Showing posts with label outdoors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label outdoors. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 12, 2014
Down in the Valley
From a stretch of the Flathead river where I was fishing with Grandpa in his driftboats... Well, he was fishing. I was a little distracted. It was so interesting to see the cool pink grazing the trees and grass right next to the blazing hot orange of the sky. I was trying to figure out what pigments to use in which places, since the instant you snap the photo the camera makes it either all warm or all cool, or some muddy combination. Congrats to Angela and Josh Erickson! This was their wedding present. ;)
Labels:
art,
artists,
brush strokes,
Cows,
Flathead,
Landscape,
loose,
oil painting,
outdoors,
paint,
painting,
plein air,
River,
traditional
Thursday, July 24, 2014
Home Again
From
the top of the big meadow on the Oftedahl Ranch, I painted this familiar scene.
A doe wandered around through my Dad’s log decks behind me, inching closer and
closer out of curiosity. Finally she came right up onto the hill in front of my
easel, and pawed at the ground, challenging my right to paint there. I wondered
how I would describe the sound a deer makes. I think I’d say it’s a cross
between the word “shoo” and “chew,” whispered as loudly as possible. There’s
never any end to the distractions when you’re painting, pleasant as they may
be. But at least I have a supportive husband who takes turns with the kids and
lets me go paint and talk to deer.
Great Grandpa’s Garages
When I was a kid, I spent a
whole summer in these sheds catching rabbits with my sisters and cousins, and they provided a maze of good hiding
places for the rabbits. Dusty, greasy, full of rusty iron tools and filthy old
tires… Great grandpa filled them up with his treasures. But that's not why I painted them. I painted them because as Harvey Dunn says it, they “reflect... the glorious light of heaven.”
Saturday, July 19, 2014
James at Work
James found this nice little runoff spot and did a vertical piece that I think turned out great. Eden (our 2-year old) wanted to hang out with her dad while he worked.
Labels:
art,
James L. Johnson,
Jewel Basin,
Landscape,
life,
montana,
oil,
oil painting,
on location,
outdoor,
outdoors,
plein air
Friday, July 18, 2014
Storing Paint for Plein Air Painting
It drives James nuts how fast the oil paint dries out in a Soltek easel (since it's not airtight), and what really gets to me is how it all slides down to one side of the palette when you're hiking if any of the pigments have some extra oil in them, so when you open it you get this big mess of paint soup to deal with. So... my latest attempt to solve this problem has worked out quite nicely so far: Airtight pillboxes.
I just set this, open, between my palette and painting on the Soltek when I'm working and scoop paint out as I need it. No need to put piles of every color on the palette, and that way there's more room to mix paint. I'm liking this a lot.
I just set this, open, between my palette and painting on the Soltek when I'm working and scoop paint out as I need it. No need to put piles of every color on the palette, and that way there's more room to mix paint. I'm liking this a lot.
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
Paint Camp Week One: Barretts, MT
We weren't really sure where we'd camp that night, but the first day on the road landed us in this gorgeous spot on the Beaverhead river. We were grateful to find a free campsite, a fire pit, an old fashioned hand pump with clean well water, and a few friendly neighbors. So we set up camp and stayed here for a week. With plenty of organizing and logistical problems still to solve, painting time this week was less than the place deserved, but still gratifying. James and I have long faced the problem of how we can both paint with two little kids without neglecting them. Here it's an easy fix... one of us paints while the other plays with the kids. :) One week he paints mornings and I paint afternoons, and then the next week we switch. The awesome thing about painting all week in the same location is that you can do a finished (and even large) painting without being rushed so long as you get several days of similar weather throughout the week. I did one painting multiple days from 8:00- 10:00, and then another (multiple days) from 10:00- 12:00 of a different scene. That way I didn't get frustrated with the changing lighting since I'm not that fast yet. It's working great so far.
Breaking in a new Dutch Oven |
Breakfast with Daddy |
The best ready-made composition was from right in our campsite. :) |
Free entertainment... |
Labels:
art,
boondocking,
camping,
family,
Landscape,
montana,
oil painting,
on location,
outdoor,
outdoors,
painting,
paints,
palette,
plein air,
representational,
traditional,
trip
Our "New" Paint-Mobile: Before and After
I'm so excited to finally be on our way to this summer's paintings! It's been a huge project (that I got us into), but James has been supportive of my crazy idea -as usual-, and the nasty old camper we bought is finally livable. We're both looking forward to the next month and a half of painting and family time... on our own schedule... without deadlines. I'll post details of the camper remodeling process if anyone requests them, but otherwise I'll just stick to some before and after pics.
Before:
After:
The New Roof/Cieling |
Dining to crib conversion:
It's cozy for a family of four, but we only really sleep in here anyway... and we like it. :)
Labels:
artist,
artists,
boondocking,
camper,
camping,
fix,
ghetto,
outdoors,
painting,
plein air,
rebuild,
remodel,
remodeling,
replace,
replace roof,
rv,
travelling,
truck camper,
upgrade