My First Painting Trip

           Whether working from life or from a photo one needs to know their subject. I remember my first painting trip. I did a lot of driving - looking for that perfect subject. Ended that first day quite disappointed. I'd used up a lot of gas and had seen a lot of so-so subjects. I didn't know part of being an artist was being able to see the important things like the farms and barns I passed up were people's lives. Came home with a few paintings, just nothing I could be proud of. Instead of wandering around the country looking for a Wyeth painting or a Schmid painting I picked a place I knew something about - the Clark Smith house. Not an impressive scene, but one I knew something about.

          Clark Smith fought in the Civil war, was wounded and died twenty years later from that Confederate musket ball. Knowing that the house and barn had been built by a veteran of the Civil War added a bit of color to my painting. Knowing Clark and his wife are buried in the little grove of trees just south of the house added even more interest for me. As a teen, a few of my friends and I checked out the story. We found the grave markers, five in all. Whether the story was true or not really didn't matter to me. Knowing the farm had maybe belonged to a Civil War soldier gave me that little something to do a better painting. 

          Not all artists need some connection to the subjects they put on canvas. I found for me a connection, no matter how trivial, makes for a better painting. 

Don't Dilly Dally Around With Flowers

Greenhouses fill my head with visions of paintings. Colors of all hues call out to me filling my head with possibilities. I want to rush to the studio and begin reaching for those impossible colors that only nature can create. I can deceive people into believing my paintings have those colors by pushing the colors that surround the flowers on my canvas.

Flowers present a special challenge for me. Besides the colors, flowers are so delicate, requiring thoughtful brushwork - fitting my style of painting into capturing their softness. Every subject requires something different out of us, drawing, mixing colors, knowing when to use colors straight from the tub...

I tell my students, not to dilly dally around, flowers may look to be holding still but they are growing as we paint and picked ones only last so long.