Category: StudioJournal

  • Morning’s at Seven

    Morning’s at Seven

    Playbill and program cover for a production of Morning’s at Seven, a comedy by Paul Osborn.

  • November Churchyard

    November Churchyard

    This atmospheric watercolor of a Maine churchyard by Christopher Cart was originally a cover illustration for a book about hauntings in Maine by DownEast Books.  It is a beautiful painting in its own right.  It gives us that feeling of sad beauty and eternity that Maine natives know when the last brilliant Maple leaves have fallen, and winter is waiting in the wings.

  • Portrait of Laura

    Portrait of Laura

    Oil portrait of a Maine activist.  The subject stands on a staircase in the Maine State House.  Her beautiful  youthful face is in contrast to her working attire and the hard surfaces of her surroundings.    The butterflies which have followed her inside add a magical touch to “Portrait of Laura.”

     

    In a private collection

  • Memoirs of a Common Man

    Memoirs of a Common Man

    Memoirs of a Common Man

    One day you wake,
    a silent quake
    your path’s compass turn

    a new day is stuck
    to a limitless line,
    when young

    someday, one day
    you find, a new day
    is one day gone.

  • The Muse

    The Muse

    This is a watercolor on paper of a girl I saw at an exhibit in New York.  She was as much a vision as anything in the show.  Andrew Wyeth saw this painting a number of years back at a show in Rockland, Maine.  His comment was, “this is a very sexy picture”.

    By the way the painting behind the girl is mine as well.

  • paintings fall into place

    When we begin the process to create a new painting we sometimes have the illusion an idea could be expressed in many ways.  And of course, in reality, this is true.  However, as the painting develops it becomes clear that there is only one way it wants to be.  So maybe there are endless possiblilites but at any one point a painting just has to be as it is.  This is one reason why it is crucial to fix errors as the arise, because all work that follows will be built on what is there….and if it is wrong, well, you see the point…

  • Art Generations

    We too often seem to think of the art world as an evolutionary process…one phase evolving into the more advanced phase. The problem with this idea is that it leads to pinnacles, which by their very nature are dead ends. In hindsight the route from Giotto to Bougereau may seem like a period of growth toward one perfect polishing of knowledge and centuries of combined rendering skills. This attitude can lead to envy of those times gone by when apparent perfection reigned.

    In truth I think the art world is more a series of reactions. One group or age or artist reacting to the work of another group or age or artist. No one in the Renaissance was thinking “oh if I work hard, I can contribute to the pool of knowledge that will eventually produce the great polished Art of the 19th century.”

    Art is not a Galileo to moon walk type of growth. Well, to a certain extent this is the inevitable process for short phases..one teacher passing on skills to the next. However, every great artist needs to have his skills in hand while he is alive, preferably early, to make a contribution…to make great art.

    So the Donatello’s and Botticelli’s may have looked back to ancient Greece for inspiration but not in the sense of, “damn, the art of our age is primitive, let’s see if we can copy the greeks.” No, it was with the full fervent passion of creativity and hunger to use some of that cool Greek stuff and, damn, do it even better.

    I guess what I am saying is that Rembrandt wasn’t trying to help in the grand artists evolution. He grabbed the skills around him, bounced off Caravaggio, and then settled down to make art, one painting at a time.

    Bernini was carving away yelling at the top of his lungs, “you think Michael was good? Check this out, whooohoo, makes Michey’s stuff look like, well, like rocks.”

    But then you get artists trying to stick with Bernini, making stone look like soft flesh and leafs all over again. Grand illusions. Man, how do you top it? Can’t, so let’s just do more and more stuff like it.

    But then along comes a Rodin who says, “yah, yah look I can do that…I did it on the cheap to decorate people’s gardens.. Look this is real emotion in sculpture…not about illusion of surface…but EMOTION from the core.”

    Reactions, not evolution. Some reactions are reacting with, some against. But reactions are good. Sometimes artists react to inventions or changes in materials. When paint companies start inventing new colors for us…what are we supposed to do, say, “no those aren’t the proper art colors used by the great masters before.” Hell no, we are supposed to do the same as the early renaissance artist when he woke up to greco roman stuff kicking around. “Hot damn this stuff is cool. How can I use it.”

    One of the key lessons of the 20th century art has been that paint is beautiful. And this was one of the major slaps in the face of 19th salon art that subjugated paint to illusion.

    We had a while glorying in the paint surface. Cool. But that got old too. So now pictures are back but what to do with them?

    Where do we go now? Painting is dead they say. Is it?  No. Painting is fine and healthy, just waiting for someone to do something with it. There just isn’t one definitive style right now. We live in a scattered, hectic and eclectic age and our art reflects that.

    You can hit a good gallery district and see good abstracts next to good figurative work next to good mannerist work next to…well you get the idea. There isn’t one over powering form of painting that is defining us….or reflecting us. That leaves realist artists defensive being mere retro artists…and abstract artists defensive about not having super human rendering skills.
    Turn back the clock?

    Nah, just grab as many tools and skills around us as we can find and let’s have a blast making stuff. Who cares what comes out as long as it looks good and blows someone’s socks off. That’s art.

  • Backstage…studies

    A couple of studies for a new painting in the works. This is one from my backstage/theatrical series. The backstage environment is such an intriguing space.

  • Wayne Thiebaud

    A very good tribute to one of our good ones.

  • snapshots, novels, tone poems

    Some paintings or pieces of art are snapshots–one thought, one impression, one gesture, that you want to capture, bam, on a page. I think this is where the monotypes come from. They are things I see, in my head or out, that just want to be on paper, solidified to be seen.

    Some ideas are more short stories or novels (yes, I know I am mixing my metaphors here). Stories with starts and finishes and plot lines. These are crafted over time, lots of studies, comp sketches, developed to make a canvas tell the story well, with color, structure, figures, mood, gesture—all the tools a picture artist uses to create a compelling world within a frame.

    And to continue the hacking apart of any metaphor consistency, some paintings, I am coming to realize, are more tone poems, needing to be paintings tht evoke a mood but perhaps do not evolve around just one plot.. These ideas just will not be contained within one illusionist framed world. A ‘realistic’ or ‘naturalistic’ painting, after all, creates an illusion of a single world contained within the canvas frame. It may be a real world impression or a complete fantasy, however, to maintain the illusion of ‘reality’ the space within the canvas edge has to be consistent…any breaks in the style of the illusion and the magic world falls….becomes paint. Consistency of space is the conscience on the shoulder of every ‘realistic’ artist. “Hey, buddy, that doesn’t really work, does it? That line flattens out her head, doesn’t look real.”

    This is nothing new. Western art woke up to this breaking of illusionary space and in the 20th century used it to great and wonderful ends, glorying in the wonders of paint in itself…no longer a tool or means to and end but beautiful in its own surface.

    All well and good. But some of us still want narrative in art and we resort to creating a believable space. There are endless, ‘realistic’ styles which our eyes are willing to accept as true. If we are true to our style we can create believable space and tell good and great stories. Break that style consistency and the space illusion breaks as well.

    So back to the tone poem idea. I have some ideas that have been kicking around in my head and in drawing pads for, well, some for many years. These ideas simply won’t be contained within one imagined world. I have tried…and the results end up trashed. I think these ideas need to be several spaces combined. What do I mean? Paint wise I am not sure–that will show up with the canvases.

  • 100 Embraces #5

    100 Embraces #5

    One monotype in the 100 Embraces series.

    • monotype on paper
    • 7 x 7 inches, image size
    • $250, matted
  • Composition

    Recently, I had a student question the idea that artists really build paintings upon complex substructures, assuming that artists are actually just painting the inspiration, conferring with the muse until it looks good. Well, um, that would be a truly dumb way to design a complex picture. While this may work fine for the simple composition in the average plein air painting or model session study, it is no way to build a complex serious studio piece. Also this makes the assumption that building the substructure is not a creative muse chatting part of the piece. On the contrary, there is plenty of musing on composition and perhaps even sipping of red wine in classic artist style…well, here is what I did for a recent piece:

    When I work on a complex painting, composition is one of the key tools used to tell the story…and to keep multiple objects in order while implying movement.  Real life is chaos.  As painters we need to organize a complex scene with one or several sub-structures to keep the action, movement from flying apart.

    This painting, Sacred Datura, is one where I spent some time designing the structure, weaving together several organizing sub-structures to create the composition.  The story needs to define this structure.  I wanted the girl to be dancing in her own quiet world, within the larger world of the gathering.  First of all, she is mildly isolated because the two figure groups face away from her, giving her a private space.

    Another basic structure is the ‘eye’ shape focusing attention on the girl’s head.  She is slightly off center in this shape giving her movement…centering her would have made her static.  The almost parallel arms, (hers raised and the background woman’s) are also important for pushing her into quiet movement.  That spot pushes and pulls her…because it is a parallel it pulls her to the other woman while her turn and twist pull away.

    Speaking of parallels, a good way to organize multiple forms in a painting and avoid chaos is making things parallel…but not in an obvious way.  Quietly organizing while letting the design breath.

    The painting is also held together with a  normal zigzag composition going from key elements.

    The movement of the painting is based on concentric curves.  I love curves…even while organizing they imply movement.

    Finally, another pair of substructures in the two key areas is based on the figure eight flow.

     

    Other things add to the movement:     The merging of forms in the shadowing on her thighs lets them slip sideways.  Crisply defined forms here would have anchored her hips, rather than allowing movement.  Also the pale skirt pulls toward the like colored datura, while the dense pattern of the leaves in front of her is jittery and wants to expand visually and pushes her right, while her head and foot pull left.

    Playing with composition is  one of the most enjoyable, and important, portions of making a painting.

     

  • model time

     

    I am really enjoying these drawing sessions. No worries or obligations other than drawing.

  • reworking

    This is a painting that was ‘finished’ last summer. And yet this week while this piece was back in the studio I dug back in. I didn’t think this painting was telling the right story…or rather wasn’t telling the story in the right way. We’ll see where it goes. Last year the original idea for the painting got sidetracked by a tangent idea. Here I am trying to get back to the original concept. Also taking it away from being strictly a narrative painting while exploring a few other ideas of composition.

    this is last’s summer’s version.

  • sketch

     

    just a quick sketch of a model from the other day.  It is very important to keep my hand in everyday or I can really get a flabby hand.  A lot of the studio day is of necessity taken up with stretching canvas, mixing palettes, that sort of thing.  But I really need to draw daily or when the brush is in hand it is not in shape.

  • Study for Amigas

    • study for “Amigas”
    • graphite and conté on toned paper

    Before I paint I do tons of studies on paper and canvas.

  • Destino: Dali and Disney

    Destino: Dali and Disney

    This small animated movie was the product of Dali and Disney joining forces over 50 years ago. Fascinating.

  • drawing class

    There is a very talented crop of new art students coming up. I am teaching a figure drawing class now in Bath and I have to say it is a thrill. Some of these students are really very good.  And the daughter of a friend is putting together a portfolio for her college entrance.   self-portraitIt will be a joy to watch them grow.

    I feel it is the responsibility of those of us with a few tidbits of art knowledge to pass it on as best we can to this next generation.

  • Mural website

    The launch of my own new website was followed close on the heels by the new website designed for the Brunswick mural. m2The site is : www.BrunswickMural.com.  This is the mural I painted for the Brunswick Trinidad Sister City Association to celebrate their cultural commitment to Trinidad, Cuba.

    It is a huge painting, for me at least, 8 x 32 feet, with over 50 figures…a major work with over a year and a half of painting work in it, from sketch to unveiling. A thoroughly enjoyable project.

    If you get a chance head over to Brunswick to see it and then drop a note if you wish.

    [singlepic id=29 w=320 h=240 float=center]

    I kept the palette bright to bring the color of Cuba to Brunswick.  I have authoring rights over there on the mural site as well, so I will be adding to the sections on the process of the mural.