Tagged: sailboat

Jun 22

On vacation in “Art-land”

Yesterday was SUCH a busy day!  I was late getting to art class and then I was on a roll, so I was late getting OUT of art class!  My wonderful husband saw how focused I was on the painting and took time out of his busy schedule to mix up some bread dough and get the kids working on cleaning up the house and making lunch.  He was very gracious about it.

So, while I was on vacation in “Art-land” forgetting about all of the zillions of things that really needed to be getting accomplished, I painted a nice little ACEO of our sailboat, the Dulcinea, as a study for my next painting.  This is a lousy cell-phone pic of it, but it gives you a basic idea of the painting.

I made a lot of progress on the Twin Rocks painting, too.  Then it was time to get back to reality.  Kids, dishes, cooking, baking, more dishes…  Check the WIP page to see the stages Twin Rocks has gone through and then let me know what you think!

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Jun 10

Painting is more than seeing

Aaahh, Friday!  My hubby and I have a regular date for coffee at our local cafe every Friday morning just to talk – away from the kids!  Well, except Justin for now.  Being only 3 months old does have privileges.  One of these days, though, he’ll stay home with everyone else on Fridays, too.

Among other things, we were talking about painting this morning.  I was mentioning to him that boats are easier for me to paint, now.  I’m thinking I just might be ready to attempt a painting of our little sailboat.  I think I’m beginning to understand them a little more, the shape of the hull and the billow of the wind in the sail.  I’m discovering that it takes a certain amount of understanding of your subject in order to paint it believably.  There is more involved in this process than just seeing.

The Dulcinea

For example, I can paint a decent horse.  As I touch highlights to a horse’s breast and flanks with my brush, I can feel my hands running over horsehair and smell that warm horse-in-the-sunshine smell.  I spent many, many hours with my mustang mare, Natasha, when I was a teen.  For a long time, she was my very best friend.  Horses are great listeners when you’re riding alone on old logging roads.  Painting a portrait of a horse, for me, involves more than just reproducing colors and shapes.  ”Understanding” is the closest word I can come up with to describe it, but it seems to be even more than that.

So if it takes understanding to paint something that is believable, the really interesting thing  is how painting so clearly illustrates to me how much I don’t understand.  I spent some time driving around running errands and grocery shopping yesterday and looking at the shapes of fir trees.  Specifically, the shapes of the branches coming toward you.  By the way, artists should not drive because we have a tendency to look at the pretty scenery and forget sometimes to look where we’re going, but that’s another topic, altogether. :)

There are lots of things out there that I have discovered I don’t understand.  I thought I knew what they looked like – until I tried to paint them.  I don’t understand fir trees.  Is it because I’ve never touched a fir tree?  Hardly.  I’ve just never cared to understand them.  No, I’m not looking to do some kind of Vulcan mind-meld with a tree.  I need to spend some time outside with my sketchpad until I can really paint one that I can believe.  The kind that looks like you could reach out and pluck a needle off of it.  I’m fascinated with the different shades of green and the pattern of light filtering through the branches and down onto the trunk of the tree.  The bark, alone, is fascinating.  Someday, I will paint a good fir tree.

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Jun 01

It feels good to get back to work

I just posted some photos of my current project on my WIP page.  This one has been a long time in coming and, shame on me, I chickened out and didn’t work on it at all last week.

I started painting it May 3rd, although I’ve been thinking about this one since last August.  It took a while to decide I needed to just pick up the brush and DO IT!  It’s just paint, for goodness sake!

I did finish two ACEO paintings that I’m quite happy with, though.  ”Spring Chives” and “Ocean Breeze”  These are both listed for sale in my Etsy shop www.etsy.com/shop/wendelika

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May 29

Little projects

I’m working on a big project again.  I’ve avoided getting started on it for a long time.  I finally just decided to get the canvas set up and DO IT!

I worked on it a few times making great progress, really happy with what I was beginning to see in it, trying not to lose ground.  I was going along fairly well with it, until I laid in the foreground.  Now I’m really unhappy with the color I put in there.  I should have fixed it last week but I really didn’t want to think about it, so in true Wende fashion, I avoided the problem and worked on a couple little ACEO paintings, instead.

I’m really happy with the little sailboat.  It’s called “Ocean Breeze.”  I just listed it on Etsy yesterday and by this morning, it was included in a treasury! http://www.etsy.com/treasury/4de11671b5ab8eefb845eb5a/summer-breeze-makes-me-feel-fine

The other one I did, I had started the week before, so it just needed a little finishing and a light coat of varnish.  It is an oil pastel painting called “Spring Chives”  I’m not really happy with the photo I got of it.  It’s much cleaner in real life.

Sometimes it’s really nice to get something done quickly.  Now I can go back to the big project feeling like I have accomplished something and, yes, I really do know how to paint something worth looking at.

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