Wednesday, June 9, 2021

The Flower Studies

 My canvases arrived and I am three paintings in to the flower studies planned. Unfortunately I broke one of the canvases, the stretcher bars. I am going to try to repair it, but I set it aside for now.

 

The great thing I love most about studies is that they seem to wander where they want to. I am not restricted to advancing them into refinement. I don’t have to do anything other than explore. Fast and loose is they way of studies. 

One of the purposes of this particular group is exploration of how positive and negative spaces work out in a square format. The other is a play, between vibrancy of the flowers next to neutrality of the negative space, and neutrality of the flowers, next to vibrancy of the negative space.  It is also a lot of fun playing around with shapes, building some up and flattening out others, simplifying.

 

Life is swell for country painters…..



Wednesday, June 2, 2021

Series

 I love to do series of paintings. Sometimes the series is based on a subject, sometimes based on a particular palette I want to test for its limits. Sometimes I work intermittently on long term series. I have been working on a series called Night Palms for many years. I might do two or three of the theme a year.

 

Recently I completed a fruit tree series. The first one sold a week ago to a tea party visitor to my studio. 


I am waiting for a group of 12 new 12x12 deep gallery wrap canvases to be delivered for my next series. It is going to be a study series for florals. I want to explore a more primitive, semi abstract exploration of some of my favorite flowers. Getting back to design elements for these studies. 

 

I often do series of paintings during the summer months when Florida slows down for artists. It is so hot here that not much goes on socially between June and October. It is a fine time to explore the art of a series.

 

Life is swell for country painters....... 



Monday, May 31, 2021

Florida Greens


 Painting Florida greens is a true challenge for beginning painters. Florida has every green imaginable. In Spring and Summer they can be overwhelming. The biggest mistake I see for painters is an attempt to match the saturation painters see in the landscape on their canvas. Over saturation is a huge problem. 

 

What you see in the landscape rarely translates well to a painting.  On canvas, these over saturated green look fake and ill conceived. Intensity is pleasing in small doses, but overdone not good. If you want color to stand out, subdue the area around it. Pouring more color on doesn’t work well.

 

My example is the posted painting. I had been looking at this magnificent Flame tree for long years. I noticed that many of the painters who love this subject handled their painting with high saturation of not only the tree, but of all the greens and landscape surrounding the tree. I did not care for that approach. To me the painting screamed to me as the viewer. 

 

I was keenly aware of this when I decided to do this painting. I purposefully subdued the greens and Palms around the flame tree so the tree would be the star. Nothing should compete with a tree like this. It is truly the ⭐️. Everything else is simply a support for it. It turned out to be one of my favorite paintings. I still have it. These trees don’t grow where I live, and many people are not familiar with it.

 

One easy way to subdue greens is by adding a tad of cadmium orange or red to the mixture.

 

Country painters love painting greens.... 

Saturday, November 14, 2020

Grace

 Grace is something we sorely need this year.  More and more, competitiveness has become the norm. I am appalled to see most of reality TV is about competition, even with young kid shows.  Winning or losing is all important now.


I believe we need to consider that being gracious winners or losers is more important than the prize. Perhaps we have forgotten that all of us win and lose regularly in life, from small irritations and victories to large and important. 


Most of our differences can be ignored. We all want our families to thrive. We all want respect and dignity. We can start with that without the anger and resentment of defeat or the righteous superior attitude of victory. I know I need to work on this myself, do you? 


I learned about grace from two important women in my life, my mother who was a traditional southern woman on the surface, and made of steel underneath. My other mentor of grace was a woman I worked for and have known for many years. She lives in Kentucky now. She was also made of steel but had incredible grace toward those of lesser means and status. 


It is never too late to reach out to each other, despite our differences. Treat others with grace, though they may not want it.


Life can be grace filled for country painters.......


Saturday, October 31, 2020

Florida Land Owners

 I must speak up on behalf of Florida’s rural land owners, farmers, and ranchers. I have known and been friends with Florida land owners for most of my life.

Yesterday I found myself in a meeting with several urbanites who belittled ranching, farming, and rural people. Many of them were vegans. I have nothing against vegans, to each his own. I am an omnivore personally.  

Many urban people are unaware that ranchers and rural people are excellent stewards of the remaining private lands in Florida. We are all that stands in the way of developers, who would be happy to pave the entire state.

Ranchers allow universities to come on to their land to study wildlife, water quality improvement, and do many studies for climate research and habitat improvement. Ranchers maintain valuable habitat and remove invasive plants that are not endemic to our natural world. They love their land passionately. These vast ranches are home to many wild creatures and trees, and are cared for by educated and intelligent families. We are multigenerational Florida natives. The next time you go to Publix, be grateful to land owners.

Life is wonderful for country painters....






Thursday, October 22, 2020

Election Stress

The election draws near. Lots of early voting this year. I voted early too. I can feel the stress building now, more than in any other voting year I can remember. Everything is at stake for our leadership and future as a nation.

 I confess that it disturbs me greatly, when I read that some of my friends have voted against my candidates. I know they feel the same way about me. We both react initially by thinking how could they vote for that horrible person? We are deeply divided politically in this country. I feel a terrible dread that we may repeat 2016.

 If that is to be, then I must prepare myself to live with this political climate for another four years. So many of our natural resources are being destroyed and that would continue. We only have a few more years to save our planet, and we are going in the wrong direction. We are going in the wrong direction away from civility as well.

 I must continue to respect others though we deeply disagree on so many issues. Unlike some, I want to reach out to others who feel deeply that I am wrong. I won’t ever change my beliefs in decency, good moral values, conservation and civil rights for all, but cutting those who disagree with me off, will not bring solutions for our future. Friendships create shared values at least on some issues.

 

Politics are stressful for country painters…



Wednesday, October 14, 2020

Sustainability

 A college student wrote to me to ask questions for a sustainability project he is doing about the art industry. He had several questions and they were quite thoughtful. I love that he chose this topic for his project. 


One question was about sustainability and environmental impact of art galleries and artists’ studios and materials. What would I change about them? After thought, I  answered that packaging was the biggest issue for me. Everything is housed in plastic now. Canvases, hard boards, and other substrates are wrapped in plastic. All paints are now in plastic tubes, mediums are now in plastic bottles.


Why not go back to recyclable metal tubes and glass bottles, as they were once packaged? Art boards and canvases don’t need to be wrapped in plastic. I think plastic is far more damaging than the paint it holds. 


Another interesting question was about using recycled materials as art forms. He was familiar with recycled machine parts in sculpture. I pointed out the wide use and acceptance of recycled paper products like old book pages, maps, tea bags, and hand made paper, for two and three dimensional art. There are endless possibilities now for recycling materials and I often recycle frames. My collectors love knowing their paintings are in recycled frames. 


Sustainability is important for country artists.......




Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Change

 


                                                                       Linda’s Web Page

I think it’s really important to be thinking ahead as a painter. Change is always on the horizon. I never put all of my eggs in one basket. I am constantly thinking about other opportunities for marketing and promoting my work. As our society changes rapidly, so does the art market and the way people buy art. Moving your work around as selling venues change, is the method I use to stay fresh and lively with my art. I spend a lot of time in the studio discovering new things and I must adjust my style and painting skills to my aging abilities. Having RA, hand tremors, and partial blindness are mere inconveniences.


In years past, street art festivals morphed into galleries for me.  After the recession it became essential for me to sell my own work as many galleries closed and that business model began to fade.  I still show in a few galleries but I am more comfortable as a self- supporting painter. Now social media, in the COVID age, has become much more important than the paint outs I did for 10 years.


 Watching financial trends, shopping trends and keeping my ego in check has helped me to survive in a less than stellar economy. Focusing my love and fidelity on my collectors and potential collectors is much more important than entering contests and winning prizes. I began to understand some years back, that competing and prestige among artists was not very important to my career. I don’t have to impress artists.  I want to please those people who love and support me with their hard earned dollars. They make my long career possible and I am humbled by their kindness. I know what my priorities are and I focus on them consistently. 


Life is wonderful for country painters.....




Sunday, October 4, 2020

Be Generous







 Let’s be more sharing between artists. When I was a young artist I began to notice that established artists were rarely willing to share anything, especially marketing information.  Gallery owners tend to be that way as well. 


There is a tendency for artists to horde information, collectors, and even supplies, fearing what? They are afraid another artist will out distance them in popularity? Someone else will steal their collectors? They will have fewer sales? Someone else will win the prizes? 


Perhaps another artist is popular because they are kind and generous. Perhaps they live with a sense of gratitude toward their fans, followers and collectors, earning the popularity without harming other artists. Other artists cannot steal your collectors unless you are careless in your relationships. It is perfectly alright for collectors to enjoy collecting a variety of art. 


Selling art is not about how many paintings you sell. You don’t need to know if you are out sold by other artists. You are missing the point. I know an artist who brags frequently about being the most popular artist and having the most sales in his/her town. He/she doesn’t include the fact that his/her pricing undercuts everyone else’s prices in order to claim that questionable fame. 


As a younger competitive artist, I won a drawer full of prizes. You know what? I never sold a painting because of prizes. Prizes are nothing but an ego booster. People who only buy art from prize winners are shallow. Prizes are a capricious decision by judges from university art departments. I have judged many art shows in my long career. It boils down to personal taste. Be generous with artists coming up behind you. It will only make you a better artist, and person. 


Life is generous for country painters......


Saturday, October 3, 2020

Tea Party Fun

 I’ve been expanding my menu for tea parties at my studio. I found some swell new baking ramekins, a soft blue color, that go with the plates I use for tea. Monday before the vaccination bombs exploded, I made six little shepherds pies in the ramekins, for afternoon tea parties. I will also be making little chicken pot pies for parties.


Expanding into real cooking makes me feel like I am back to my old and loved parties before Covid. I always liked to serve serious food at my parties. I am not one for the cheese and crackers or dip and chips food. Anyone who looks at me knows I like real food. 


My guests always get homemade food. A variety of sandwiches, fresh fruit, savory spreads, and homemade desserts. My next tea party menu will be: shepherds pie, chick pea and cucumber salad, fresh fruit, chicken port wine and cheese spread, and white chocolate bark for dessert. My friend is coming out in a couple of weeks to commission two paintings, so we will have much to talk about. I can’t wait to see her. It has been a long time.


Tea parties are wonderful for country painters.......