I wanted a good sky and am working with these colors lately until I feel comfortable with the results. I wanted a good evening sky, close to twilight, and then decided to throw that moon in there. I had a brighter more intense moon but decided to back it off to look more like an early moonrise where it's value is closer to the sky surrounding it. A very pale moon since there is still a lot of daylight left. I'm pretty happy with the results.
A couple of details of the painting....

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Grass Mountain

"Below Grass Mountain"
12" x 24" Oil on Canvas

Grass Mountain is located in the Figueroa mountains which run on the north side of our valley. You can spot Grass mountain miles away since the side facing the valley is covered only in grass and a few sparse trees. There are 3 distinct ridges that come down the front side too so it looks sort of like a hand with 3 fingers.....however it is described you would spot it in a heatbeat. I have just finished this painting of Grass mountain in the distance. This hill in the foreground is part of the Chamberlain Ranch. The cad yellow highlights on that hill are really not as intense as you see here. My camera once again loving yellow to death! These afternoon scenes work well with rich yellows and oranges but getting a good photo of the painting is always a trick with those colors.

Here is a small detail shot of the hillside trees.....

Monday, July 06, 2009

California Landscape

"California Landscape"
12" X 24" Oil on canvas
What a generic title. The one thing about that title is that this painting really does represent most of the California hillsides all up and down the coast of California. This scene is just off the 101 freeway just north of the town of Buellton, CA. Warm summer dry grasses line the hillsides with a splattering of oak trees. Close to sunset you will see the amazing glow of light that I think is the highlight of any day here along the coast.

Monday, June 29, 2009

Blue and Green

" Evening Blue and Green"
9" x 12" Oil on canvas covered panel
Another good color combination I like is a Cerulean Blue sky with dark greens in the foreground. Throw in a little slightly pinkish clouds and it's hard to goof that up. Not that this is a perfect painting...there is always room to improve and I've already decided what I would have done differently on this one for the paintings down the road.

Depth in a Painting

One of the things early painters seem to struggle with is adding depth into their paintings. Depth adds to the atmosphere while also adding a wonderful sense of space into one's painting. You are working with Aerial, or, Atmospheric perspective here. You can look these terms up and read volumes about this type of perspective as well as other types. I don't want to write a book here so I'll put it in a nutshell for you.
To add depth you need to work on your atmospheric perspective. This means the farther back your distance is colors will be less brite, less intense, will start to move into the blue/grey range. You will have less detail, less sharp edges, less focus. The eye is a magnificent machine but even it has it's limitations. Heat, moisture, airborne particles and distance will cause the eye to see less of anything the further it recedes. All you have to do now is to remember these things and practice pushing your distance in your paintings.
This painting I've done was just painted from a basic pencil thumbnail sketch I did on a scrap piece of paper with a drafting pencil. There are no color notes or actual picture to work from because I know what it will look like before I start the painting. It's a good thing to get into the habit of seeing your painting, visualising it, before you actually paint it. Then you just paint what you see in your head. The better you visualise it the better you will paint it.
Here is my pencil sketch.....

It's very simple and of no particular place. I can see my sky and tree colors as well as the foreground so this sketch is more a map of where to put my lines on my canvas. I'll add my sky working my way down to the trees. At the trees I will add some very light yellow ochre suggesting the haze you would see closer to the land.

At this point I want to add my distant mountains which will be blue. I will then add some of my "grey" mud to some white paint and then paint that into the base of the mountains to add more "atmospheric haze" to them. This gives the effect of distant mountains by the blueing of their color and hazy filtered light/color at their base....all of this adds to the illusion of distance.

Here you see the blue of the mountains blocked in. Before I leave this step I will also take a clean brush and drag just a bit of sky color along the top line of the mountains...this softens that edge...remember? Less sharp edges as they recede. My mud mix kept in a jar for later uses....What is it??? After you clean your brushes in a jar long enough you end up with a thick mud of paint at the bottom of your jar. I periodically scrape it into this jar for adding grey to my paint mixes...when I paint plein air I will use a tube of Paynes Grey but in the studio I use this leftover paint.

Here is the painting with my mountains done, my distant and foreground trees added....this is basically the blocked in stage and I will start tweaking these parts once they are all in place.

Now the rest of the painting is blocked in. After this I took a brush rinsed in turpentine and wiped out the paint for my trail. I then painted in a mix of white/yellow ochre and ultramarine blue for the trail.

Trail "wiped in" Once the trail was painted in I darkened my foreground grasses on either side and began to work my grasses and edges of the trail. In the end this is what the painting looked like.


It's all in stages. Very light or faint background work...nice mid value colors for the midground and strong darks in the foreground...much sharper detail and edges closer up and soft brushwork in the distance. Paint what your eyes can see...the exaggrate that and psuh it as far as you want to go with it. The early tendancy I think is to not push it as much so keep working at it and push a little harder each time...go lighter where you need it and darker where you need it...softer brushwork and stronger brushwork. Don't sweat it if you don't get the results you want...just start another painting and keep your mind and eye in control of that brush and paint.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Oaks on the Chamberlain Ranch

"Oaks on the Chamberlain Ranch"
22" X 28" Oil on canvas
In this painting I wanted to try capturing the evening light against the hillsides. The warm tones of last light against a hillside is always a favorite sight to me so why not paint it. Our grassy hills are all now brown with the summer here. This always leads to wonderful earthtones to mix and try getting right.
I'm always amazed at how great some paintings can look from across a room while others look better the closer you get. This one is stunning as you get back and the eye can mix the colors without being bothered by the detail...much like seeing it in real life. Each time I walk into the studio this painting catches my eye even if my overhead painting lamp isn't on....when it's left on the painting looks even better.



I had a painting in a 22" x 28" frame but it was painted a while back and I thought another attempt at that size was in the cards. They had a recent canvas sale so I picked one up at that size and painted this one up to replace the older painting....a good thing too because I'm much happier with this image.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Goleta

On one of my trips down to Santa Barbara I decided to take the beach route instead of climbing over the mountains. This was last winter and we had a storm blowing out and these huge clouds were what was left over. Nothing like winter to bring in these great cloud formations we get here. The Pacific ocean would be just to the left of this scene but it gets painted enough and I wanted the clouds over the mountains anyway.


"Goleta Skies"
9" X 12" Oil on canvas covered panel
a detail of the painting....



Wednesday, June 17, 2009

A Desert Sunset

" A Desert Sunset"
8" x 10"
The reference photo for this painting was taken at sunset in the small town of Los Olivos just north of here last week. When I started painting in the foreground I began to see more of a desert sunset appearing so I just went ahead and finished it off that way....low desert scrub plants and grasses. Works for me...this one really reminds me of the Mojave desert at sunset.
I was recently watching the mini series Lonesome Dove and just floored (floored again since I saw Lonesome Dove when it was first broadcast in 1989) by the photography/cinematography....Lonesome Dove was filmed in both Texas and New Mexico but how they filmed it is was what made the difference. It is truly a masterpiece caught on film and everyone associated with that film was right on the mark. I suppose seeing the awesome evening scenes in the early part of it was what made me want to paint a sunset scene.
A detail of the painting....

Carrizo Wash

I used this particular color scheme on one of my earlier paintings and liked it. Something about the white sandy wash against the olive greens of the desert plants that I like. I decided to do another painting but on a smaller 8" x 10" format. I had a couple of masonite panels laying around in that size so off I went. I'm not sure if I'll stop on this one yet or not...I like it as it is but might opt to add more flowers, maybe. We had 2 daughters both graduating this last week so I didn't get any painting done and this was my painting to get back into the swing of things. Took a little longer than normal, 2 days of on and off painting. I don't like to skip painting for any length of time because it takes me a while to get back into the groove.

"Carrizo Wash"

8" x 10" Oil on panel

Friday, June 05, 2009

Moon Over The Chamberlain Ranch

" Moon Over The Chamberlain Ranch"
12" X 16" Oil on panel
There is a spot along Foxen Canyon that is up on a hill...one way looks towards the canyon andthe other has a great view of the rolling foothills of the Figueroa mountains. I never realised it but all of that property belongs to the Chamberlain ranch. These hills are used for cattle grazing and many times it is just the cattle and me up there. I did this painting at late evening showing the full moon rising up over the Figueroas.
A detail of the painting....
I was trying to keep these distant oaks soft looking and with various shapes. I also used them a bit to show the curve of the land out there.

Monday, June 01, 2009

Carrizo Spring

"Carrizo Spring"
12" X 16" Oil on panel

Getting good reference photos of the Carrizo Plain in bloom has really inspired me to paint yet another scene from that area. I like painting scenes of the Mojave desert but have yet to really get out there when things are really blooming. The atmosphere of the Mojave has been what I've painted there so far. The Carrizo Plain seems to me to be about color and sky....beautiful skies out there and a lot like skies here...almost too blue to paint them. They come off looking contrived so I keep away from super blue skies. You have to look for the glitches in nature at times to form a believeable painting, hahaha.
This dirt road ran right through an area of the plain that was carpeted in beautiful gold and yellow flowers....very small flowers but formed what looked like a rolling landscape of color.

A Detail of the painting....