2/23/2010

Oil Sketch over Grisaille of Sharon Posing


Oil on Linen, 4 1/4" x 6 1/4"

click here to bid

This is a loose color study over
a black and white oil grisaille
(underpainting).

Painting this way is really fun,
because you do a black and white
version first, let it dry, and then
paint over it.

This is the way oil paintings were
first done in the 14th/15th Centuries.

I painted into a wet glaze of Gamblin's
Transparent Earth Red, a wonderful,
all-around useful color that I have used
many times for this same technique.

Cloud X


Oil on gessoed ragboard, 4" x 4 1/4" SOLD

click here to bid


This may be my last cloud. I have something else
to post that I did today.

Thanks for visiting.

2/17/2010

Cloud V


Oil on Canvas, 4" x 6" click here to bid SOLD
This is another in the series. I am really caught up in doing this, and
can't seem to stop painting clouds. I'm hoping to follow this up with
full landscapes. I'll just have to see what happens.
Thanks for visiting.

2/15/2010

Cloud III


Acrylic on Gessoboard, 4" x 4"
click here to bid

For this painting I used the new Interactive Acrylics,
and was pleasantly surprised. They come with several
different bottles of mediums. One that keeps the paint
wet longer, another that makes the paint dry really
fast, in case you want to use it as an underpainting.


It was easy to apply, brushed out nicely, had lovely
colors, and even blended easily, with the ability to
create soft edges. All in all, a very nice product. You
should try it.

2/14/2010

Cloud II


Oil on panel, 5" x 5", click here to bid
I think this is becoming a series. I love imagining the
sky. When I arrive at something that seems "real" to me,
it is so exciting. As though I am really "seeing" it.




2/13/2010

Cloud



Oil on Gessoboard, 4" x 4", click here to bid SOLD


After all this snow, gray skies, cabin fever, S.A.D.,

etc., etc., I just decided I had to paint myself a cloud

that would remind me that spring and summer will

really be here some day. As a matter of fact, I have

daffodils sticking out of the ground in my front yard-

only right now they're buried by three feet of snow.

It's a good thing they are hardy plants!


This picture just makes me feel happy, and I hope it

helps your mood too.


Thanks for visiting.

2/03/2010

Thunderheads











Gouache sketch on blue paper, 3" x 4"
I have been working hard on several paintings that are more
complicated . They require a lot of concentration, but leave
me little time for daily painting right now. I don't want to go back
on my resolution, but being preoccupied with painting is the point
here, I think(?). Not a daily race to see who can publish first.
So, I've posted one in the series of small landscape sketches in gouache
that I have been doing all along. Gouache fascinates me, because you
can use it either like watercolor (transparently), or opaquely, the way
it is really meant to be used. I like the leeway that gives me to experiment.
This particular study doesn't have any transparency in it, and was painted
fairly thickly, kind of like an oil painting. Anyone who loves oil painting
would love working in gouache!
Thanks for visiting today.

1/29/2010

The Vision


6 1/2" x 9", SOLD
Oil over prepared underpainting
(unfinished piece)

I am happy about the direction in which this
is going. It is a variation on a pose that I have
used before, and with which I am endlessly
fascinated. In this version the red dominates.

1/28/2010

The Beautiful Parakeet


3 1/8" x 4 7/8" - Pastel Pencil on Wallis Sanded Paper
I am working on some more complicated
paintings right now, and cannot be a "painter"
as such, every day. As everyone knows who
uses them, we paint when we use pastels.
I am very fond of this little drawing. I'm thinking
of going to the pet store - I asked them if I
could photograph their birds and they said
"yes" - to get some more material.

1/27/2010

Monotype of Spring in the Blue Ridge


Oil Color Monotype, 5" x 4" , painted on zinc, transferred to
Rives BFK using an etching press. click here to bid
This is a small monotype done in a loose fashion. I love this tech-
nique, and wish I had more time to do them. They're tricky though-
for every five that you do, maybe one or two are keepers... Although
this isn't my favorite - I've done so many - it has a nice feel
to it, I think.
Thanks for visiting.

1/22/2010

Figure Sketch in the Studio


Oil on Belgian Linen monted on board,
5.75" x 7.5" , click here to bid
This was really fun to do. It started out as a quick
sketch in mechanical pencil on some linen canvas
that I had. Then I coated that with polymer medium
with a little turquoise acrylic in it.
Then I painted in the light areas with a little white
and yellow oil paint.
After letting it dry over night I glazed it with Liquin
and Gamblin's Transparent Earth red, and it was all
stream-of-conciousness after that. I know it is loose,
but I rather like the effect, particularly the balance of
the bright turquoise blue and the bright spotlight.
Unfortunately, the beautiful effects of the paint don't
really come across in this photograph. Belgian linen
has a tighly-woven, exquisite surface that is unlike
anything else. It gives a delicate quality to your paint
passages that you sure can't see here! Just try to imagine
it....

1/21/2010

Monotype of a New Orleans Fountain Statue


Oil Color Monotype, painted on zinc, printed on BFK
Rives printmaking paper using an etching press
4.5" x 5"
NFS
I didn't have the time to do anything new today, so
this is my offering. I've always been fond of this.
Thanks for visiting.

1/15/2010

Sunset Sketch


Oil on Gessoed Wood, 5" x 7.5", click here to bid
I photographed this right after I finished painting it, so that explains
the glare. This was really fun to do. I used a different medium today,
which was essentially just linseed oil with some solvent in it. I usually
use Winsor & Newton's Liquin, and have for years, because it is such
a good glazing medium. But, this is a very frank sketch, so something
where you can just push and smear the paint around is best for
something like this. It's really fun.
Another good sketching medium is Dorland's wax medium. It also has
the advantage that it dries almost instantly, and, it can be buffed up
with a cloth when it's dry. How weird is that? Mix a little Liquin with it
to make it more fluid, and it's really great. By itself it's good for palette
knife work.
Thanks for visiting today.

1/13/2010

Christina

Oil on Board, 7 " x 9.5 ", SOLD
I have been working on this image over a series of
years, actually, and am glad to have finally resolved
it. The contrast of her almost-black hair against the
turqoise background is something that has always
obsessed me, but I couldn't rectify the colors in her
face with the rest of the painting. I finally decided to
just "go with the flow", and I'm pretty happy with the
results, which aren't really true to life due to my
camera. Her face is really more colorful than this.

1/08/2010

The Young Egon Schiele, a pencil drawing


Graphite on paper, 5.5" square, NFS

I've been getting ready for my weekend workshop all
day, and haven't had time to paint, so I thought I would
"cheat", and post something I've already done.

I love this drawing. I love Egon Schiele's work, bizarre
and idiosyncratic as it is, there is so much beauty there.
I know some people have a difficult time finding that
beauty, but for someone who loves to draw as much as
I do, it is very evident.

Poor thing, he died at a very young age (early 20's I think)
of the pandemic flu in 1918. What a waste of a great talent.
Well, he certainly produced a lot while he was alive.

This was done from a photo of his face at the age of about
sixteen, and clearly shows his intelligence and sensitivity,
I think.

Thanks for visiting today.

1/07/2010

Sophie by the Window II


Oil on Canvas on Wood, 7 1/8" x 10 1/2" SOLD

I did not paint this in one day. I have been working
on this painting on and off for a few months now.
It is a copy (in reverse) of a painting I did of my
daughter about seven years ago. I just love the
composition and colors so much that I had to do
another one. It was painstaking, but worth it, I think.
I love the orange/gold/yellow kimono jacket contrasted
with the purple/blue/white kimono robe, and the light
in her hair. Isn't she beautiful? (on the inside, too)

1/06/2010

The Actress


Oil on Primed Paper, 4" Square SOLD
Well, so far, I'm doing well with my resolution to
paint every day. I'm really enjoying it too. It's so
stimulating! There are just so many things to paint.
I love painting people, and I love landscapes too.
I have a weekend-long workshop this coming
weekend, and then on Monday I'll be teaching all
day, so I'll have to see how I can work things out.
I don't relish the idea of ignoring my family, but
sometimes one has to do this.
I remember reading, in Life with Picasso, by
one of his mistresses whose name escapes me
at the moment, that he used to paint all night,
and she would deliver his breakfast to him in the
morning. What service! Of course, she was an artist
too - not that that mattered to him, of course......
Then there was Mahler and and his wife Alma Schindler,
whom he forbade to compose...............
F. Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda, Nijinsky and his wife - boy
these guys were intimidated by their wives'
creative urges. What a shame.....
I'm lucky - I don't have that problem. Thank God.
Thanks for looking.

1/05/2010

Winter Sunset


Oil over Acrylic on 6" square Linen-covered masonite board

This small painting is part of my resolution to myself to do a painting
every day except Monday (I teach all day).
I finished the figure paintingyesterday. I'll probably do another painting
this afternoon as it is only 1 pm. We'll see what happens!
This is inspired by a photograph, but the
rest is imaginary.
I wish it would snow!

Sonia's Back


Oil on Stretched Canvas, 7.75" x 10", SOLD
Here is that painting I showed the beginning of a few
months ago. I finally finished it! Don't ask me why it
took so long....you don't want to know. It's a loooong
story.
Anyway, I have another post today - a small landscape
painting I partially made up. But I am very happy with
this one, if I do say so myself. I love the colors. I used
my chromatic grays that I mix to paint the drapery that
she is sitting on. It came out perfectly. Just a little
dioxizine purple and some chromatic gray warm!
So much fun.
Sorry about the glare.
Thanks for visiting today.

1/04/2010

Storm over Green Fields


Oil on linen laid down on wood, 6" x 8" - SOLD
As it is the beginning of the New Year, and as life has taken me away
from my work so consistently in recent months, I have made a New
Year's Resolution to complete a painting at least six days a week,
starting TODAY.
These paintings will be for bid starting at $100 in my eBay store.
They will range in size from "4 square, to 8" x 10", or sometimes larger,
and I can't promise they will always be oil paintings, as I love to experi-
ment so much.
This painting was photographed literally the minute after
I finished it - that is why it is so shiny.
Thanks for visiting, and I wish my "followers", and all else who visit
here the Happiest of New Years!
Priscilla

11/14/2009

Sunset on a Lake



Another small gouache painting. Will they ever stop? No matter what else I am working
on, I can't help coming back to these. This one was done on light blue Canson pastel paper
and I rather like it...... Size isn't everything, you know.

Thanks for stopping by.

11/10/2009

Purple Hill


This is another in the series of tiny gouache paintings that I am addicted
to doing. This is a bit smaller than it really is, but nonetheless, it is
small. I don't know what it is about this medium that encourages me to
work in a miniature mode - perhaps I was a monk doing manuscript
illuminations in a former lifetime - but I sincerely enjoy it. This will
be on a sheet of four on blue paper.
This color isn't completely true, but it's close.
Thanks for visiting.

11/05/2009

STANDING MODEL WITH GREEN PILLOW


SOLD
This oil painting was begun on a piece of paper, and then
I decided to affix it to a canvas board with archival adhesive.
It has a bit of nice texture because of this. I always liked this
image, and this is th second version I've done of this .
Thanks for visiting.

10/17/2009

Model Back and Colors revisited


FOR SALE SOLD
I decided to re-post this painting tonight, because last
night's image was photographed, and did not do it justice -
I couldn't stand the way the image looked in the end.
So, after using a quick-drying varnish this morning before
going to teach my class, I scanned it in my printer tonight,
and here is the painting the way it really looks. The true
colors, and minus the strange blue glare/glow of yesterday!

10/16/2009

Model Back and Colors


Oil on Wallis sanded pastel paper, 7" x 12" SOLD
This painting is much more luminous and lovely than it looks
in this photograph. It is not matte, but rather quite glossy.
It might seem strange to be painting on pastel paper, but quite
a few people do it, because it is an impervious surface, and also
archival. -- To tell the truth, this actually started out as a pastel
drawing, but halfway through, I just got the urge to use oils. There
was something about the light, and the color of the drape that
she is sitting on. I felt like doing a loose, sort of bravura study
and nothing lends itself to that like oil paint!

10/15/2009

Head of Hypnos lll, (God of Sleep)


Pastel, Pastel Pencil, and Vine Charcoal on White Paper, 7" x 12"
This is number three, because this actually is the third drawing that I have done of this
head. I have about eight photos of it from many angles, and am just sort of obsessed with
it, I guess. The drawings never look the same, and I have never yet really tried to create the
feeling of the bronze that it was originally created from. I'll have to do that next - that's really fun.
I was fairly satisfied with this, though not completely. There is some inherent ethereal
beauty in this face that makes it difficult to make it appear manly, although in the actual head
itself there are many manly elements that are particuarly evident from certain points of view.
I also find it intriguing just that they had a god of sleep to begin with, and always feel I
am creating something "unusual" to say the least, when I draw this object. I just never
tire of it. I think it is so beautiful. I'm sure I will do many more.

10/14/2009

Ancient Roman Sculpture of a Child. ca 10 BC


SOLD
I decided to go back to working in pastels today, although I'm
alternating this with working in oils, to honor some commitments.
For some reason, I really get inspired by images of ancient sculptures.
This child was particularly moving. One doesn't see many sculptures
of many children extant - particularly one this expressive! It was
marble, but I decided, with my "artist's license", to take some liberties
with the color, so I could give it a blue background. I love blue!! Any
chance to put blue in a picture I will always take. And there are so
many hues of it! Actually, my oil palette has about eight blues on it.
They areso inspiring.

Anyway, this is my offering for today. And, as I said recently, I am
beginning, slowly, to offer these things for sale again in my eBay store.
There will be more information about each item there.

Thanks for your interest in my work.

10/09/2009

Bearded Iris in Gouache and Watercolor


FOR SALE HERE
My gouache class is going to start working on flowers in the coming week,
and I'm just trying to get together some examples in watercolor and
gouache.
The truth is, I prefer the combination of WC and gouache to just
plain gouache, which I find rather mat and dull. I like the variations
inherent in combining both mediums into one piece. Of course
there are many beautiful gouache paintings, and I have used gouache
exclusively myself, but for right now, I'm gravitating towards the
watercolor/gouache combination.
Tomorrow I need to get some real flowers to work from. I hope I can
find some interesting ones to work from. I just wish summer were not
over, and that flowers weren't so expensive! Maybe I should move to
Florida!!

10/06/2009

Black Sweet Peas


FOR SALE HERE
Ever since I lived in Blacksburg, Virginia, when my
husband was going to Architecture school, I have been
fascinated by black sweet pea flowers. They grew wild
around the house where we were living, or perhaps,
someone had planted them there. I did several monotypes
of them in oils, all of which I loved, but unfotunately, I no
longer have my favorite one.

This painting is gouache and watercolor, yet again. I'm happy
with it, although I don't feel the same sense of mastery that
I do over oils. I haven't had the years of practice yet. I'll
just keep plugging along. The color in the picture is actually
a bit more red, and while I tried to correct it, it still doesn't
come across totally as it really is. No problem. It still looks
like some black sweet peas, and that was my objective for
the day.
I just love this medium!

Thanks for visiting .

10/05/2009

Late Afternoon in Florida in August


FOR SALE HERE
I did this today while I was teaching my oil painting
studio class. I had very few students for some reason.
I teach gouache - which this is - in the morning, and
I had already gotten it going, and couldn't bear to stop.
My students were very accomodating however, and we
all had a wonderful afternoon!

10/02/2009

Rose Tulip


FOR SALE HERE
I am having a real tug of war lately between my oils and my gouache.
I have things I really have to get done in oils. Paintings that are unfinished
make me very uncomfortable.
This morning I painted all morning, but I noticed that my heart just
wasn't in it. Have I become a "gouche painter"? Who knows? But it
sure seems like it. For one thing, it's just so much easier. No solvent,
no washing the brushes when I'm done. And, there is something about
the particular mercurial characteristics of the watercolor and the
gouache that I just love.
We'll I'll just keep this up like this for a while and see how it goes.
Today I asked the angels to help me. I believe that they did.
Thanks for stopping by today.

9/29/2009

Sunset Sky


This is another in the series of small gouaches that I have been doing
lately. I painted in oils all morning, and just couldn't keep from grabbing
the gouache by about 3 PM. This isn't the greatest piece I've ever done, but
it has a certain feeling that I like. I figure if I keep on doing them I can't
help butget better and better. Anyway, it is really fun.

Thanks for visiting today.

9/24/2009

Oil Painting of Figure Back in Progress


This is what some of my paintings look like underneath. This is a
variation on a grisaille underpainting. I have talked about this before.
That word is based on the French for our word gray, gris, and refers to
a monochromatic underpainting or underdrawing. In this particular
case it isn't completely monochromatic, but as I was working on a toned
canvas, I was able to use just a lot of white and a bit of color to work up
my figure after drawing it in with a pencil.
Because I know that graphite has a tendency to migrate up through paint
layers (weird!!), I sprayed my drawing heavily with both a polymer and
Damar spray. I know I will be also using a lot of glazes and layers of Liquin
painting medium, so I am not that worried about it. I teach this method,
which is called the Indirect method, as opposed to the Direct method
(think Van Gogh and John Singer Sargent - no pencils there, and no
underdrawings either), at the Art League School in Alexandria, Virginia,
where I live.
I am very happy with the way this painting is starting out, and have a
pretty good idea about how the color harmony is going to proceed at this
point. Now, I just have to force myself to stop working in gouache........
Thanks for visiting today.

9/23/2009

Imaginary Landscape #4 and a Page of Gouache Studies






I 'm glad that they let you format where the pictures go in this thing, I certainly
wouldn't want one picture sitting right on top of the others.

The smaller pictures are not as small as they appear, and are more distinct in reality. I
had a lot of fun doing them . Both pieces were done on Fredrix Watercolor Canvas. I just
can't get enough of working on this substance. It is just the greatest.

I know I have to start working in oils in a few days, to fulfill some commitments I have
made (you have to earn that money!), so I will really savor my last few days of working
in gouache and watercolor - a truly wonderful combination. Everyone should try it.
If you are at all afraid of watercolor -- try gouache! - there's no such thing as a mistake
in gouache, because you can cover everything up!

Happy painting!!

9/22/2009

Imaginary Landscape #3


This is another watercolor and gouache piece, done in class as a demo for my students
yesterday. I was lucky it came out so well. That doesn't always happen!!
This was done on a wonderful new product which I just love! Fredrix Watercolor Canvas.
I had been painting on it already in oils, because it has a lovely smooth, delicate surface,
and I had been using mostly paper and panels, because I Hate canvas generally!! But this
stuff is very different.
But, for watercolor, and gouache, it's absolute revelation! You can lift, wipe back, lay
washes, remove whole areas of color - you name it, it's more like working with oils
practically when you work on this product. I've been having so much fun, I can't wait
to get up in the morning! Of course all days aren't successful ones, but one can always
try, and always hope! I'm planning on filling this whole sketchbook with these landscapes,
exectued entirely with brush, and having a feeling of being partially imagined. I've got
13 to go. The paper in the book is Canson watercolor.
I usually begin by covering my picture area with Winsor and Newton Lifting Preparation,
because right now I like to paint skies, and it is enormously helpful. Of course this isn't
necessary on the Fredrix Watercolor Canvas, but I sometimes do it anyway.
So much fun.
Thanks for visiting.

9/21/2009

Imaginary Landscape #2


This is another example of a completely painted gouache landscape that I made for my
new class today. I was pretty happy with it, although I don't think it really comes across
very well in the photograph. I just love working in gouache. It is so forgiving. I even did
a decent demo in class in it today. Demos are ususally problematical for me, but I find this
medium very "friendly" and also intuitive.
I almost feel like it's "guiding' me to do the right
thing in a piece.
I could do this for twenty-four hours a day.


9/20/2009

Imaginary Landscape #1


I was making some examples for my students in a gouache class that is going to begin
tomorrow, and I wanted to create an example of one done entirely with a brush - no
pencil lines at all.
This is what I came up with.
It isn't very big, but I like the colors, and
the composition. I feel the contrast is rather dynamic, and I wouldn't mind being in that
place, either.

Thanks for visiting.

9/01/2009

Gouache and Pencil Standing Figure Life Study


This is a drawing I was rather pleased with, and it is missing
the head because it was a demo of using gouache ("gwash" -
opaque watercolor) in washes with a pencil, to quickly sketch
the figure, and capture the contrapposto stance. (where one
side opposes the other - very popular throughout history).
This model was also very graceful, but had such a sad face
I could hardly bear to draw it - but as previously stated, that's
not why it's missing.

8/30/2009

Milena in "Essence" Technique


SOLD
This piece was done in the "essence" technique, which, I
just recently learned, Degas invented to be able to work in
a medium that looked like pastel which he would not have
to frame. -- Although Degas is thought of as being wealthy,
and was, in fact related to Italian nobility, his brother's
erstwhile, failed cotton business in New Orleans placed a
great deal of financial pressure on him during many years
of his life, so I guess he was looking, like most of us do, for
ways to economize. -- In this technique, the oil is soaked out
of the paint overnight on blotters, paper towels - Degas
apparently used cardboard - then scraped onto the palette
the next day.
Then, the paint is diluted with solvent (essence in French)
and can be painted on any unprepared paper surface.
Fun!

8/29/2009

More Advanced Demo from my Drawing into Painting Class


This is a semi-colored grisaille underpainting done over a drawing done
with a mechanical pencil and then covered with a thin layer of acrylic
medium tinted orange. The oil colors used to develop the picture so far
where simply black and white, with a bit of brown and green on the mag-
nolia blossom.
The interesting color phenomenon occurring here is do to a situation
known as "optical grays". That is that any medium (center of a value scale
of five values) gray placed near a color or about the same value and intensity
will take on the complement of that color. Notice how the sphere appears to
be blue in parts. This is because the background is slightly orange. The
sphere is really only a gray made of black and white.
Color is amazing.

2nd Project Demo from my Drawing into Painting Class


This is a demonstration of a grisaille underpainting that has been partially
painted over, by painting into a wet "imprimatura", or layer of transparent paint.
A grisaille, some of you may not know, is any monochromatic underpainting, but
is called what it is because the word gris means "gray" in French, and in the early
days of the development of oil painting technology, underpaintings were most often
done in black and white, or raw umber and white. Leonardo actually used brown,
and a close inspection of Vermeer reveals that he sometimes used a greenish color.
Anyway, this type of painting is known as "Indirect Painting", in that you separate
the drawing, or "form" part, from the color part. It is actually the easiest type of painting,
and is believed to have been developed in Flanders by the Van Eyck brothers in the late
14th C.. -- My underpainting in this demo was done in black and white acrylic, but in my
classes, we use Mars Black and Titanium white, because Mars black is the leaset oily black,
It is important to keep the lowest levels of a painting almost oil-free, and then gradually
add oil (fat) as you build up the layers of the painting. This lessens the chances of cracking
and crazing of the paint surface over time.
This type of painting is directly opposite that done by alla prima ("all at once", "at the first",
who began working in the late 16th, early 17th C.'s, such as Frans Hals and Rembrandt. Later
on, Van Gogh and John Singer Sargent, and Mary Cassatt are marvelous examples of this
direct approach in which one both draws and paints onto a bare canvas, creating form and
color all at once with the brush.
Thanks for stopping by.

Desi Standing


This little sketch I did at an all-day figure drawing
class I taught today at The Art League School in
Alexandria, VA. The model was so beautiful, I now I
did not do him justice, but let's face it, how much can
you do in ten minutes. The drawing practice is the
thing, after all.