Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Day 30, Paintings 29 and 30! Yippee!!

I am so happy that I was able to finish 2 paintings today. I did the drawing and underpainting for “Almost Home” last night so I would be able to complete both. I painted “Rushing Water on the LaCrosse River” plein air this afternoon at one of our city parks, with a bit of finishing work at home tonight. As I look at both photos I can see areas that still need work- including correcting some shadows and angles – but for tonight let’s call them finished, okay?

“Almost Home”, 8x10 on Canson paper.

a214pastel_Almost Home

“Rushing Water on the LaCrosse River”, 9x12 in., pastel on uArt 600 grit

a215pastel_Rushing Water on the LaCrosse River

Monday, July 29, 2013

Day 29, Painting 28… just 2 days left!

Daylily in Coral, 9x12 in., pastel on pastelmat

a213pastel_Daylily in Coral

I have never liked florals I have painted more than those I painted this month for the challenge, especially the 3 daylilies, the water lily and the sunflowers. Looking at a flower outdoors as a beautiful shape reflecting sunlight has changed how I approach the painting. I have grown artistically during July, and I hope to share some of that growth in words in the weeks to come. For now, the images speak for themselves!

Friday, July 26, 2013

Day 26, Painting 25

“Bearly Relaxing”, 9x12 in., pastel on colorfix

a210pastel_Bearly Relaxing

Day 25 and this is Painting 24

“Waterlily on the Mississippi”, 10x13 in., pastel on colorfix surface

a209pastel_Waterlily on the Mississippi

This time of year, or a bit earlier, waterlilies crowd the backwaters of the Mississippi. In masses they are a majestic site, singularly they are exquisite.

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Day 24, Painting 23

“Bridge Over Beaver Creek”, 10x13 inches on Wallis sanded paper

a208pastel_Bridge Over Beaver Creek

I spent the last hour or more screwing around with my computer before I could download this photo, crop and rename it, and get it posted. Painting this was so relaxing with the gurgle of the creek and the wind in the trees, that I didn’t really let myself see how ugly the willow (yes, that is supposed to be a willow!) had become. I apologize to the willow and I realize this means I will have to paint this again. Soon.

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Day 23, Painting 22, but whose counting? Me, I guess!

“The Old Power Shed”, 9x12 in, pastel on pastelmat

a2076pastel_ The Old Power Shed

What better way to spend the afternoon than painting outdoors by the LaCrosse River Dam with the sounds of the water, birds, and wind? Joined by Pat, later by Betsy, and still later by Betsy’s kids just made painting even more fun. A few onlookers offered encouragement, and I hope at least one of them looks at this to see the finished product!

Day2, Painting 21

“Sunnies”, 9x12 in. on Wallis

a206pastel_Sunnies

The lighting is not correct on this photo, but it will do for now! We have several groups of sunflowers in our yard that were planted by the birds or squirrels that I left to grow. This is one clump and they are really beauties.

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Day 21, Painting 20–a Very Special Painting!

This is special for many reasons: it is my granddaughter Annabell, it is a birthday gift for her dad- my son Arlo, and it is my VERY FIRST PORTRAIT EVER. I don’t know how portrait painters do it. This may have been the hardest painting I ever did.

a205pastel_Annabell, Wrapped in a Rainbow

“Annabell, Wrapped in a Rainbow”, 8X10 inches, pastel on canson board.

Yesterday’s Painting

“Lauren’s Bears on Grandma’s Chair”, 9x12in, pastel on colorfix surface

a204pastel_Laurens Bears Grandmas Chair

Last night I had a visit from the computer boogey-woogey monster, leaving me without a means to post this painting to this blog or- more importantly- to the challenge blog. But here it is. I feel very sentimental about it. Lauren- here for the night while Sally relived her teen years at a concert in Minneapolis with Jamie- set up her bears and we both painted with pastels. The rocking chair has been used since Sally and Arlo were wee ones for baby-soothing. I tried in vain to give it to both of them, but they weren’t interested, so for now it rocks teddy bears.

Friday, July 19, 2013

Day 19, Painting 18

“After the Flood”, 12 x 15 inches, pastel on Wallis sanded surface

a203pastel_When the Tree Drowns

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Day 18, Painting 17

Reflections on Angelo Pond, 9x12in, pastel on uArt500 grit surface

a202pastel_Reflections Angelo Pond

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Monday, July 15, 2013

16x20 in a Day… what was I thinking?

Today’s painting – 14th in 15 days- is “Round Barn and Shed in Autumn”, 16 x 20 on Canson board. Here is what I learned: 16 by 20 inches is too d&^* big for a one-day painting. I worked on it for 10 –11 hours, and though I took a few breaks, I never stepped away from it – I used the breaks to eat and critique and decide what came next. I am pretty pleased with it, but heck it’s almost midnight and I need to post it on the  challenge site real soon. Let’s see how much I like it tomorrow!

a199pastel_Round Barn and Shed in Autumn

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Day 14, Painting 13

This was painted with a gouache underpainting, pastel overpainting – the technique I learned from Frank Federico at his IAPS workshop in New Mexico in June.

“Barn, Shed and Wildflowers”, 9x12 in., pastel over gouache on uArt 500 grit surface.

a198pastel_Barn, Shed and Wildflowers

Besides finishing this painting today, we went to Racine to celebrate the 90th birthday of my Auntie Frannie – my dad’s only surviving sib. Aunt Fran is a character and story teller – fiercely loyal to her family, including me. This party honored who she is/was to all of us – her daughter, grandkids, nieces and nephews, brother, and more. My camera battery died so I couldn’t take photos, but my mental images will live on for a long time.

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Serious Rework of an Old Painting

Day 13, Painting 12 - Lighthouse at the Day's End, 16 by 20 inches, pastel on canson paper. This is a major rework of a painting I was never crazy about but wasn’t sure how to rework…. until we hung it in the living room and I determined several fixes.

a197pastel_Lighthouse at the Day's End

For comparison, here is the “before” painting:

I think this is a significant improvement, changing a blah painting into a wow painting that tells a story. What do you think?

Friday, July 12, 2013

Day 12, Painting 11

Yes, you read it correctly… I missed a day of painting yesterday. Actually I did the drawing and underpainting of this, but it was slow going as I hurt my upper arm and shoulder (weeding?) and I decided to give it a rest.  Today it is sore but not as much, and I took it pretty slow today, too. I also painted with my left hand as much as I could. It’s weird that I am pretty klutzy with my left hand for almost everything, but I pass the pastel back & forth without really noticing it.

a196pastel_Dragofly on Water's Edge

Dragonfly on Water's Edge, 8x10 inches, pastel on canson board

I am using a non-lap computer until my syruppy mess gets fixed or replaced (thank the Goddess I bought the warranty!). This is how lazy I am- I don’t feel like writing a thing if I am not sitting in my recliner with my confuser on my lap. So- that’s the explanation for my sparse postings recently.

Monday, July 8, 2013

Day 8 is Reflective

Day 8 painting: Good Morning, Sandy Lake, 8x10, pastel on canson board.

a193pastel_Good Morning Sand Lake

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Lily in Scarlet

Day 7 - Lily in Scarlet, 8x10 inches on Canson board

this entry is brief since I have to use our backup computer…. I spilled maple syrup into the keyboard of my laptop. don’t ask. unless you are asking, “could this bizarre story be true?”  in which case the answer, sadly, is yes. so short blog post, long excuse, sad Debbie (sort of, since I have a backup computer).

a192pastel_Lily in Scarlet

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Barn in the Valley, Day 6

For the 6th day of the challenge, I painted from a photo- Barn in the Valley, 12 x 16 in, pastel on UArt 500 grit.

a191pastel_Barn in the Valley

Something I experience in plein air vs. photo reference painting: I find it far easier to determine composition elements from a photo, than from outdoor observation. Maybe this is a no-sh*t-Sherlock to everyone else, maybe this is something I read, but this is the first time I get it at a gut level…. the borders of a photo help me to envision painting borders. In outdoor spaces, I struggle and see infinite possibilities and no edges. I guess I need to work on this.

I finished another painting yesterday – one I started a while ago. Here it is:

  a184pastel_TheCreekWakes in Spring

Friday, July 5, 2013

Daisies in the Wind

Day 5, Daisies in the Wind, 9x12in., pastel on Wallis

a191pastel_Daisies in the Wind

I sat near the flowers and did the layout and underpainting on my lap. Somehow without an easel, and with only a few pastels, it seemed more honest, fresh.  I used a turpenoid wash over the hard pastels underpainting. The final layer – done with soft pastels indoors – lost some of that freshness, in my eyes. But I can still see the wind.

Painter in the garden

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Happy Independence Day!

In honor of the holiday, I completed a painting I had begun plein air back in May when I was the guest of Mary’s cousins Sue and Pete Betts for 3 days. This is the view from their sunroom window. It was an amazing that while I worked on this, leaves changed from bud to open leaf; ferns from bump to unfurled fronds; and the water level receded so the water in this painting was mere mud. While I stayed there, I visited daily with my mom and dad – that was my mom’s mother’s day gift- me!

Betts’ Marsh in Early May, 9x12

a191pastel_Betts Marsh in Early May

I also worked some of the problem areas out on yesterday’s still life:

a190pastel_Early Bounty2

I wish everyone a safe and happy day!

Give us this day our daily veggies

Harvest! We will have radish slivers in our July 4th potato salad, thanks to today’s harvest which is the subject of Day 3 painting….. which I can tell needs a little work yet. I am not fond of still-lifes. And yes, I know it is now Day 4. Very early in Day 4.

“Early Harvest”, 12x15 on canson mi-tientes paper, dots and all.

a190pastel_Early Bounty

Happy Independence Day to all of you!

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Day 2–Bridge in Evans Park

The city of Sparta has been adding these great bridges – one a year or so for the last couple years- and I keep saying I am going to paint them… what better time than when I am painting daily? Today I spent FIVE HOURS in the park working on this, and another hour at home tonight. Actually, there were 2 false starts before I narrowed my scope a bit and focussed on the front view. This was extra fun today, as 2 other pastelists – members of the class I taught in Spring – met me there and painted, too. We hope to make that a weekly thing. Without additional blah blah, here is DAy 2 painting: Bridge in Evans Park, 9x12 on pastelmat.

a189pastel_Bridge in Evans Park

Monday, July 1, 2013

Day 1 of 30 paintings in 30 days!

So here I am, painting plein air in my own garden on Day 1 of the challenge to do a painting a day for 30 days, sponsored by the Arizona Pastel Society (no I’m not a member).

garden painting

So here is another reason for starting this blog yesterday. I consider artistic goals, and sometimes I even whisper them to myself… I actually don’t wonder why I seldom meet those goals, but I WOULD like to change that pattern. So, I am saying it out loud – I am doing the 30-paintings-in-30-days challenge. Here is my first painting:

a188pastel_Garden in July3

In the last couple days, lilies have begun to open.. as the yellow lilies on the left, and the pink Lollipop Lillies in the center. Hello Lillies! Thanks for showing up just now.