Saturday, February 25, 2012

Ray Robert's Workshop - Maui 2012




Ray's amazing 20 minute demo!

                                       
Ray and his wife, Peggi Kroll-Roberts


I was fortunate enough to participate in Ray Roberts plein aire workshop in Maui last week. What a blast! Not only was it great fun, it was a great learning experience, and Ray and his wife, Peggi, are wonderful, warm, people. A pleasure to have met.
I have only painted "en plein aire" a few times in my life, with no direction except what I had read. In fact, this is the first time I have taken a workshop from an established artist. I have taught them (how to paint animals in acrylic from photographs) but had never taken one.
Anyways...the object of his plein aire teaching is to use these small plein aire sketches as reference material to utilize in the creation of a more finished studio painting. He doesn't create them to sell.
Some of his most useful tips apply to all types of painting, not just plein aire and I found them incredibly useful. 
Some of them were:

  • ALWAYS do a number of value studies, or Notans...either in just two values or three. Do a few different greyscale ones, and a few color ones, to feel out which one will make the best painting. It will be almost immediately evident. (I thought so anyways!)
  • Translate a scene from your grayscale study to color. It helps immensely in reading the values.
  • Avoid equal shapes, masses,  and divisions. It makes things boring and repetitive.
  • Start with your darkest darks and lightest lights. Once they're established, it's much easier to find the middle values.
  • Borrow from everything around you to make a great painting. You don't have to paint the exact scene. Remove elements, or add them, to make the best scene.
  • Shadows in a landscape are cooler and lighter farther away from the source (under a tree) and warmer and darker towards the source, as they're reflecting light from the source. The farther shadow reflects light from the sky.
These are only a few of the great things I learned. Peggi has invented a few very useful plein aire tools that they sell on their website.
You can check out Ray and Peggi's beautiful work at www.krollroberts.com.



Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Tahitian Dancer


Tahitian Dancer -- 12 x 16 oil on canvas covered panel $600.00

I finally painted something in Maui that I'm happy with! Yay! I've been painting plenty, but nothing good enough to share until yesterday...I was going to show you an in progress progression, and managed to remember to photograph the first step, but I guess I got so excited about the painting going so well, that I forgot to take any more pictures!
Anyways, we saw a Hula show last week, where they do a lot of traditional Polynesian dances. I managed to take quite a few good shots for reference. This girl was dressed in a Tahitian costume, which was very unique. I loved how her dark hair contrasted with the light background, and the strong light on her face made for a dramatic portrait. I tried to work loose and keep it fresh...I'm pretty happy with it.
The photograph of the painting is a bit contrasty, but it's pretty faithful to the colors.
Thanks for stopping by!



Saturday, January 28, 2012

Haiku View...Maui

Marissa's View 

Here's another Maui sketch...this time from Up-Country, in Haiku. Unfortunately the photo doesn't do the sketch justice. The left side is all washed out.I don't have a scanner here, so I have to try to photograph it...yuk! Anyways, it'll do.  
I love it so much up in Haiku. It's the country, what I'm used to. Away from the tourists and the crowds and the traffic. It's just so relaxing. We had a nice visit with our friend's Marisa and Chip yesterday and as we sat on the deck, Bill played guitar, and I chatted and sketched the view. I was taken by the atmospheric sense of distance, and that's what first inspired me to sketch this scene...the light is great up there! I loved the hill, and how the graceful tree shape echoed it...and I just love those crooked fenceposts. It was a bonus that as I was finishing up, some cows and a horse wandered through the scene!




Monday, January 23, 2012

Moleskine in Paradise, Part 1

Moley in Paradise


Here it is! Proof! That I've been doing something other than lying on the beach all day. I'm lying on the beach AND drawing.
There's also a painting in the works, but it's not quite ready to show to you yet.


My daughter and I found these very interesting pods about a week and a half ago. They're round, and split, with a spirally looking thing in the center and they smell delicious. They're brown and hard, and very intriguing. So ever since then, I've been trying to hunt down what they are, and yesterday, I figured it out!
I was having a lovely Thai Iced Coffee at my favorite Wailuku Coffee shop, on my odd day "sans ma famille", and a delicious fragrance was wafting through the shop. I noticed the flowers on the tables looked a lot like the ones that grew on the trees that dropped the pods, and discovered that they're called a "Tahitian Gardenia" or "Tiare Flower". I like the second name best, because it sounds kind of like my name:) So I proceeded to sketch the flower, and finish my moley spread. I think it would look better with color, but I don't have anything to color it with yet...


Friday, January 20, 2012

Sorry for the Long Absence

"Charlie" a commission for a great friend
8" x 10" oil on canvas panel

I know I haven't posted in awhile, and perhaps I should change the title, as has been suggested, but I do really hope to be back to "Almost Daily" soon.  Life has been busy...I've been creating...a lot! Just trying to find my direction, which has changed since I started this blog. So thanks for your patience!

Friday, December 30, 2011

Totally NOT Paintings...Sock Monkey and Sock Horse by Tahirih

So, I've been painting a bit,  a few commissions for Christmas and such, but I'm in a bit of a slump, so I thought I'd try my hand at a bit of a different type of creativity. My kids love stuffies, and we found the pattern for the horse in one of their library books and thought we'd give it a try. The horse is all hand-sewn...talk about time consuming! I think she took about six hours. But I picked up a nifty old vintage singer sewing machine at a garage sale, and not only does it look cool, it sews well. So the monkey took about three hours. It was fun! Now I want to make a whole menagerie of sock animals!

Jacob and Carlos the Monkey

Rhiannon and Sparkles the Horse

Sunday, December 4, 2011

New You Tube Slideshow

Hi all, 
I've been travelling, teaching a workshop and working on commissions for the past month, so I haven't got any new artwork to show you, but I have a little slideshow set to music that I made up today.
Enjoy!