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Iris Afternoon 6x8" oil on panel. 250$

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  Impressionist take on the iris on a blazing summer day. Ideal shown on a small easel. 250$

Donna at Rest 32x20.5, oil on cradled board.

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  Donna rests on the red leather couch as a north light casts a glowing light. 1200$.

Blue Vase Pink Flowers 6x8" oil on panel

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  Impressionistic sketch on a small format. Ideal for resting on a small easel. 200$

Blackrock Coast 30x24, oil on aluminum dibond, $1200

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  Using a variety of sources, I created this unique landscape that exists only in this painting. The cliff face looks out to a rapidly roughening sea where a storm appears on the horizon. The juxtaposition of calm foreground waters with the crashing surf highlights the tension of nature. This painting is available. It is not framed.

"Old Vine Zin" SOLD

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My favorite wine, old vine zin. Nothing beats sitting on the jasmine covered porch as the sun sets looking out into the park, eating  cheese with a glass of my favorite wine. This painting continues my series of libations, branching off into vino. Painted on a 5 x 7" board in oil, this beautiful and luscious work is perfect setting in a small display easel without a frame.  SOLD

Martini with Skull and Olives -- SOLD

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The classic martini joins my series of drinks. This luscious drink features two olives on a pick with a small green skull. The painting is oil on board, 5 x 7", signed. SOLD

Another Painting for the Riney Show!

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This painting, "The Orchid and Time," is one of my favorites. It is 18"x20" and looks at the primeval quality of life as embodied by orchids, which are, by far, my favorite flowers. This plant has been blooming in my house every three months without fail. I'm pretty sure this one will sell. At only $1200, it should!!

Riney Gallery Show Starts March 6th!

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Here is one of eleven paintings to be shown at Riney Gallery come March 6th. It'll be a good show with I think what will be a very large attendance. Let's hope!

Small Oil Sells Like in a New York Minute! SOLD

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Well, this baby sold before I could even write a blogpost about it. It's 5x7" oil on panel. This series is taking off! I hope to have more small paintings up soon! These paintings are done during breaks working on larger paintings for an upcoming show at Riney Gallery. I love these small still lives that just ooze heart and love for the medium! I'll add a pics of some of the paintings in the next post. SOLD

Whiskey Glass -- SOLD

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This oil painting of a whiskey glass conveys American iconography at its finest! It carries such freight. From westerns to rough and tumble city bars to whisky pubs in Brooklyn, it conveys a welter of meanings! Temptation, celebration, contemplation, quiet times after a hard day, loss, struggle. Life. This painting is 5x7 inches, oil on board.  SOLD

Recent Portraits

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This young woman was a natural and a delight to paint. While I like to believe that I draw out the best of anyone, she made my time in the studio a pure joy. The young man is the little brother to the girl above, While not quite as conscious of his role in the process, he is blessed with an amazing innocence that translates well in paint. This is a portrait of my son. He is a great kid who can write, program, and draw like nobody's business. And, my daughter. She works very hard to make her way in this complicated world, and you can see the determination in her eyes. This was another fun commission. She has a stunning inner beauty that outshines even her extraordinary physical beauty. Oftentimes it is the precise manipulation of micro-expressions that tell the story. As I've stated before, capturing a likeness is not terribly hard. Capturing a soul...that is another thing.

Missing Your Children

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Every now and then I sell paintings which I kind of wish would somehow magically return. They are haunting to me. The one to the right captures a specific feel of invitation, anxiety, beauty and dread. It fascinates me. The one to the left with the hydrant holds some sort of spell on me. Between the clouds portending either rejuvenating spring rains or the possibility of lashing storms and the pattern of tiny white flowers that lead the eye back and forth, in and out, I find I can stare at it for hours. All I have now is the picture. The real thing is far better. I can see the brush strokes in raking light, not to mention that the painting's color will never be as true in a photo. Sometimes it is not enough to be the painter. I want to have it in my house where I can visit at any time.

Still Life: A Literary Experience

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There is something about still life that is fascinating--if done right. It should have all the standard pictorial elements: composition, interesting color usage, brush technique, etc. But, what interests me most about a still life is the almost intangible story/mystery of that combination of elements. If done well, it seems that a faint quantum trace of the humanity it represents remains. We want to know more. Our eyes search the surface for meaning and find small almost abstract moments of paint scumbled or washed or scraped where a small composition within the larger presents its own mystery. It is like a novel that bears rereading and yields anew with each visit. To the left is an example of a painting that invites us to dawdle, to get lost in reflections, to wonder about relationships between objects. It is also a painting that lets me get lost in meditation as I paint. There is a certain point I reach where I am no longer painting the label--bell, brush, book, bottle-- bu...

Direct Painting--Japanese Tree Peony

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When people think of the how of painting, the direct method of painting is what many people assume most painters use, and this is largely the case for most abstract and much of realist painting. The indirect method is currently making a comeback, and I may discuss it in another post. For now, the direct method, which seems simple, but if done well, is surprisingly complicated. To start, you may or may not have an underdrawing, tone, or underpainting, but you will have a series of brush strokes that are as precise as possible. The paint will be mixed to the exact hue and value--shade, tint, tone--lifted from the palette with the exact size and shape brush needed for the expected mark and deliberately applied by dragging the color on the tip of the brush, not the bristles across the desired area. The artist may twist the brush, press to fan it out, or manipulate it in some other way to get the exact brush shape desired to make the exact mark. If the mark is incorrect or inarticulate, i...

Rainy Days

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There is something about wet streets that fascinates me. This painting was part of a show last year in which I had several rainy day paintings. All of them sold, including this one. I guess that tells you what people like. The one thing that rainy day painting taught me is to be observant as a neutral observer. Rain slicked streets and objects are patchworks of color. Sure there is a logic to the reflections, but you can only paint it accurately if you can stop the part of your mind that says, "this is a car," and you then put in your symbol for a car. Think of what you see as a collection of marks on a canvas that is your eye. It is not a car, it is a slab of grey over a bit of very dark blue with a hint of red in a grey box. Just put down the right color in the right place, and you will go a long way towards a serviceable image. Sounds easy, right? Well, do as I've done and practice for 35 years and you can get pretty good at it. Or, you may be a natural. Let'...

Crystal -- Capturing the Feeling

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Today, I use my painting of Crystal to talk about the emotional content of a portrait. Anyone with a modicum of effort can get a reasonable likeness. I firmly believe that. But it is the composing and editing of the vast amount of information that makes a painting feel like it has captured a subject's inner life. This can only be done by careful observation--that is standing back and seeing what the painting says at any one moment. Does your most recent mark head you towards a coherent understanding of this person's inner life or does it head away? This takes practice and it cannot be taught. Some people are simply insensitive to composition and to subtle changes in emotional feel when painting. I know, that sounds mean, but it is simply a fact. Now, I don't mean that a viewer who cannot paint the emotion before them cannot see the emotion when presented by someone who can. Of course they can. That is what makes us human. In this image, I see a very concerned woman wh...

Waterman Sunset

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This is a work that started as a pencil sketch. I stood on the curb and sketched this simple view and then snapped many photos, bracketing the exposure to replicate (as closely as possible) the look of the shadows and highlights. It is entirely possible to capture the look of a scene very accurately with a simple camera on a phone as long as you can control exposure in specific areas. On my iPhone, I can essentially change the exposure infinitely (I say that that advisedly as my physics friends would really spank me on that assertion). I change the exposure for, say, the street. I take the photo then immediately check it against what I see in front of me. If it is off, I delete it, adjust the exposure, and take another. I repeat this process for each area. I took a photo with the exposure of the pale yellow area of the building in mind. I took one of the lower part of the sky and one of the middle and one of the upper. I took one of the brightly lighted orange area of the building, a...

The Return of Still Life

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This painting is inspired by Sadie Valeri's use of wax paper in her still lifes. In this case, I used the green florist paper that the rose came in. The challenge with still life is to produce something that resembles what we actually see. Many people are unable to simply be in the moment and see what is actually there. We "know" that the edge of an object is hard and we paint that exact and strong edge, but the truth is, we actually only see a hard edge when we directly look at a very small portion of reality that is before us. Edges attract attention. We flit from edge to edge and as we flit, each edge comes into exact focus. If you want to see what I mean, it is easy enough and you may simply say, "Duh!", but it bears examining. Find an object within a few feet (2-5 ft.) and stare at a hard edge. Make it a boundary edge that defines the break between the object and the space behind it. Keeping your focus on that edge, notice how blurry the background is--...

Studio Pics

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Here is my studio--at least most of it. I use color balanced verilux lights, an old easel my father gave me when I was sixteen, a tool chest from Cessna Aircraft, a glass palette on top of the red tool chest, and a light box for still life setups. Here is the still life setup in action. (The painting sold in my most recent show). Below is a shot of the finished painting.

Dali.

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Salvadore Dali. This whiteboard drawing I did while giving a test in a college English class. (I have an MFA in creative writing and have a book called The Heirloom, available on Amazon.com) Often I find myself bored during a test or long class activity and will open my phone and draw whatever I find. This is a great practice and lots of fun. Dry erase markers are surprisingly easy to use and manipulate. I have also done large chalk drawings on traditional boards. These only live on if I remember to take a photo.