Showing posts with label oil painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil painting. Show all posts

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Artwork oft the month: Recently acquired.

The Minneapolis Institute of Arts just purchased this new painting.  It is a beautiful landscape, and definitely worthy of your time o go down and take a moment to contemplate its simplicity.  As it is a very small painting, it is easy to walk past if your not paying attention.  

Richard Parks Bonington
British, 1801-1828
"Rouen Cathedral, sunrise"
1825, oil on millboard


I have not had the time needed to study it to speak clearly...
...It could pass for contemporary work completed today.


Wednesday, May 23, 2012

One way tickets!!!

Athena and I purchased our one way plane tickets to Maui, Hawaii in August.  
We are moving with 4 suitcases each, our car, our two dogs and some art supplies.  I intend to paint a complete series of new oil paintings while we are there.  Hopefully my work will change in ways I can not see in my mind at the moment.  

Our new life on the island will be good, with a place in New York and a place in Minneapolis we can go visit our favorite haunts anytime we want to.  We both are very excited.


I have three oil paintings to finish here in minneapolis before we move...
...so check back soon.


Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Artwork of the Month: Wedding art

After a night of drinking and dancing Athena told me that she can relate to this oil painting now.  We have looked at this painting in passing, not really thinking very much about it until now.  It is on view at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.  

Douglas Volk
American, 1856-1935
"After the Reception"
1887, oil on canvas

She looks completely wiped out. A wedding, drinking, dancing, eating and talking will do that to you.  Athena and I were both completely wiped out the day after our wedding. We had a blast!

Saturday, March 17, 2012

My grandfathers drafting table

My grandfather Greg was an engineer, a problem solver for Honeywell.  In his spare time he did fine woodworking.  Pop built clocks, most of the furniture in his house, tools to do things he needed, and he designed it all.

This drafting table is one of his designs and it has been mine for the last 15 years.  
I use it for everything.


Its height is adjustable from 36 inches and it can extend to 60 inches tall.  Making it comfortable to work on sitting in a chair, a tall stool or standing.  I do most of my work on it these days standing.

The bottom of the legs are held by peg braces so it is easy to disassemble.

The adjustments are made by simple bolts and fly nuts.

                
The top can rotate its angle almost 180% and adjust to be flipped completely for working on complicated and tight compositions.  


His brother Rodney passed on a few years ago and I got his drafting tools.  This drafting arm is perfect for design and basic drafting.  I used it mainly for laying out tricky compositional elements when I wanted forms to coincide with one another.


I love this drafting table...
...I will be used until I die.


Monday, January 23, 2012

New painting in progress

I have been working on this painting for nearly a year now.  I started with an academic study of the subject-matter, the artist that painted it, and then realistic details.  Over the last 6 months I have worked on the abstraction of the original composition with a heavy bias on the content of the narrative.  


I am fairly far along, but the real work starts now as I begin to truly work the composition.
Minneapolis #? "Penitent Magdelene"

This painting at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts is my source material.  I have admired this work of art for many years.  I am very happy to present the subject-matter as I see it.
Bartolome Esteban Mutillo    c. 1650-1665


I hope to have this painting completed by the end of March or the beginning of April.

Thanks for reading along...
...I will post more about this painting as I work on it.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Artwork of the month: Maxfield Parrish and Skyrim.

I have been playing the video game Skyrim a lot lately.  And just to make a connection between fantasy paintings and this fantasy game I give you Maxfield Parrish.

First off Skyrim rocks.  An HD video game with 5,000+ hours of digital escapism hunting dragons. Seriously Skyrim just rocks and dragons have the best treasure.


Skyrim was released at midnight 11-11-11.  I know that because I was one of the geeks at GameStop in uptown Minneapolis for the midnight release with the rest of the entertainment hungry flock.

As to Maxfield Parrish, I have never really liked his subject matter, albeit his technical skill at rendering realistic and painterly works is nearly unmatched in art history. I love the way his work appears as if it were a silver gelatin print. This painting is at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts where I spend way too much time, but not nearly as much as i have spent playing Skyrim lately.

Maxfield Parrish
American, 1870-1966
"Dream Castle in the Sky"
1908, oil on canvas

"I don't know what people find or like in me, I'm hopelessly commonplace! Current appreciation of my work is a bit highbrow, I've always considered myself a popular artist."
-Maxfield Parrish

Thursday, January 5, 2012

New Minneapolis painting started

I started a new painting for the Minneapolis series of works.  This is only the first thin layer of oil-color, as it will dramatically change over the next few months.  I would like to have this completed sometime in March.



Thanks for taking a quick look at my blog...
...many more new paintings to posted soon

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Minneapolis #7 "Milk Bubbles"

Slightly behind schedule, I finished another painting in the Minneapolis series.  the minneapolis series of paintings is really just a chance for me to explore color-form ideas and relax.  there is no real artists statement other than i am testing out some of my ideas before I move on to my next major series.

I was not able to resolve the minimal composition of this piece; and for some time it sat in the corner of the studio waiting for me to understand it.


Minneapolis # 7 "MIlk Bubbles" 
oil on linen
12" x 24"


Thanks for checking in...
...I hope to complete another painting soon.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Minneapolis #6 is complete.

I just completed another of my Minneapolis works.  Enjoy it.

Minneapolis 6
24 x 12, oil on linen


Check back later...
...the next Minneapolis painting is on the way.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Artwork of the month: Revenge is sweet.

Anne-Louis Girodet de Rouncy-Trioson
French, 1767-1824
"Portrait of Mlle. Lang as Danae"
1799, oil on canvas

This painting is purely a revenge painting.  Lang commissioned a portrait of herself from Girodet.  When the painting was completed Lang refused to pay believing the portrait to be unflattering of her beauty.  The woman was so vain she couldn't see herself. 

Lang was a beautiful woman, well know professional actress, vain, adulterous, gold digger.  This completely insulting painting was intended to immortalize Lang's character flaws.  Lang is shown as a prostitute, holding a cracked mirror.


The turkey with the wedding ring is the rich sucker she married for money.

The gross mask is her lover Leuthraud with a gold piece stuck in its eye socket

This painting is filled with insults directed at Miss. Lang who must have blew her top when she saw it.  Honestly from all that i have read Miss Lang got exactly what she deserved, to be remembered 200 years later for being a complete bitch.  

Bravo Girodet...
...you remind me of Rob McBroom and his portrait of Tim Taylor who also got what he deserved.  


Let me tell you about Mr. Taylor.  If you were to see any of his online posts, you’d quickly find a smug, egotistical man who thinks he’s a genius, but isn’t.  Amongst his many targets is fellow duck stamp artist, Rob McBroom who found some of Tim’s mockery on an online message board (09, 10).  Like Girodet, McBroom chose to respond with art, not words by recreating Tim’s drawing of a wood duck that he also uses as his avatar on the very forum where he bullies other artists.




Still fighting in the Cold War against the Soviets that’s been over for over 20 years now, Tim has a rabid disdain for anyone who doesn’t agree with his extremist right-wing views employing such outdated terms such a “pinko” or “commie lib” to put them down.  Whereas Girodet bitingly used symbolism to showcase Ms. Lange’s  terrible qualities, McBroom takes the things that Tim detests most & incorporates them into his wood duck to irrevocably associate Tim with what he sees as is ideological foes.

As a Tea Partier, Tim opposes Barack Obama both as a politician & a person, so the Obama logo is a logical choice

 Tim is also a Birther, which explains Obama’s birth certificate in the duck’s neck.

 A Soviet ruble is the duck’s eye so the window to its soul is Communist.

 Finally, dozens of photos were culled from various sources on the internet of Tim & collaged into the duck’s feathers.  To further link Tim with Socialism, he’s seen cavorting with Joseph Stalin & Vladimir Lenin in many of the images.


I am having too much fun with this, so lets just close it up.
Seriously Tim Taylor is an overly egotistical self important prick.  He is the kind of guy that simply looks for an argument on the internet, picks on people relentlessly for no reason other than he can see that the people he targets are better than him.  Yep I said it publicly in a blog, Tim Taylor is a jerk and will be remembered 200 years from now as a jerk.  Tim will not be remembered for his contribution to the art world, as his paintings are nothing special.  So no wonder he targets artists that are.  

Rob McBroom
American, born 1973
2011, digital image with acrylic, plastic gems, glitter, on canvas.




To all of you out there getting even with a prick...
...do it so they never forget their shame, I know I am.




Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Artwork of the month: Georges Braque.

I have been working on abstractions of the Minneapolis landscape; simple line drawings that I will eventually turn into oil paintings.  As I think about my forms, I envision color combinations that will express the content of each composition.  Lately I have been reminded of Georges Braque's landscape "The Viaduct at L'Estaque" and how bright and unstable his use of color feels.

This is my favorite landscape at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.  I have always paused in front of it to just look without thinking.  The use of yellow as a central color is unnatural, and oddly waking while allowing it to retain the laid-back mood of a landscape. Braque created harmony with discord like a soothing out of tune instrument.

The nonnaturalistic colors of the Fauves, and the simple geometric forms he reduced the subject-matter to are pointedly runners up to Cézanne's work of bold all encompassing spaces.  Albeit, Braque's choices are those of a master as this is a master oil painting.

Georges Braque
French, 1882-1963
"The Viaduct at L'Estaque"
1907, oil on canvas


"Art is made to disturb, science reassures."
-Georges Braque


Friday, July 1, 2011

Artwork of the month: Yue Minjun's "Untitled"

I love looking at this painting, but i am unable to stare it down for long.  Its content reminds me of how the world works for most people, and really laughing through the lies is a disappointing way to live.

Yue Minjun is a contemporary Chinese artist living in Beijing.  His work is obvious in telling us the mental state of his world.  He is a cynical realist, and as you can see these men frozen in states of laughter or simply holding that happy smile for presentation, they are anything but laughing.

This is a masterwork, if even only for its content.

Yue Minjun
Chinese, born 1962
"Untitled"
2007, oil on canvas


This work is currently on display at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts on the second floor...
...go see it, and take some time contemplating the reason they smile.

Monday, June 20, 2011

On the Paintbrush. Part II


On the Paintbrush part II

In the hope that I won’t bore you to death I am going to try and keep this interesting; as technical works always seem dry when we read them.  All paint brushes can be used for any purpose that you see fit.  Be it fine detail, soft transitions of color, or painterly brushstrokes, paintbrushes are the tool for you to decide what use they have.  Albeit, All brushes have an intended use, and when used with that intent in mind, the paintbrush can work magik.  
There are a number of paint brush types varying from size, shape, and body for many different purposes in working with oil paints.  The most common brush types are: flat, bright, fan, filbert, egbert, liner, round, flat wash, mop, and the angular.  They are named for both their appearance and use with paints. 
The flat brush, with its flat rectangular body and square chisel edge is the perfect brush for applying large amounts of color both quickly and evenly.  It's width is typically half its length.  It holds plenty of paint for applying thick amounts, and it creates long straight brush strokes.  The flat brush is excellent for softly defining compositional elements that have a straight edge to them.  I find the flat brush most useful in applying the underpainting when clarity and precision are not too important, but applying a large amount of paint is.  
The bright brush has the same chisel edge as a flat brush, but with shorter bristle length and comes to a fine chisel edge when loaded with paint.  Its width is typically the same distance as its length, giving it a relationship with the flat brush.  The short, square head of the bright brush makes it ideally suited for straight lines, applying broad strokes with a controlled edge, and well-defined brush strokes.  The bright brush is capable of finely detailed forms, making it perfect for overpainting and finial editing.  I use the bright brush for all geometric forms and the overpainting of large areas of negative space to redefine positive spaces. The bright brush is my personal favorite, my paintbrush of choice.  I tend to use it for most everything.  The bright gives me more control over oil-paint than any other of the brushes.  
The fan brush is shaped into a flat profile with a curved edge spread out like a hand-held fan.  The fan brush is designed for delicately blending color and softening edges, creating dusty-like strokes when painting objects such as clouds, and distant foliage.  I consider the fan brush a gimmick, and believe it should not be used by the professional oil painter.  The professional can reproduce the brushstrokes the fan brush creates with a filbert brush.  I say do not buy a fan brush; save your money and buy filberts instead.  The filbert brush has some real purpose to it.
The filbert brush has the body of a flat brush with a slightly rounded edge point.  The filbert is extremely versatile and is used to create long painterly brush strokes.  Just as a flat brush can make broad strokes or more delicate and tapered strokes, the filbert excels in both of these purposes.  I use the filbert brush for softening the edges of forms and fading small areas of change in color value.  The filbert brush is the macro lens of oil painting with its dual ability to focus a finely detailed stroke and fade oil color, softly blurring its appearance. 
The egbert brush is similar to a filbert brush in that it has the same rounded edge, only with much longer bristles.  Its flat ferrule and long bristles can carry more color than a filbert brush.  It is as long as the liner brush and is most commonly used for thick, long tapered lines, and blending value changes.  I have no personal use for the egbert, and I find it lacking in self-control as a result of its unnecessary and excessive length.
The liner brush has a slender round head with very long bristles that comes to a thin tip that makes it ideal for working with tiny details.  The length of its body holds a lot of oil color allowing it to deliver color continuously in a single stroke when painting long lines.  The thin tip creates fine lines like no other brush type.  This brush is commonly called a "rigger" for its common use in painting the thin lines of rope rigging on ships.  I have used the liner brush previously with well worked oil color to achieve the immediate effects of small detail.  I simply do not like this brush type.  Although it has its uses, none of them coincide with what I do.  
The round brush has a thick round head with bristles that taper to a fine point at the end. It is used for precise strokes of fine detail work.  Like the liner brush, the round brush holds a good deal of paint and is best used with slightly thinned paints; however, thinned oil paints fade away, crack, and slowly become transparent with time.  I have taken to beating down my oil paint on the pallet prior to use with the round brush, so as to make the paint more malleable.  I use the round brush for detailed lines.  It is better to simply work the oil color on the pallet until it is soft enough to achieve the desired consistency so it can flow from the bristles evenly.

The flat wash, flat shader, and stroke brush types are extra-large, extra soft, blending brushes intended for watercolors.  Even though they are primarily used for  painting with watercolors, they are useful to the oil painter as a dry brush to remove all trace of brushstroke after the establishment of oil color has been finished.  I use the flat wash brush with oils as a dry-brush for soft surface color blending and smoothing.  The flat wash brush is ideal for blending surface area and applying a smooth transition between color and value changes without disturbing the wet underpainting.  
The mop brush has a large, flappy, fat body and is shaped into an oval or rounded thick edge.  The mop brush is used for delicately glazing, so as to not disturb the underpainting.  It is also useful as a dry-brush for blending large amounts of surface color.  I personally find the mop brush useless,  Albeit, I have used the mop brush for applying glazes over large surface areas.
The angular brush is similar to the build and body of the flat brush, but with the edge angled at a tapered slant.  The angular brush has a flat edge and a pointed tip, allowing for both wide and thin strokes.  The tip is its most valued feature, as it can easily reach areas within a painting that are between sections you do not wish to disturb.  The tight details the angular brush can reach are virtually impossible to work with a larger brush.  I use the angular brush for precise details in color forms where a mistake, or “coloring outside the lines,” would be nearly irreversible.  I also use the angular brush when I need the flat chisel edge of a bright brush but must fit into a tight compositional element.


Thanks for checking this out...
...part III on the paintbrush coming soon.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Artwork of the month: 5 favorite nudes at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.

I admire these works for their beauty, their composition, and their important historical value.  They are also nude, which i believe we all like.  Anyway, enjoy them.


My 5 favorite Nudes at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.


Francois Rude
French, 1784-1855
"Hebe and the Eagle of Jupiter"
1853-1855, bronze

Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse
French, 1824-1887
"Undine"
1912, bronze

Louis Corinth
German, 1858-1925
"Nude Girl"
1886, oil on canvas
 
 
Aguste Rodin
French, 1840-1917
"The bronze age"
cast 1906, bronze 

Guess?




"I have no problem with nudity. I can look at myself. I like walking around nude. It doesn't bother me. I see all the people walking around nude; it doesn't bother me."
-Ursula Andress

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Artwork of the month: American landscape.

There was an exhibit of paintings owned by local Minneapolis collectors at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts early in 2009.  For the most part I found the exhibit okay, but the idea of celebrating the wealthy was as distasteful as citrus after brushing your teeth.  Out of that revelry for the rich and their possessions I came to admire a brilliant example of expressionistic realism.

Last week I was surprised to find out the MIA purchased the painting in the exhibit that I felt was the best in show.  And here I believed that I would never see it again.

Theodore Robinson
American, 1852-1896
"Farm among hills, Giverny"
1887
Oil on canvas

"I must beware of the photo, get what I can of it and then go."
-Theodore Robinson


oh, the exhibit was titled "nobel dreams & simple pleasures..."
...wow what jerks.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Artwork of the month: Berthe Morisot.

I have paused periodically in front of this paining for the last 6 years.  I don't find it to be a masterwork, nor do I see it as a great stride within an ism.  As far as the subject matter of this work goes, hello boring.  I do however truly admire the painterly brushstrokes, their precision in intent, and the way dark under light under dark is executed.  

You can see this painting at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.  

Berthe Morisot
French, 1841-1895
"the Artist's daughter, Julie, with her Nanny"
1884, oil on canvas


"Real painters understand with a brush in their hand."
-Berthe Morisot

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Artwork of the month: Willem de Kooning.

I discovered Willem de Kooning in 1992 browsing through a book store.  Immediately I found myself admiring his philosophical originality within his works.  He outlived his contemporaries, the living hard and fast generation of artists that burned life out.  Although he completely rejected movements, de Kooning was the best out of the abstract expressionists.  His work was original,


There is so much on the net about Willlem de Kooning that I decided not to go too deep into his life, but express what inspired me about his work.


This is the one that started my admiration of his work.  Compositionally it is impeccable, and as to his color selections I could see that de Kooning was ahead of his peers.  This painting transformed how i view abstract works.
Willem de Kooning
"Seated Woman"
1040, oil and charcoal on masonite


As we take a look at his portfolio we see that de Kooning's career is a long climb back to peace of mind.  Looking chronologically at his works we can see the passionate beginning, the decent into some form of madness, and the slow and steady climb back to peace of mind.  I can say that because I know him through his work.  


"Queen of Hearts"
1943,


"Woman"
1949,


"Untitled XII"
1983,


"Untitled #2"



"Art never seems to make me peaceful or pure."
-Willem de Kooning


Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Artwork of the month: Jean Léon Gérôme.

I would like to take a look at two works in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts permanent collection.  Jean Leon Gerome was an amazing oil painter.  His sense of composition and his application of oil paint was profoundly admired and copied.  I do not want to talk much about this because my knowledge of this artist is limited to these two works, and both of which I chose to ignore for a decade.  

Jean Léon Gérôme
French, 1824-1904
"The carpet merchant"
1887, oil on canvas

"Young Greeks in the Mosque"
1865, oil on panel


Theses are surprisingly small works...
...rendering the real is easier when done smaller.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Artwork of the month: Philosophy.

This is one of my favorite oil paintings in the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.

Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo
Italian, 1727-1804
"Head of a Philosopher"
1750-1760, oil on canvas

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Artwork of the month: Alexander Roslin.

There is an Alexander Roslin exhibit at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts showcasing the MIA's recent acquisition.  It is a worthy exhibit and worth taking a moment or two to walk through.  I am mesmerized by the fabrics, they appear so real.  

The Exhibit from now until Sunday, November 30, 2008
on the ground floor in the Cargill Gallery.  


This panting of his wife is by far the best in show. 

Alexander Roslin
Swedish, 1718-1798
"The Comtesse d'Egmont Pignatelli in spanish costume."
1763, oil on canvas


"Let them eat cake."
-Marie Antoinettee