I've been doing some painting recently, and I'd like to share some of it. I started doing watercolors about 30 years ago, but then just kind of let it go after several years. After I retired in 2012, I started taking classes in watercolor, and it got me painting again. So here's what I've been doing lately.
Tuesday, November 5, 2019
October 2019
Last summer I added one more painting from the John Muir Trail. On our way up to Silver Pass, we passed this marmot on the rocks. I could have zoomed in on the marmot, but I wanted this to be more about his rocky habitat. I felt that a close-up of the rocks said more to me about the place than the many expansive views in my photos.
When my painting class started up again in September, our first project was a trumpet player that Ron had photographed in New Orleans. I thought the background was a total mess when I started, but now that it is done, I like it.
Our second class project was to paint something for a holiday card. We had just returned from a couple of weeks in west coast Canada, and I wanted to do something from that. We had visited the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, and saw these totem poles and houses in an outdoor exhibit. After days of gray skies, dark forests and wide views of sea and islands, I felt that the native artwork said a lot about this environment, so I tried to put it all together in this painting.
Thursday, July 18, 2019
July 2019
My painting class was done for the summer, but I wanted to keep it going. I decided to do some more work on the series that I had in mind of scenes from my 2001 hike of the John Muir Trail. I took several hundred photos on that trip, and though many of them wouldn't make very interesting paintings, I was sure that some of them would work. This scene is from our second day on the trail, after leaving Yosemite over Donohue Pass and descending a couple of miles to Rush Creek. We rested for an hour or two in this beautiful spot.
On our third day on the trail, we passed by Garnet Lake, with a great view of Mt. Ritter and Banner Peak. My son, Aaron, and his wife, Alicia, were accompanying me at this point, and I think that after a couple of days of hard work, they were finally fully appreciating what a beautiful place this was.
On the morning of our fourth day, we hiked along Shadow Lake and saw this scene. I don't usually like to do much masking, but I thought it was needed for this one, for the trees and sparkles. I wanted to show the early morning light with lots of contrast, and I think I did it pretty well.
I had already done a couple of paintings several years ago that fit into this series. At some point, I'd like to show them all together. I could put them on a website that I've been planning for years but haven't got around to yet. Two of the paintings that belong in this series are from May 2015 showing the Tuolumne River and Palisades Lakes.
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
June 2019
The last class project of the spring session was a turtle. Ron supplied two different photos, one black and white and one in color, and the idea was to combine them. By the end of the class, I thought it just needed a little more work, which I could do the following week. When that time came around, I decided that I was satisfied with it as it was, so I started a new painting instead.
One spring afternoon I went for a walk on the Ukraina Trail in the Hayward hills. It was a beautiful day, and as I passed a rocky hillside with a few poppies, I thought that it could be the subject of a painting some day, and I took a photo with my phone. In my class, while everyone else was still working on the turtle, I started this scene and finished it up later at home.
Tuesday, May 28, 2019
May 2019
I found a photo online that I liked of an old car in the snow at the ghost town of Bodie. It was fun to paint and I think it turned out pretty good.
In April, our friends Norma and Mike invited us up to their ranch deep in the hills southeast of Livermore. The wildflowers were at their best, and we walked up the ranch road to admire them. In my painting class, our next project was to paint the "superbloom", the amazing displays of wildflowers brought on by our wet winter, especially in southern California. Those scenes didn't excite me much. I wanted to paint a place that seemed more real to me, someplace that I had actually experienced. I chose to work from one of my photos from Norma and Mike's ranch with a field of poppies.
I found another photo online that I liked and wanted to paint. I'm not sure of the exact location but I think it is in the Buttermilks west of Bishop. I really like high desert places like this and I like my painting a lot.
Another class project was to paint this scene of the entrance gate to San Francisco's Chinatown. It was a very busy scene but didn't try for too much accurate detail. After two class periods, I was done, and I looked around and no one else was anywhere close to being finished. They all joke about how fast I paint, but it doesn't feel fast to me. I spend a lot of time just sitting and thinking about what to do next, and waiting for areas to dry. I'm not sure what the others do that takes so long.
A couple of months ago I painted a scene from my 2001 hike on the John Muir Trail, but I wasn't completely satisfied with it and thought I could do better. I almost never try to repeat a painting, but I know that many other artists do with good results, so I tried it with this one. The scene is at the upper end of Lyell Canyon in Yosemite, when Mt. Lyell first appears. This time I added some people. I had another photo of my son Aaron, his wife Alicia, and her brother Ray sitting on the bank, and I used it to add them into this scene. I think it improves the painting a lot, and I like it.
In April, our friends Norma and Mike invited us up to their ranch deep in the hills southeast of Livermore. The wildflowers were at their best, and we walked up the ranch road to admire them. In my painting class, our next project was to paint the "superbloom", the amazing displays of wildflowers brought on by our wet winter, especially in southern California. Those scenes didn't excite me much. I wanted to paint a place that seemed more real to me, someplace that I had actually experienced. I chose to work from one of my photos from Norma and Mike's ranch with a field of poppies.
I found another photo online that I liked and wanted to paint. I'm not sure of the exact location but I think it is in the Buttermilks west of Bishop. I really like high desert places like this and I like my painting a lot.
Another class project was to paint this scene of the entrance gate to San Francisco's Chinatown. It was a very busy scene but didn't try for too much accurate detail. After two class periods, I was done, and I looked around and no one else was anywhere close to being finished. They all joke about how fast I paint, but it doesn't feel fast to me. I spend a lot of time just sitting and thinking about what to do next, and waiting for areas to dry. I'm not sure what the others do that takes so long.
A couple of months ago I painted a scene from my 2001 hike on the John Muir Trail, but I wasn't completely satisfied with it and thought I could do better. I almost never try to repeat a painting, but I know that many other artists do with good results, so I tried it with this one. The scene is at the upper end of Lyell Canyon in Yosemite, when Mt. Lyell first appears. This time I added some people. I had another photo of my son Aaron, his wife Alicia, and her brother Ray sitting on the bank, and I used it to add them into this scene. I think it improves the painting a lot, and I like it.
Friday, March 29, 2019
March 2019
One day in early February, I went up Mt. Diablo for a hike. A couple of days before, it had snowed on the mountain, but I didn't care about that, I just wanted to do some hiking. I found that the road up was closed at Juniper Camp, and the parking lot was filled with people come to play in the snow. I started up the trail to the summit, and took a few photos along the way, including the one that inspired this painting. I think I did a pretty good job of it. The trail began to be dangerously icy in spots, so I gave up and turned back before reaching the top, but I had a great afternoon anyway.
For the last project for the winter session of my painting class, we painted a couple of toucans. Ron had just returned from a vacation in Costa Rica, and that may have inspired his choice of subject. The birds and branch were masked to paint a quick wet-on-wet background, and for once, I refrained from trying to fix it. That made it a better painting.
Wednesday, February 27, 2019
February 2019
Another class project was based on one of Ron's photos of the coast at Pacific Grove. The photo was of an overcast day, and a bit uninspiring, but it did show some nice rocks and waves. It was easy enough to make it a sunny day with a blue sky. Ron masked the white parts of the waves, but I just painted around them. It was fun to paint and I think mine came out pretty good.
This winter has been a very rainy one, but one rare nice day I went for a hike in Pleasanton Ridge Regional Park. Out in the middle of this big natural area I came across this house and barn, a park employee residence. It made a nice scene so I took a photo with my iphone. The painting went quite well, and I like the result.
On another rare nice day, I went hiking in Mt. Diablo State Park. I started at the Mitchell Canyon Entrance and went up the Mitchell Rock Trail. I took a bunch of photos. Many of them are spectacular distant views, but I wanted to paint something that was more close-up, a more intimate view. I chose one showing the rocky trail up the mountainside. I wanted to keep it fairly loose and impressionistic, but at least somewhat real, and it turned out to be quite a challenge. Without any easily recognizable shapes like buildings or figures, I found it hard to make it look like more than just abstract shapes and colors. It may not be one of my better paintings, but I feel that it is heading in the right direction, toward something that has more feeling than just a pretty picture.
Thursday, January 24, 2019
January 2019
The winter session of my painting class was about to start and I wanted to get warmed up a few days early. Maureen had turned me on to a Facebook group called "Eastern Sierra & Scenic Hwy 395" where lots of people post photos and artwork, and many of them are very good photographers. On that site I found a photo of an old wagon in the ghost town of Bodie, and I decided to paint it. I am quite pleased with how it turned out and it helped boost confidence in my painting again.
For quite some time I've been thinking that a good source of ideas for paintings would be my photos of hiking the John Muir Trail in 2001. I thought that it would be cool to have a series of paintings that would illustrate the story of my adventure. I've already done a couple of them, but this was the first one that I did with the idea in mind that it was the beginning of a series. Five of us started out from Tuolumne Meadows, and after several hours of hiking up Lyell Canyon, came across this view of Mt. Lyell, highest peak in Yosemite. The painting is a bit messy, but I like that I just plunged in and did most of it with just a few big washes with a large brush.
My first class project of the new year was a sunset scene in snowy mountains.
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