In the afternoon the sun shifted to the west, of course, and we were able to now look east toward the Noyo Harbor area. There are a lot of great structures and boats here. Enough material for days of slopping paint on canvas. The main challenge is finding a spot to set up and to get the light right. On this day, I painted from across the river.
I really like the scene. I think I took several photographs so I should be able to tackle another version in the studio. In this case I used a 10" x 20" canvas panel. I like these 1:2 ratio canvas sizes. They are perfect for landscapes. I wish I had brought more for the trip. I feel that the buildings on the left are a bit weak. I may see if I can punch them up a bit with some contrast. The light was coming in from the west (right) and it was bright and intense. I didn't really capture that...but I should be able to add it now without much reworking.
All in all it was a great first day at Ft. Bragg. Beautiful weather and great landscapes to challenge any artist to do their best.
Ruth Andre on the first day. She had a very successful trip. Ruth's fabulous blog and her posts on our Ft. Bragg workshop can be found here: http://apaintingday.blogspot.com/
Barbara found a great spot, but without an umbrella, that sun was BRIGHT! Barbara and her husband Mario had just returned from New York where Barbara had a one-woman show. The competition on these workshop trips is getting fierce! Here's Barbara's website...you'll see why she was having a show in New York!!
http://barbarafracchia.com/
Ted gets going on day 1. The sign isn't kidding, especially if Ted has brought along Thalo Green. Ted had a great trip and managed to do one of the best paintings of the four days. We didn't take a vote, but if we had, Ted would have gotten the prize, I think.
Monday, October 24, 2011
Sunday, October 23, 2011
Supporting the Locke Foundation

The Locke Foundation is the Locke town council and they raise funds for improvements and historic projects in the little town. Saturday was the Harvest Homecoming Festival, a fund raiser that included Chinese singers, dancers, a chinese orchestra and, of course, Chinese FOOD! A great time!!

I donated three paintings that I've done over the years in Locke. All of them sold in the silent auction!! I was very pleased to contribute the proceeds, and also pleased that they all sold! How about that!??
I could only find pictures of two of the paintings and they are included here. Both were 12 x 16 I believe. The one on main street was painted during the annual chili cook-off on stretched pre-toned canvas. Painting while your insides are being dissolved by incredibly hot - and delicious - chili is a challenge. The tequila shots that many of the chili vendors pass out as bribes to vote for their chili don't help a lot either. The painting of the buildings in the alley behind main Street was done on a toned canvas panel. I've always liked this painting. I used black acrylic gesso to sketch the scene and also to block in the darks. The rest of the painting was done in oils. This black gesso technique gives a painting a lot of contrast....something my work can sometimes lack. The gesso is also really nice to paint over with oils...Take a look at the handrails painted over the black gesso in the lower left of the painting. I like the effect. The third painting not shown here was also painted from the end of Main Street during the Chili Cook-off a few years ago. It was a large painting done entirely on location. I think the beer helped me see it through
Don't miss a chance to visit Locke if you get it!!
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
In Ft. Bragg with the Group
Once again, I attended a workshop presented by Howard Rees, Jackson California artist, and once again, it was a gathering of good friends - this time in Ft. Bragg California. Many of these fellow artists have been mentioned in my earlier posts, but I'll sprinkle pictures of them here and there as I present our four days of painting in the next few blog entries.
Our weather couldn't have been better for the entire trip. The days were warm and sunny with cool mornings and evenings that were easily handled with a light sweater. I marveled the entire time at how lucky we were. Some members of the group had been in the area the previous week and reported heavy downpours for days on end, but for our visit we could not have ordered up better days along the rugged and spectacular Mendocino, Ft. Bragg coastline.
On the first day, we painted right below our hotel balconies in the Noyo Harbor area. I believe I am right in saying that this is a harbor formed by the meeting of the Noyo River with the Pacific Ocean. The harbor is surrounded on all sides by high rock cliffs, some covered with trees and forest, some craggy and stark. The intense early morning light from the east forced me to face toward the ocean (west) and look for painting opportunities there. There is so much to see when you look out to the ocean...distant cliffs, rock pounded by surf. It's immense and can be almost overwhelming.
I decided to paint the massive cliff face at the very point that the ocean meets the river. The early morning light was coming in strong and low from the left and raking across a few jutting areas of the cliff. I wanted to capture that light while painting the rock boldly and quickly. I knew the scene would change rapidly and soon the whole cliff face would be in sun, so I sketched directly with the brush on a white (untoned) canvas panel. All the while, I made an effort to remain clear in what I wanted to paint - in other words, I had a plan, something I so often forget in the rush of plein air painting. I made a special effort to sketch exactly the areas where the light struck the sloping rock face in the lower left and the very tip at the top of the cliff before they changed.
This was the result and my first painting of the trip. It's oil on canvas, 12"x16".
Frankly I was very pleased with the result and consider it one of my best plein air efforts in awhile. I love the colors and I felt that I maintained some restraint and correct values in the light.

On the same morning, Andy (left) and Rusty (below) paint similar scenes. If you look carefully at the picture of Rusty, you can see the same concrete seawall that appears in my painting (extreme right).
Our weather couldn't have been better for the entire trip. The days were warm and sunny with cool mornings and evenings that were easily handled with a light sweater. I marveled the entire time at how lucky we were. Some members of the group had been in the area the previous week and reported heavy downpours for days on end, but for our visit we could not have ordered up better days along the rugged and spectacular Mendocino, Ft. Bragg coastline.
On the first day, we painted right below our hotel balconies in the Noyo Harbor area. I believe I am right in saying that this is a harbor formed by the meeting of the Noyo River with the Pacific Ocean. The harbor is surrounded on all sides by high rock cliffs, some covered with trees and forest, some craggy and stark. The intense early morning light from the east forced me to face toward the ocean (west) and look for painting opportunities there. There is so much to see when you look out to the ocean...distant cliffs, rock pounded by surf. It's immense and can be almost overwhelming.
I decided to paint the massive cliff face at the very point that the ocean meets the river. The early morning light was coming in strong and low from the left and raking across a few jutting areas of the cliff. I wanted to capture that light while painting the rock boldly and quickly. I knew the scene would change rapidly and soon the whole cliff face would be in sun, so I sketched directly with the brush on a white (untoned) canvas panel. All the while, I made an effort to remain clear in what I wanted to paint - in other words, I had a plan, something I so often forget in the rush of plein air painting. I made a special effort to sketch exactly the areas where the light struck the sloping rock face in the lower left and the very tip at the top of the cliff before they changed.
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Noyo Harbor Cliff, Ft. Bragg, CA |
This was the result and my first painting of the trip. It's oil on canvas, 12"x16".
Frankly I was very pleased with the result and consider it one of my best plein air efforts in awhile. I love the colors and I felt that I maintained some restraint and correct values in the light.
On the same morning, Andy (left) and Rusty (below) paint similar scenes. If you look carefully at the picture of Rusty, you can see the same concrete seawall that appears in my painting (extreme right).
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Fiddling Around with Nero
Last weekend I decided to try the Wetcanvas.com Portrait forum Challenge for July and August. I shouldn't have. The challenge turned out to be to paint from a sculptured bust with several to select from. Foolishly I bypassed several lovely young ladies to take on ....yep....Nero. That's where my troubles began. Mistake #1
The first day I printed out the subject using standard printing paper rather than photo paper. Mistake #2. The picture printed out dull and without the rich look of the original bust. I didn't care since I convinced myself the print was only for the purpose of copying the head onto canvas and that the painting would be done from a computer monitor or iPad. Using a grid system, I transferred the 8 x 10 photo to the 9 x 12 canvas. I had a new panel from RayMar I wanted to try...triple primed, very smooth cotton canvas. Nice stuff made for portraits. Wow it's easy to draw on too. I rarely use pencil, preferring to draw directly with the brush but I wanted to proceed carefully so I drew it out.
In an hour or so on the first day I had it blocked in. I was OK with the progress.
The second day I worked another hour or so to begin to refine the image a bit. I find the block in stage to be the part of the process I like the best. It always seems to go downhill from there. I was using synthetic sable for most of the block it. For several years, I've used bristle entirely, but I'm beginning to move away from that.
On the third day, I worked on getting a likeness while at the same time trying to paint a "statue" and not a real face. I want this to look like a sculptured bust. In particular I wanted to correct the chin which I had much to far to the left. At the end of this session, I was pleased with the general progress and the likeness. I should have quit right there, but of course - Mistake # 3 - I didn't. In looking at the painting, and more specifically, at the photos of the painting, I could see several issues. The primary one wasn't a drawing problem -although there were a few of those at least -instead, I didn't like the color. Somehow I had drifted into a very greenish cast to the shadow, no doubt a result of using unbleached titanium as a primary base color and adding ivory black for shading. The mixture results in a green, which I should remember for landscapes, but which is unpleasant in a portrait. (It looks better here than it did in life.) Anyway, I decided I wanted to 'repaint' the bust to get closer to the richer base color and to get to a cooler, bluer gray in the shadows. Not to mention that by now my new Isabey mongoose brushes had arrived and I was dying to try them out for the first time. A perfect excuse to Fiddle with Nero some more.
Need I say it? Tune in for the next post in which I manage to take four giant steps backward without saying "Mother May I?"
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Day 1 the pencil drawing using a grid |
In an hour or so on the first day I had it blocked in. I was OK with the progress.
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Day 1 the block in started. |
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Day 2 Refining the image a bit |

Need I say it? Tune in for the next post in which I manage to take four giant steps backward without saying "Mother May I?"
Sunday, July 10, 2011
Sunday Afternoon
It was a lazy Sunday afternoon today in Sacramento. Hot and beautiful as the summer always is here; however I was at
loose ends until I remembered the July Challenge! in the Southwest forum on Wetcanvas.com. Sure enough there were some great pictures to choose from this month. One was this old place located in O'Donnell Texas. I'll have to look that up on Google Earth. I'm not sure what part of Texas it is...although it sure looks like West Texas...maybe even Judge Roy Bean country! Anyway, I can't resist these
old shacks! When I see them in person, I can't help but think about the
lives that were lived there. I got the photo on my iPad and went out
to the studio. I painted for about an hour, went off to do some yard
work and shopping, then returned for about another hour to work on the
already setting first coats. (In the dry heat, the oil really sets
quick...and I was using Liquin today too.)
Here's the photo uploaded by Kay of the Southwest Forum. She had several good pictures to choose from this month. (I hope she doesn't mind me using here photo here. Here's a link to Kay's fantastic blog (http://kaysmithbrushworks.blogspot.com/)
as a bit of a thank you!)
I picked an oblong canvas because I wanted to put some prairie behind the little shack and create a sense of space and, of course, loneliness. (There's actually about another 2" of the painting on the right, which shows in the preview, but not in the final post. Agggghhh... I think it does a lot to give a feeling of vastness and emptiness. Here's a smaller size to show you what I mean..)
I moved the Yucca plant (tree??) and added a window and door to the exposed face of the cabin. (Love those tall skinny windows!) I made the Yucca the focal point which then hopefully leads one to the more complicated cabin. I exaggerated the roof lines intentionally to add a bit more drama. I like the way it came out...and I was glad that I decided to get out into the studio and make it a Painting Day, as my Artist Friend Ruth Andre says on her blog ( http://ruthandre.com/blog ). It was a good Sunday all around.
Here's the photo uploaded by Kay of the Southwest Forum. She had several good pictures to choose from this month. (I hope she doesn't mind me using here photo here. Here's a link to Kay's fantastic blog (http://kaysmithbrushworks.blogspot.com/)
as a bit of a thank you!)
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Shack in O'Donnell Texas Oil on 8" x 16" panel |
I moved the Yucca plant (tree??) and added a window and door to the exposed face of the cabin. (Love those tall skinny windows!) I made the Yucca the focal point which then hopefully leads one to the more complicated cabin. I exaggerated the roof lines intentionally to add a bit more drama. I like the way it came out...and I was glad that I decided to get out into the studio and make it a Painting Day, as my Artist Friend Ruth Andre says on her blog ( http://ruthandre.com/blog ). It was a good Sunday all around.
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
Final day in Bishop
Our last full day of painting in Bishop found us alongside a country road outside of town. The mountains in the distance were beautiful with snow still on top. Ruth Andre (ruthandre.com) and I set up and painted these trees to start the day...
It was a simply gorgeous summer day...yes, it was hot, but it was SUMMER! After the long drawn out winter/spring this year, it was glorious. Immediately in front of this scene between the easel and the trees an irrigation canal flowed. Just a few feet away, at the source, it was much wider and partly concrete lined. About noon or so two bicyclists came by, stopped and hopped into the cold clear water. It looked wonderful! And it reminded me so much of growing up in Fresno and swimming in the canals in the summer...and sometimes even the San Joaquin River. Wow those were wonderful days. I think this painting was the most successful of my Bishop trip. Perhaps listening to the swimmers in the cold clear water as I painted had something to do with it!
After lunch, I set up under some nearby trees and tried to paint the distant mountains. I didn't catch the intensity of the high desert light in this picture, but overall I was pleased with it. It's the kind of "pure" landscape that I always have such trouble with, so I felt that it was not too bad with that in mind.
We did paint one more morning before heading home around noon, but my painting wasn't successful at all. The real highlight of the last day was watching the local kids come down to swim in the Mill Pond and to use the rope swing tied to one of the big trees overhanging the pond. Growing up in a small town definitely has its compensations. With that it was goodbye to Bishop and my artist friends until next time.
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Outside Bishop Oil on 12" x 16" canvas panel |
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Eastern Slope Oil on 12" x 16" canvas panel |
After lunch, I set up under some nearby trees and tried to paint the distant mountains. I didn't catch the intensity of the high desert light in this picture, but overall I was pleased with it. It's the kind of "pure" landscape that I always have such trouble with, so I felt that it was not too bad with that in mind.
We did paint one more morning before heading home around noon, but my painting wasn't successful at all. The real highlight of the last day was watching the local kids come down to swim in the Mill Pond and to use the rope swing tied to one of the big trees overhanging the pond. Growing up in a small town definitely has its compensations. With that it was goodbye to Bishop and my artist friends until next time.
Monday, July 4, 2011
Bishop Workshop Continued
On the second day of our workshop, we visited the Laws Railroad Museum. Among RR and history buffs, the narrow gauge Southern Pacific branch that served the high desert area is well known. The museum has only one locomotive and a string of cars, but it is full of old structures, machines, steam engines, and of course the famous Laws water and oiling tanks. There was just too much to paint. During the day, the wind kicked up, blowing sand and debris into the air...and into paintings as well. It was challenging. I was pleased with the performance of my easy...I never felt it was going to blow over. I think two of my fellow painters french easels did go over...and I know that at least one painting went into the dirt jelly side down. I did have to close up my umbrella a couple times as a precaution. I was intrigued by this old Ford sitting at an ancient gas pump. It was in full shade with brightly lit buildings behind. That was the look I wanted to capture...the car and foreground dark with brilliant sun behind. The painting feels very unfinished to me, but I think the design worked out OK.
After lunch and when the wind had died down, I tried to capture the line of cars behind the narrow gauge locomotive. It was almost as though the train was pulling into the Laws Depot (another wonderful relic on the museum site). But I no sooner got set up and started a block in than it was time to quit. It seems the Museum closes at 4PM each day, so we did our critique at about 2:30...earlier than usual. I got caught with nothing more that this little study. (Sorry for the lousy photo...I'll see if I can't get a better one,) This isn't much of a painting, but I've posted it just to be honest about the struggle that goes on when painting outside. Time, light, wind and early closing all can work against you!
At the left are the water tank and oil tank for the little narrow gauge locomotive- which no longer runs. Though they don't show well in this photo, they are well known structures to RR buffs. I love the way they are silouetted against the Eastern Sierras. I can almost hear the whistle and the chug chug of the little locomotive. I would love to return to Laws to paint. The opportunities are almost endless.
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Laws RR Museum 1932 (?) Ford 12" x 16" oil on panel |
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Narrow Gauge Pulling Into Laws Oil on 8" x 16 " panel |
At the left are the water tank and oil tank for the little narrow gauge locomotive- which no longer runs. Though they don't show well in this photo, they are well known structures to RR buffs. I love the way they are silouetted against the Eastern Sierras. I can almost hear the whistle and the chug chug of the little locomotive. I would love to return to Laws to paint. The opportunities are almost endless.
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