Monday, April 13, 2015

Art Pillows and Prints For Sale





My printed fabric is for sale in different throw pillow sizes! 
This one above is made from my art work.
Punch up the color a few notches and liven your interior decor.
Two different coordinating prints available at Fine Art America.
Most everyone knows I am crazy about flowers.
Our roses are still more than half dormant.
Today it was a balmy 81 so things will start blossoming overnight.






There are also two of my palette knife painting prints for sale.
Pink is refreshing and such a cheery color especially when offset by teal,
 lavender, green and gold.


Spring has rolled in after many attempts!  I can't wait to do some plein air painting 
before the onset of gnats and mosquitos, but I am not complaining one bit.

Saturday, April 11, 2015

Painting Montana's Prairie

                 
                                                                Painting In Progress


I'm currently working on this acrylic painting hoping to finish tonight. It's a painting of the Montana prairie, a mustang pony, and a family member. I'll be the first to say this has a punch of color. My Dad would always say he thought the most beautiful landscape was in Eastern Montana. When I was little and we visited I thought it looked barren, but these grassy plains were my Dad's playground when he was growing up in a large family. They raised sheep and cattle and they didn't have fences except in a barnyard corral. They all herded sheep. Someone had to be out there with them all of the time. These days you see field after field of wheat in the Summer. Also pheasant, elk, quail and a long list of fowl and animals.

I tried to get the richness of the colors when the sun gets a bit lower.There is so much sky out there. I made it darker than I normally would to set off the grasses.  The grasses are remarkable in the late afternoon and much darker. For this painting I actually brushed in a sketch of the mustang pony (what you see) and now I have to paint it with a knife and touch up the man. That of course will prompt me to do a little more here and there. The creative process. Some days it's so smooth you can't believe it. Other days, well, it's a little longer road to the finish line.

Thank you for visiting. Leave a comment if you like.

This will be for sale online with Saatchi Art

Friday, April 10, 2015

Princess Kaiulani Painting

                                         
                                                               Princess Kaiulani Painting
                                                                       11 x 14 inches

In Hawaii there are many places, parks, schools, hotels, and buildings named after this beautiful young princess in Hawaii's Royal Family. She is still carried in the hearts of Hawaii's people and will not be forgotten. Princess Kaiulani was half Hawaiian and half Scottish. Her mother was Princess Miriam Likelike (a descendent of King Kamehameha I) and her father, Archibald Scott Cleghorn who came to Hawaii from Scotland.

It was said of Princess Kaiulani when she was alive, "It is impossible not to like her." That is still true today.

I painted this in an Expressionist and Impressionist style with a palette knife in a painterly fashion used by the old masters such as Van Gogh and Madge Tennent. Madge painted a number of Hawaiian people when she lived in Hawaii.

This portrait painting of Crown Princess Victoria Kaiulani Kawekio I Lunalilo Kalaninuiahilapalapa Cleghorn is available for sale through Saatchi Art. $1,300.00  More details and link here.

Did you know that King Kalakaua of Hawaii met Thomas Edison in New York in 1881? On King Kalakaua's birthday, November 16, 1886 Iolani Palace was lit with electricity. In the year 1888, Princess Kaiulani flipped the switch that lit the town's streets.  

Monday, April 6, 2015

Miss Kolden Impressionist Painting

                                                                       
                                                                       "Miss Kolden"
                                                                      Masonite Board
                                                                       For sale here.

There is something peaceful about painting. I hope that is one thing that might show up in my paintings.

I've noticed in my portraits, this one included, that the eyes never look directly at the viewer. My goal is to make them look slightly relaxed and approachable.  I say, "Slightly." I also mean, "amused, thinking, shy, or busy."

Today it was a delicious temperature,  in the 70's. It made me wonder how these ladies in the1800's and early 1900's wore all of these long sleeves and long dresses, etc. in the summer months? And happily cooked over a wood stove. One thing we know. they probably weren't cold. Whew!

The garden will start popping open  flowers like popcorn after a few warm days. I can't wait to paint some of the gems. Hopefully their happy faces will be obliged.

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Abraham Lincoln Portrait


                                                                       14 x 11 inches
                                                                           Acrylic
                                                                         Carol Yap    

This painting started out with brushwork and I was going to leave it like that. It did stay that way for a few days and every time I walked by it, I thought, "I have to change it."  When the opportunity to paint came I changed it to a palette knife portrait and the looks are much different. Raw and meaningful I would describe it. More texture, more personality, more courtroom wear and tear of a young lawyer. The former was too smooth and we know his life wasn't exactly smooth. All of these things reminded  me of other painters and their feelings about painting.

Edgar Degas, "Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things."

Degas also said, "Painting is very easy when you don't know how, but very difficult when you do."

The funny thing is I understand both of these conflicting statements. When we are painting we are a mixed bag of emotions. Degas painted around forty self portraits at the beginning of his career. Edgar's stomach must have sank and lifted a few times.

Details of Abraham Lincoln's portrait painting for sale here.