Friday, April 27, 2012

Pastel of my Grandmother Addie Wilkins



Pastel on Canson paper approximately 16x20.
I  took a portrait class from Daniel Green at his annual summer workshop in his home in North Salem NY back in 2005.   He demonstrated a pastel portrait one evening from a live model that I was absolutely mesmerized with.  I have been using his techniques of marking off the head into four equal sections, using Nupastels to lay in the drawing and then working from dark to light with softer pastels.  I did this painting 4 or 5 years ago and have learned so much since then.  This was a quick painting to give my mother for Christmas.  My grandmother has since passed away but this painting hangs in my mom's home for her to remember how special and loving my grandmother was.  I also have my grandfather posted in this blog in another post.  We miss you MawMaw!


Redo of Abby


 Redo of the portrait of Abby. Spent a long time on this one!




Pastel of Don




Started this pastel of my step father. Haven't done a pastel in awhile. Was really fun getting back into it.


Monday, January 10, 2011

Pastel of Abby

Pastel on canson: Work in progress of my youngest daughter Abby. Doing the pastel as a study for an oil painting to come later.  Plan to paint all three daughters again. I have been studying with a very talented artist here in Memphis named Frank Morris who does astounding work.

http://www.frankmorrisportraits.com

My current goal is to become better at judging values and edges.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Cotton bolls

Oil 14x18: It "cotton pickin" time here in the south (Memphis area) and you find cotton everywhere. My wife decided to pick some cotton bolls branches and make an arrangement in a vase. This is my composition of the arrangement.  I couldn't pass up a chance to paint something that you just take for granted around here.  My mom has worked in the cotton business for about 50
SOLD
years.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Red Flowers (picked)

11x14 (canvas)  Reworked:  I just didn't like the last post of the red flowers on a summer day. Never got them to look like i wanted so I just (picked) them out and made it a field of smaller flowers!  I may try using the palette knife in the future for looser flowers as suggested on WetCanvas in the landscape forum.






Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Red flowers

11x14 oil on canvas: Just tried a small flower/landscape of some red flowers in a field. Enjoyed just putting all that color in there. Thought I'd paint a end of summer picture.

Friday, August 13, 2010

Barn commission

This is a painting from a photo a friend of ours ask me to paint of a barn where she grew up.  The photo was almost a sepia color due to its age so I had to put in my own interpretation of color.  The painting is 8x10 on panel and I'm going to paint a larger 16x20 for her as well.  This small one will go into a frame that is made from the actual barn wood.   SOLD

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Finding time to paint

I seem to go through times when I'm all fired up to paint and create something new and other times when busy schedules, work stress or just plain being tired keeps me from painting.  I think about sometimes of all the paintings that are being missed out on by my laziness!   Some of my reluctance to paint is from the fear of "not being able to paint a masterpiece" each time I step up to the easel.   I guess my masterpiece will always be my "next" painting.  I read that somewhere and thought it was so true.  I think in the end that the process of painting is just that.  It's just a process and a journey to be enjoyed along the way.  Maybe I can inspire myself here to pick up that brush tonight when I get home from work!

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Demo for Rita Crocker Art Conservatory class


This is a demonstration painting I did for an art class I taught at the Rita Crocker Art Conservatory at Trinity Baptist church a few years ago.  I had a small class that had never painted before and had a great time teaching.  All of the work in the class came out great and I was very proud of my students.  This was painted quickly for the class using whatever I could find laying around our kitchen beforehand.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Jenna in pencil

Portrait of Jenna my middle daughter in pencil and charcoal 11x14.  Jenna was valedictorian of her class this year,won an art contest for the school which puts her painting on the Shelby County school calendar for this next year.  She also won a school essay contest which earned her a lunch with an author from a book her class read and the school art contest to have her drawing on T-Shirts that the whole school wore on the end of year picnic.  She is a very talented piano player and loves to read.

This was the first of three pencil portraits I tried of each of my daughters.  I used Arches paper and was very pleased with the results.  It is a very forgiving paper and took a lot of abuse.  I've only used three of the sheets so far and I think there are 40 in the binding, so I need to get busy.

I did this picture free hand after using the grid methods for so long.  I always felt like I was cheating using the grid method and found it to be very tedious and frustrating.  I took a class by Daniel Green, a very well know portrait artist a few years ago and was fascinated by how he could capture a likeness using proportions and angles.  I began trying it out and really liked the results.  I found it much easier to get a likeness by just drawing rather than looking for shortcuts to drawing.  I even used to use a projector many years ago but it always had a rather odd look to it in the end and put it away in the attic about 10 years ago!

Pepper

 Pepper , the sweetest dog.   Pastel pencil on Pastelmat 16x12.