Lake of the Woods

July 1st, 2016

July 1st, 2016

July 1st, 2016
Oil on Canvas, 24 x 36 in

Having trouble with my website, and also with getting myself to post paintings. I have done more than I’ve posted, hopefully both I and the site will be functioning more efficiently presently.

Puffer’s Sunset

March 29th-31st, 2016

March 29th-31st, 2016
Puffer’s Sunset
Oil on Canvas, 24 x 36 in

I was supposed to go painting on Tuesday but the wind was way too strong so I decided to stay in and try to work out a sunset. So because I found one of the photos I took this summer of one of the incredible sunsets on Lake of the Woods and tried to make it come to life. As I was finishing it up this morning, I got a solemn phone call from my brother in law and two nephews alerting me that my Cockatiel Puffer, who they had taken in in May when I had to leave my Uncle’s, had passed away. I know that his last years of life were his happiest, and am so grateful for the loving attention and care they lavished upon him and Bird (his bereaved cage mate.) He was a wonderful guy. RIP.

February 21st, 2016

February 21st, 2016

February 21st, 2016
Lake of the Woods
Painted in Gloucester, MA
Oil on Canvas, 16 x 20 in

I went to Essex to paint today, and according to my phone I walked 1.35 miles with my 30lb paint bag, easel and palette box and found not one thing that was strong enough to pull me out of a storm cloud in my head. This time of year, when there is no snow, is my least favorite time to paint. I don’t like the colors of all the masses of naked deciduous trees huddled against one another in the cold, the pale dead grass, the dirt and sand every where and even the cedars a strange burntout orange-green. The problem with being a painter, or perhaps the problem with being me, is that whatever I am feeling inside is often all I see outside. I have been able to overcome this sort of mood at other times by focusing on the light – because no matter how dreary and dead the husks of exhausted vegetation appear, one stray shaft of light in the right place or moment can make everything come to an almost beatific life. I didn’t find it today outside. So I made my way home in frustration. I made myself paint anyway, choosing a favorite subject (doubly, 1.water 2.Lake of the Woods) and Cracked ON until it was done. Tomorrow when my fog has cleared I might try to straighten the wobbly horizon but in the meantime, it’s a good example of what I’m starting to think of as expressive impressionism, where what I’m looking at is both a reflection of the place and the emotional state of the person painting it at that moment in time.

Sunset, Ring of Fire

Nov 18th - 22nd, 2015

Nov 18th – 22nd, 2015
Sunset, Ring of Fire
Oil on Canvas, 24 x 30 in
(sold)

This week is one of anniversaries and memories, and either the three months of shatteringly beautiful sunsets at the lake or a year full of endings – or an inspiring blend of both – has me very fixated on painting sunsets.

July 5th, 2015

July 5th, 2015

July 5th, 2015
Uncle Bruce’s Backyard
Treaty Island, Lake of the Woods
Kenora, ON Canada
(sold)

Summer, 2015

Summer, 2015

Summer, 2015
Oil on Canvasboard, 11 x 14 in
(sold)

Summer, 2015

Summer, 2015

Summer, 2015
Oil on Canvasboard, 16 x 20 in

What I remember about this was that it was freezing and very windy outside, but I wanted to paint. I was seeing this scene with the woodstove in my mind’s eye as a very cold and clinical but luminous realism, like a Vermeer. What I was actually able to execute looked more like a Spongebob Van Gogh. I raged and hated it and myself for a while, and then after hiding it from myself for a month or so I decided I kind of like it. I mean, it’s rather cheerful and rollicking – as a partnership between Spongebob SquarePants and Vincent Van Gogh ought to be.

May 25th, 2015

May 25th, 2015

Detail

May 25th, 2015
Sketch

May 25th, 2015
Lake of the Woods, ON
Boathouse, overcast day
Oil on Canvasboard, 12 x 16 in

I have been absent because I have been packing, and moving, and travelling. Last Friday I finally made it to the Island, and yesterday I finally got to start painting. Only, I found I had almost no white paint in my paint bag – which meant I had to paint very sparingly, carefully controlling the amount of white I use (and I use white in everything, basically.) Painting sparingly is not nearly as much fun as painting liberally – so tomorrow I’ll go to town and fetch the vast supply of spare paints in my car. From then on, I hope to be painting almost every day. I’m very happy to have finally landed, and here especially.