Lake of the Woods

January 31st, 2017

January 31st, 2017

January 31st, 2017
Oil on Canvasboard, 16 x 20 in

Today, I joined a good friend to paint. I was not satisfied with my rendering of the scene I had in mind yesterday, so I decided to find the photo that was close to it and work from that. So – this painting and the one below are of the same scene – yesterday from memory, today from photo. I am surprised to find that although my colours in this one are much truer to life, and it’s a lot more “realistic” than the one below, I like yesterday’s best. The way the trail of light sweeps left and right, and appears to swell with the water – and just the overall feel. Yesterday’s you’re pulled in, all nature seems to pull you forward toward that moon whereas today’s just lays there before you, being. Interesting what the emotional vs rational renderings reveal.

January 30th, 2017

January 30th, 2017

January 30th, 2017
Oil on Canvasboard, 18 x 24 in

I was full of turmoil and was teaching a painting student. I couldn’t stand to paint the still life the student was painting so decided to work from a picture in my head. I needed to be at my lake. So I struggled to mix the colors that brought the memory and mood to mind. At one point I realized I had a small photo of the approximate scene on my phone, so periodically I referred to that for a tone I wasn’t hitting. Mostly from memory and very emotion driven. The student liked it and bought it, so I left it there.

December 1st, 2016

December 1st, 2016

December 1st, 2016
Loon at Sunset Reprise
Oil on Panel, 12 x 16 in,

Again, trying to work out the gleaming light of sunset in puddles on the water.

October 18th & 19th, 2016

October 18th & 19th, 2016

October 18th & 19th, 2016
Loon Phoenix Rising
Oil on Canvas, 24 x 30 in

Not a Plein Air! I worked on this one rainy day and one sunny day. I attempted a similar painting a year ago and I was not pleased with the result. There’s something about the light and water my mind needed to work out, so I tried it again. Again my focus has to do with creating the illusion of glowing light. If you use a paint brush, the dynamic is a lot easier to create because you can blend and grade your highlights & shadows gradually. With the knife I’m working with planes and slashes and daubs of paint. The starkest contrast you can get on a canvas or a piece of paper is between black and white – but in spite of their being polar opposites, white on it’s own & in contrast with black doesn’t look expressly like “LIGHT.” Even in an Ansel Adams photo, you have the precipice of contrast but no sense of RADIANT LIGHT. The qualities of warmth, grace, beauty, benediction, life-force, joy – to me, those and countless other dazzling adjectives are what I see in light. That’s what I’m trying to paint. The secret and the key I know lie in colour, but also in the energy and motion of a moment.

Incidentally, I do see this as a sort of phoenix, and identify with it as such – particularly as this phoenix is rising up out of water and light rather than ash and fire.

September 9th, 2016

September 9th, 2016

September 9th, 2016
Kenora, Ontario Canada
Oil on Canvasboard, 18 x 24 in (I think)

I painted this, though I was not intending to fess up about it any time soon. I like the water on the left especially, I am angry about the trees. In real life, there is a bridge where lies that straight of sand. The right hand side is a still bay, while the left is subject to currents and a lot of boat wakes as it bears the brunt of welcome channel traffic (“Welcome” is a term I will use with extremely limited sincerity until the date silent, wakeless, environmentally protective boat technology is the law and custom on the lake.) Where was I? Ah. Well, I’m still mad at myself for what I didn’t think went right with the trees. Maybe next year when the memory of what it isn’t has faded, I’ll appreciate it for what it is.

August 22nd, 2016

August 22nd, 2016

August 22nd, 2016
Twin Island, Lake of the Woods, Ontario
Oil on Canvasboard, 16 x 20 in

Boathouse

August 17th, 2016

August 17th, 2016
Boathouse
Oil on Canvasboard, 16 x 20 in