Wednesday, May 15, 2013
A Room with a View, and a Family
I recently finished this portrait for a family. It is 44" x 64" oil on linen. The family lives on a lake and they asked that the landscape out the window be painted in winter so that the lake would be visible through the trees. The room was yellow, so a relationship between the warm interior tones and the violet and blues in the winter landscape happened naturally. Various other elements note things from their personal and professional lives. The boy is an accomplished musician so I gave special attention to his beautiful hands and long fingers- in the painting he is playing Chinese Checkers, but in the painting within the painting, on the right- he is playing the piano. The painting now hangs in the same room that it depicts, so even at night when the sky is dark, they can still enjoy the view.
Labels:
dog paintings,
landscape,
mural,
oil on linen,
painting,
portrait
Monday, March 4, 2013
A Dog's Life and Lucky Dog Animal Rescue
This is a tiny painting I did of my dog Rembrandt who is actually rather large. It is one of my "A Dog's Life" paintings in which I am trying to express how a dog enjoys a particular place or environment just as we do. In this painting Remy is lying in the field below the Spring House Hotel on Block Island. He has his head lifted slightly to catch the sea breeze. If you could get close enough you would see that his nose is twitching, taking in all the interesting smells that the breeze carries with it- at least for a dog. Because I love dogs, and love looking at dogs, I have started fostering rescue dogs, until they get adopted. I am fostering for an amazing organization in DC called Lucky Dog Animal Rescue. They rescue dogs from high kill shelters in the south and bring them to the Washington area to find homes for them. Last week they found homes for fifty-four dogs. Seeing the dogs get lifted off the trucks into the arms of people waiting for them, is one of the most moving things I have ever witnessed. The dogs enter their new life looking a little timid. Some of them cower and crouch when their feet touch the ground. Then they look into the eyes of the human who is reaching for them and you can almost hear them sigh. They know they have been saved and given a second chance at life. I am so moved by this endeavor that I have decided that part of the proceeds from all my A Dog's Life paintings will go to Lucky Dog Rescue so that more dogs can get lucky.
Labels:
dog art,
dog paintings,
dog portraits,
dog rescue,
oil on panel
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Mrs. Paisley's Night Up
I love this poem by India DeCarmine and it inspired me to do this painting. In the painting Mrs. Paisley takes a break about half way up, to catch her breath and gaze at the moon. The painting is oil on canvas 36" x 36".
The Gift:
Wherein Mrs. Paisley
Rights One Wrong
of Her Misspent Youth
When Mrs. Paisley was a child
She wasn’t what you would call wild.
She never deigned to skin her knee,
Bake with mud or climb a tree.
In short, for all of her young age
(when beastly girls were all the rage),
her main aim was taking care
not to disarrange her hair.
Mrs. Paisley eyes an elm,
hitherto within the realm
of things she’d not meant to ascend.
Yet lately she’s discerned a trend
whereby categories shift.
With fine, long limbs, this tree’s a gift.
Mrs. Paisley’s not elastic,
and the angle is quite drastic
of that first limb. While she heaves
her butt up towards
the new spring leaves,
she thinks of neighbors with a view
and hopes they’ve better things to do.
She strains, she gains the branch, how sweet
to feel its curve beneath her feet.
Yet soon she knows that sweeter still
is the second branch; a thrill
attends each branch in turn. Her knee
is skinned as she goes up the tree,
but Mrs. Paisley doesn’t stop
until she’s reached the tippy top.
Here she grins and looks around.
How pleasant to have left the ground.
Labels:
art,
climb a tree,
interior,
magic realism,
narrative,
oil on canvas,
painting,
poem,
tree
Monday, January 7, 2013
The Calm before the Storm
oil on linen 36"x48"
In this painting a cellist plays alone in
a quiet room. As she plays, the room metamorphosizes into an enchanted forest
and birds begin to fly in and congregate on the tables and chairs. The cellist’s dogs listen and are seemingly undisturbed by the visiting
birds. Outside the window the sky is getting dark, and storm clouds move in
over the city, in contrast to the calm silvery interior. I was inspired to do
this painting after reading about birds displaced by the high winds during
Hurricane Sandy. Gannets were spotted in New York Harbor, Jaegers
at Cape May, NJ, and Petrels on the Hudson River. I started thinking about the room as a
sanctuary, like the calm before the storm, in the face of impending chaos.
Labels:
allegory,
birds,
cellist,
cello,
classical,
dogs,
enchanted forest,
forest,
interior,
magic realism,
narrative,
painting,
perspective,
poetic realism
Sunday, November 11, 2012
The Attraction of Fishing
My initial concept for this painting was to create a “floating
room” as if it had just drifted onto the sand at the edge of the water. I have
always loved the image/idea of mermaids and all the mythology and folklore that
go along with them. I have done several other paintings with them, including
the painting “Water Music” in which a mermaid is sleeping in a chair listening
to a pianist. While I was working on that painting I did a drawing in which the
mermaid was stretched out on the top of the piano and the shape of her body and
tail and the long shape of the grand piano just seemed to fit together like the
pieces to a puzzle. In composing
this painting I became intrigued by how the shape of the back of the mermaid
also reflected the rhythm of the dunes in the landscape behind her. The title comes from a quote I read from
a filmmaker in which he said “life
can both be explained in the same way someone might explain the “attraction of
fishing”. I interpret this as our desire to go forward in life is motivated by
not really knowing exactly what we might catch if we keep casting our line. In the painting there is a fisherman in
a rowboat, fishing with his dog. There is an interchange of dreams here. It is
possible that the fisherman is daydreaming that he may catch a mermaid, and the
pianist is dreaming about fishing as he plays, and thus the mermaid has
materialized on his piano. The dogs in the painting are not dreaming, but
instead they are enjoying the simple bliss of a comfortable chair and the
pleasure of being out in a boat in the water, unencumbered by the more complex
dreams and desires of their human companions. The heron in the foreground with the fish is frozen in the
moment, one foot in the “real” world and one foot in the dream world of the “floating
room”. The painting is 30" x 42" oil on linen.
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Rabbit Summer
"Rabbit Summer" is the third of my three moon paintings composed on a square. The moon in this one has just gone down and the sun is just rising. The woman gardener on the yellow striped sofa tried to stay awake to keep the intrepid rabbits from eating her vegetable garden. But she dozed off....not even her faithful dog knows how to handle the situation. The painting was inspired by my own gardening challenges this summer when a bumper crop of rabbits sprung up in our neighborhood and devoured all our lettuce, radicchio and green beans. Fortunately the tomatoes were spared.
"Rabbit Summer" is oil on linen, 48" x 48".
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Goodnight Moon
This painting is titled "Goodnight Moon". It is oil on linen, 48"x48". It is the second in my summer series of moon paintings. ("Moon River" is in an earlier post)
Many of the elements of the painting are inspired by the wonderful poem/children's book by Margaret Wise Brown that has lulled so many children to sleep. It starts off:
"Goodnight Moon...
Goodnight room
Goodnight moon
Goodnight cow jumping over the moon.
Labels:
cow,
goodnight moon,
interior,
moon,
oil on canvas,
oil on linen,
painting,
poem,
sleeping girl
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)