I have had the plaid cloth for a while, looking at it, thinking I would sneak up on it someday when it was just the right day for too much pink and today was the day.
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Monday, January 31, 2011
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Kitchen Trash
I am preparing for my first painting with the Texas Moleskine Authority (not the correct name, I have forgotten it) which is a sketchbook that travels among the members, each painter having a theme for her/his book, and each painter painting in each sketchbook. My theme is detritus, so I am exploring my own garbage. And I guess, no putting selected paintable objects in the trash. However, other's people's trash.....
Labels:
8x6 inch oil on board,
JeanTownsend,
Still life
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Friday, January 28, 2011
Cyclamen 3
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Cyclamen 2
I bought some grey gesso and have been experimenting with it. It is a premixed grey so it is very neutral, neither to the blue or red side or any other. Maybe I like it....so different from working on black. With the black you must incorporate those black bits into the overall -- I mean it has to be ok to show. With the grey, I think maybe a range of whites is easier to achieve. I don't know really yet, experience will tell. I am also trying out different brushes as I go, this one was a large flat, so it gives me some chop to the image. Not sure that cyclamen are good with chop though, they are so smooth and undulating. Also, I read on Catherine Kehoe's website, Powers of Observation.com, that color usually improves when it is mixed in large batches with a 4 inch pallet knife, so I am doing that instead of mixing with the brush. I think maybe this is right, because the mixed color batch has a greater chance of not being absorbed into the rest of the paint, it holds it own better. That is the most fabulous website. Fabulous!
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Cyclamen 1
I have had these cyclamen sitting around for a while, thinking of painting them and scared witless because my man Freud did the definitive one, who could improve.... so because I could not face the stocks again, I had a go. Really fun after all. They are sort of fleshy. I also had a new creative mark brush (do not buy!) which the hairs all fell out of as I worked, infuriating, however it is a bristle filbert. It's always a shakeup when there is a material or tool change. I'm interested in getting the rhythm down of those leaves because that makes the whole plant interesting, not just those other worldly blossoms.
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Monday, January 24, 2011
Stocks and Pink Vase
I bought a small bunch of stock to put in my bedroom because their fragrance is so spicy and strong, so I have been scrutinizing these for a while. They are complicated with all their bunched petals and not much distinct blossom structure. This is my second go at them, the first was a wiper. The surprise was that the flowers were much less interesting to paint than the vase, which was so much fun, that yes.....I'm going to have to do a series so I can get it down. I might give myself a break with another flower though. This painting is after a Van Gogh - I will post the title tomorrow. I am interested in getting a field of color behind the flowers that is not just background, that has a life of its own.
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Cabbage and Bananas
Goodbye to the cabbage. But.... I learned a lot about using the big brush on these, and it was exciting. I like lots of paint and a broad take on the forms. It isn't as difficult as I imagined to use the big bristle brush but it takes some getting used to. Different approach. There is no bogging down in detail - a big relief.
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Friday, January 21, 2011
Cabbage and Striped Cloth
For this one I used a big fat old bristle brush, misshapen so it looked like a shoe with the bristles curving. I can't believe you can get so much detail - or really any at all - with such a brush. I like this cabbage the best so far. It is no Miss America, plain except for this cloth I have to drag out every time, but I like the clarity of the entire painting, and the proportions of the elements. Maybe it could be an Amish cabbage, no offense to any of you who might be Amish. And also, the greatest thing about that brush -- you have to load up the paint on it to do anything on the canvas, so you end up with this beautiful fat paint surface. Worth the bungling.
And now, for your entertainment take this link to my video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6lWaqlUwuk
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Cabbage and Eggplant
I am getting the hang of this cabbage thing, both the painting part and the compositional part. The size of the images are better suited to the space in this one. This 10 inch square is starting to feel more normal, not so scary. Alas, the cabbage is getting old and turning yellow so I may have to prune for tomorrow, and I will try a larger brush to force simplification.
Below is a little video shot by my friend Jenel Looney of a puppet project we have been doing. She did such a great job with it, I felt like a movie star.
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Cabbage and Lemon
Here is the first cabbage and a leftover California lemon with a shriveled leaf. I am having second thoughts about loving the cabbage. Timing is everything. What I need is a better understanding of values and getting them down correctly the first time and I think simpler subjects would be more helpful. The cabbage is beautiful, though, with endless facets and folds and surprising grays. Maybe it's possible to simplify it, but I will have to fight myself all the way because my natural inclination is to make everything more complicated.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Monday, January 17, 2011
Pansies and Cabbage
This one is 10 inches square. Seems huge when working. I want to make the leap to a larger size where there are all sorts of other issues present, so I just have have to juuuuummmmmp.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Pansies in the Mirror
By now I am familiar with the form and color of these pansies and feeling pretty friendly about them, so I thought I'd play with a mirror and see if I could abstract a bit. That could be a very long road - I can see a hundred ways for it to go, but everything mostly ends up in Diebenkorn.
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Pansy Still Life with Pear
Here I am attempting to put together things I am familiar with ( the painting of) into a larger format, a 10 inch square. And, to keep to solemn colors, greys and browns as a backdrop for the strong purple so there is not too much color.
Friday, January 14, 2011
Pansies in Small Vase
Another. I'm trying to work out some color stuff here. Such as, what is too much, and how can it be used most effectively. The end of the spectrum I'm not so familiar with is the quiet end. I know very well the over the top part. Currently I am in love with grays and want to learn how to use them to my own ends.
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Pansies and Striped Cloth
On this one I had a nice experience. Things were going along swimmingly and when I got to the bottom of the glass I realized that the stripes reflected in it, more than just through the base, in fact all up the left side. And I decided not to put them in because it was to0 much information. Very liberating. I don't think I have ever edited anything out before.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Pansies and Napkin
I ordered the Ultimate Canvas Sampler Pad from Dick Blick I think, but they are put out by Creative Mark, so they must be carried everywhere. This one is the linen sample, and it is very different from any other surface. You have to really be determined to get a sharp edge, the weave of the material takes the paint differently. There is glare on this, but you can see the texture. I have seen people use this stuff (on Utube videos) by masking taping it to a board. My friend who showed me this had used double sided carpet tape on a panel and just stuck the sheet to it. There are four sorts of canvas in the pack, very good for experimenting. I am amazed every time how much difference materials can make. And of course, you want everything going for you that you can get.
Labels:
8x6 inch oil on board,
flowers,
Jean Townsend,
Still life
Monday, January 10, 2011
Two Black Pansies
The last two days have been such great painting days, always so grateful for those. I have approached everything more experimentally and it is liberating! The flops don't count for anything, no attachment. I bought a pack of 8x6 canvas sheets and there are two examples of four sorts of canvas in the pack. There is big difference in how the paint goes down on them. I had never painted on linen before and it is quite amazing. The texture of the linen does not encourage an edge - it is really easy for the edge to get lost. Just. Like. Velasquez! It is freezing here now, but when it warms up I will shoot the try out and post it.
Sunday, January 9, 2011
Black Pansy
I am starting on another adventure now, it's time for some stretching. I have chosen these black pansies because the forms are simple and the apartment complex around the corner from me has a fresh supply every day. I want to reduce detail; to have more tension in the composition; to use the paint in a more fluid manner; to go somewhere I haven't been yet. The best way to do it as far as I can tell is to use the same form over and over and make happen in the second painting what I couldn't make happen in the first, and on and on.
Saturday, January 8, 2011
Cowboy Up
This is my entry for January to the site Some Texas Artists Like to Paint. The challenge this month is: Cowboy Up. For my friends who do not live in Texas, this is a term that means, pull up your socks, get off your behind and do what must be done. I think that's what it means. To see everyone's entry, click here.
Labels:
6 x 15 inches oil on board,
cowboy,
Jean Townsend,
portrait
Friday, January 7, 2011
Been to L. A. #2
This was an interesting painting to do and I learned a lot. I didn't know what to put down first - some people say work back to front, some say front to back - and a thousand other shoulds. So I just started with the sky because that was the thing I was most interested in. I used a red orange ground and laid in the low whites and blues and couldn't get a good build up of paint on the surface, you know, really thick for those whites. So I left that and went on to the rest of it, trying to stay loose, even though this doesn't look loose. Finally toward the end I realized I needed a softer brush to lay the paint on thickly, because a stiffer brush picks up the paint after the first hit on the surface. Sure enough, a sable layers it on, very good to know for next time.
Thursday, January 6, 2011
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
California Lemons and Striped Cloth
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
California Lemons in Glass Bowl
More. Really tried to keep those edges soft as I worked them, rather than cleaning them up afterward, which produces a sort of dreadful .... wiping mark, yech.
Monday, January 3, 2011
California Lemons, Mutations
Here are some of the odd shaped lemons. Now of course I wish I had more of them. The ones I painted in the last two days are huge, big as oranges. Can't wait to open one up and see what it's like inside.
Sunday, January 2, 2011
California Lemons on Aluminum Foil
This was an interesting one to do -- sort of like riding a runaway horse. At the set up stage,I thought the strange pinky greys would be a good balance for the strong yellows and greens, warm and cool together and it would be subtle... well, I was really panic stricken for much of the painting of it, the forms and reflections were so similar and it didn't fall into place until the very end, and that was a surprise. I so much like that aluminum foil -- it is reflective but not shiny -- so ethereal.
Saturday, January 1, 2011
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