Sunday, August 27, 2023

"Plein Air" flower work

 This summer I’ve been doing "plein air" flower drawings with colored pencils. I found an old spiral bound sketch book that was empty. I challenged myself to fill it up by the end of the summer. Consequently, I work fast, getting down what I see as quick as I can. Sometimes I am holding three or four pencils at a time drawing in different colors. Letting them blend and fill large areas. I have never really worked with colored pencils much before so this has been fun, learning how to use them.

I have been going with a friend about once a week to various parks within walking distance to the studio. My friend has been working in watercolors and I, in colored pencils.


Making these drawings has given me a couple of things to think about. First is the difference in drawing from life vs working from photos. I take pictures of these flowers scenes so I can make drawings later in the studio. I find that working from the pictures I can’t visualize the depth as well, where my on site drawing I find myself working much more with it. It seems more important for me to incorporate depth into the sketch when I work on site.

I have also been thinking about textures. Recreating the textures of the leaves, flowers, and glass. I got to check out some Van Gogh drawings this summer at the Met. He had a great way of simply creating different textures of landscape with simple line work.

This work has motivated me into wondering how I could translate these into paint. The artist Joan Mitchell comes to mind as an artist that has taken this vision of landscape to some conclusions. Also I found the exhibition of Cecily Brown at the Met quite instructive and much on my mind while working on these.










Art work from summer 2023


Wrapping up another summer art season. An area of thoughts about painting have been along the lines of developing scenarios that let the paint flow, mix and develop on their own. I set parameters of color, and regions of the painting surface for mixing to happen. This system leads to abstract landscape style compositions. 
This summer 2023 I have been working exclusively with Acrylic paints. I feel that the setup and working/drying time has worked with my attention span and schedule. I have been thinning down the paints with water. I haven’t had the budget for getting any mediums. The use of old latex house paint makes the Artist grade Acrylic paint behave in some unpredictable ways. I always welcome that!
Below is a small body of work that I created using scrap wood panels that were used as painted wood grain samples. Not sure if this work is finished yet. I feel it could go in a couple of different directions. Perhaps it could be a background for something painted on top, or just a stand alone abstraction. I need to keep them around and see how I feel in the future.








Archangel Thunderbird


This group evolved from a scrap piece of plywood that was used as a table top cover. It had random paint stains left from other projects. I was using the sulfur yellow color to blend in with actual sulfur powder in a larger series of paintings about the American revolution. I cut down the larger board into smaller fragments. I was holding onto these scraps for quite a while until I found this use. The yellow sulfur color made me think about a sulfur cloud. I added wings. Imagine an Archangel of sulfur and thunder.


"Archangel Thunderbird" 73/4"x 8.5" Oil on panel

"Archangel Thunderbird" 11"x 7.5" Oil on panel

"Archangel Thunderbird" 7.5" x 8" Oil on panel

























Spotted Lanternfly "Pest"

 This summer was also the year of the large-scale establishment of the Chinese Lantern Fly in my area. They are quite a striking bug with red and gray wings. They also have a cool spot and line patterns that I thought would make for some interesting abstract paintings. 


I created a number of smaller life size paintings of the whole bug flying. They remind me of a decorative wall paper.