Saturday, April 30, 2011

Bruce's Birthday Dinner at Nosh's 5 "11

To celebrate Bruce's Birthday we went to the newest high class restaurant in Pawleys Island  named "Nosh" .  It bills itself as artful dining, and believe me it  lives up to its banner.  They have some of the best food in the county, and definitely some of the best local artists.
Happy Birthday, Bruce!
 Left front to rear:  MaryPaul and Robert LeClercs;
 center back: Scott Susla,: 
right rear: Nancy & Harry Susla, front Bruce and Cece Jacobs

Friday, April 22, 2011

Doing my homework

My recent pastel workshop reinforced the importance of knowing the value range ot the stick of pastel I am working with.  So I set myself the task of grouping my collection of pastels by colors, and temperature, then sorting them again by value.

A photo of some mid tone sienna color chips against the gray scale. 
It's easy to do with the dark and light ends of the spectrum, but mid values get a little trick.  I wound up making a color chip of each pastel stick, then visually ranking the color chips, then  photographing the chips against a set of known value gray scale sheets.

I used photoshop to remove the color saturation so I could view it in gray tones
 A week later I have a well sorted set of  700  pastel sticks arranged and labeled  by  brand, #, color, and value. And I have a set of color chips with the same information just in case I loose the label and need to figure out where a stick of color belongs.

This is only a portion of  my set.

New pastel painting of Jekyll Island Marsh '11

Jekyll Island


 Last November I visited Jekyll Island.  I was very impressed with all the beautiful colors in the marsh.
Reference photo used to create the painting.

 The pastel work area was set up so I could see both a value and a colored rendition of the reference.

I printed out the reference photo in color black and white to give me a understanding of the values in the scene.  I also displayed the photo on a monitor next to my easel. , then made a little test sheet of the colors/values  I wanted to use. Using my newly sorted values made painting the scene a snap.

Hmmmmm, -- for some reason the color in my  photo of the painting (first photo in this post) came out more saturated than the actual painting ( as you can see the difference from the last photo posted_  shown on the easel.)  The real color of the painting is actually somewhere between the two photos.   Clearly  I will have to spend some time learning to use my camera.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Dinner with the neighbors 4 '11

The neighbors got together this evening for dinner at Harry and Nancy Suslas. It's always fun when everyone is in town and we can all get together.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Visiting with the neighbors: Tree Frog 4 "11

I went outside to empty the rain gauge on my 2nd story deck this morning and found this lovely little green tree frog swimming in the water.  At first I was concerned that it had gotten in and couldn't limb back out.  But not to worry, those little suction pads on those tiny feet could make climbing  any surface possible.  I left him  ( or her) to enjoy catching whatever bugs it could find in the plants and drip pans. Maybe it will keep the mosquito larvae from hatching in the potted plants drip pans.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Greg Barnes Workshop 4 '11

 I  recently attended a three day Greg Barnes pastel  workshop which was held at  the Island Art Gallery on Pawleys Island. The workshop opened as usual with introductions and a verbal review of the equipment that would be used. After which Greg gave us brief demonstration of his pastel painting technique.
The Demonstration on the first day was of painting from a reference photo.   Greg chose a traditional marsh scene from the photos he had brought with him, and proceeded to sketch the scene on his pastel paper with vine charcoal

Then he blocked in the dark tones often smudging the areas to blur and blend the tones.
 Next he put in the  mid tones followed by the lighter shades leaving these more distinct, especially near the focal point.
 Below you can compare the painting with the reference photo.  Obviously Greg is not into slavishly copying the original photo.
Greg then added in the highlights ,  intense tones , and details to finish the piece in less than two hours..
Day two was a lesson in plein air painting.  Actually all three days should have included some plein air work, but the weather didn't cooperate.  The morning of the second day was the only time it didn't pour.
 The subject of the painting was the Island Deli across the parking lot from the Gallery.  The bright red roof was eye catching in the morning sun against the stately old oak tree.
 Greg set up his easel in the parking lot outside the gallery and proceeded to sketch the scene in vine charcoal.

 Then Greg blocked in his colors.  Again he started with the dark tones of the oak, but quickly threw in some of the mid value red so as to have something to judge the other mid tones against.
This is a photo of the painting  when Greg ended the demonstration an hour and a half later.

On day three, it poured, so we were again stuck inside.  Greg decided to show us how to paint with a limited number of colors  
 using a background toned with watercolor .
 As promised, Greg pulled it off beautifully.   The trick, it seems, is in knowing your values well enough to pick the right set of limited colors.
 Each afternoon the class worked on their own paintings, while Greg coached us.  

 Every one's style was different.  From the semi abstract and dreamy painting above,
to the dark and moody one above. 
There were some highly realistic renditions,
and even an attempt to paint the same scene as Greg's original demo.(Below)
Clearly personal style matters.  Both paintings were beautifully rendered, but each was unique.

Monday, April 4, 2011

The Thunderhead '11

With all the storms hitting the South, there has been a lot of dramatic cloud formations in the sky over the marsh....I just finished this pastel painting of a thunderhead I saw yesterday.

Oh by the way, so far, dramatic cloud formations are about the only action we have seen from those storm fronts.