Kale Bouquet

"Kale Bouquet"
12" x 12"
Oil on wrapped canvas 
I walked into an office where this bouquet was on the counter.  It had miniature heads of kale where one would expect to see roses. The light shone on this little beauty so I pulled my camera from my purse and documented her.  


The background supporting this little kale is stroked with all the colors I saw in the bouquet, from bright to subdued and back again.  It was a fun piece to paint.

Kale Bouquet can be seen on Dailypaintworks in the membership gallery under my name.  It is for sale there.  You may also email me with any inquiries.

Thank you.
Carol

Wayside Garden

"Wayside Garden"
8" x 8"
Oil on canvas panel
There are places in my line of travel where gardeners have taken the time to delight the eyes of those of us who must get from one place to another.  This is one such cluster of color.


This one could have been painted with a palette knife, but I used a brush to make these marks.  It's as sunny and fresh as this family's plantings.

Wayside Garden can be seen on Dailypaintworks in my gallery.  It's also for sale there.

Thank you for meandering through today.

Carol

Succulence #2

"Succulence # 2"
20" x  24"
Acrylic on wrapped canvas
I looked straight down into her face like a lover reinventing courtship.  She stared back at me with capricious intent, yet nary a move did she make. 


This large succulent was painted with a stencil brush, a 1/8" little round one; about the size of a Q-tip. It was a dry brush technique I perfected during this series.

Succulence #2 is listed with and for sale through a Dailypaintworks Auction.

Thank you for stopping by today.
Carol



Zinnia Simplica "

"Zinnia Simplica"
8" x 10"
Oil on wrapped canvas 
She was simply the only zinnia left; colorful complementary colors, whorled petals.  She was hidden under a leaf, the last of her kind in the garden next to the building where I meet for painting critiques. 

I tend, as I'm finding out, to paint complementary color schemes more often than not.  They seem to please me. I don't think I seek them, or plan them in advance, but when it comes time to smear paint on something, I'm pretty consistently ending up with two colors across the traditional color wheel from each other.

Simple Zinnia, here is for sale through dailypaintworks.com.  If you click the web address it'll take you to my gallery on that site.  It's kind of fun to see all the paintings from my blog in one neat, tidy spot—with no words!

Thanks for stopping by.
Carol

Snow in the Valley

"Snow in the Valley"
6" x 6"
Oil on panel
This is a break in the tree line along the road I travel with some regularity and one of the places I photograph on a weekly basis.  The light hits it differently as the seasons change.  There's also enough distance to be able to catch some haze on occasion.

I was given a tool that intrigued me.  A Colour Shaper, I'm told.  It's a pointed rubber nib on a stick.  I painted the panel black.  Let it dry, then painted it white.  While the paint was wet, I drew on it hard enough to see the black underneath.  When it was dry, I glazed a bit of blue onto the top two thirds.  Isn't experimentation fun?  

This painting can be seen in my Gallery on Dailypaintworks.com.  It's also for sale through that web site.  

Thank you for visiting today. 
Carol 

Devil's Thumb Ranch Pond

"Devil's Thumb Ranch Pond"
8" x 10"
Oil on wrapped canvas
Probably it had a practical use, this little body of water, but to me, it was a little gem with nothing between it and me but air.  Everything in Colorado is on a grand scale, so this meandering pond, or brook, or creek was approachable, and much to my liking. 


This is one of several pieces from a memorable trip.  It can be seen and for purchase on Dailypaintworks.com.


Thank you for stopping by.
Carol

Meadow

"Meadow"
9" x 12"
Acrylic on canvas panel
It was the end of summer, the trees along this fenceline had grown weary of wearing green. The thought of gold, or orange seemed nice, but so did red, for that matter.

I like the cool blue in the shadows under the trees. The lawn-like meadow with its weedy middle added interest, too. 

This painting will be listed with, and for purchase through a Dailypaintworks Auction. 

Thank you for stopping by today.
Carol

Garden Flowers

"Garden Flowers"
9" x 12"
Acrylic on canvas panel
It had been sunny when I found this cluster of flowers. I sculpted merrily, oblivious to what was coming in from the west. The air became still, and a canopy of dark hastened my final scrapings.

Knife painting has taught me a lot about happenstance.  I'm thinking of it as an "indication" medium. No details, just indications. 

This painting can be seen on, and for purchase through a Dailypaintworks
Auction.

English Walled Garden

"English Walled Garden"
9" x 12"
Acrylic on canvas panel
Inside the English Walled Garden there's beauty in every direction. The light on the concrete surfaces seemed right for my intended use.

I had painted this view before, but was so wrapped up in the minutia of each pillar and blossom, that I may have lost the essence of the walled garden room. I'm happy with this rendition. 

English Walled Garden can be seen along with the rest of my blog entries by clicking here. My daily posts (of which today is number 100) funnel into Dailypaintworks.com where they can be seen and purchased.  You may also email me at Brushstrokes@comcast.net for information, or just to visit. 
Carol

Veteran's Park Pond

"Veteran's Park Pond"
9" x 12"
Acrylic on canvas panel
There's a pond up north of where I live that has a fenced-in, square dock; like a porch, for fishermen to stand on so they won't sink into the muck and mire. Someone was fishing across from where I was standing, and if his whoops and hollars were interpreted correctly, the fish were biting that day.

By the various colors of green, you might be able to tell that this piece was painted in mid-summer. It's as green as green can be. With a speck of red across the way.

You can find this and the rest of my posts on my gallery page on Dailypaintworks.  Most things are for sale through this site, too.  But if you see somthing without a price or not currently on an auction, please write to me at Brushstrokes@comcast.net

Carol

Brookside Garden #2

"Brookside Garden #2"
9" x 12"
Acrylic on canvas panel
I stood on a peninsula with water rushing by me, still in the sun, still hot.  The daisies were still nicely lit, so I began a second painting of them. 

As fast as I put down paint it dried. Like watercolor.  It left a texture. Like plaster. I felt like I was sculpting a painting rather than painting it. This was new to me. I loved it.

This painting will be listed with, and for purchase through a Dailypaintworks Auction. 

Thank you for visiting today.
Carol

Brookside Garden

"Brookside Garden"
9" x 12"
Acrylic on canvas panel

It was hot, bright and and I was wilting, but the flowers beside the brook in this garden were getting what they needed. 

This series was all done en plein air with a palette knife and acrylic paint. For me the combination of sunlight, plastic paint, and the crustiness that builds on a rigid surface like canvas board, was exactly how I wanted my outdoor paintings to look.

This painting is listed with, and for sale through a Dailypaintworks Auction. 

Thanks for stopping by.
Carol

Bird Movie

"Bird Movie"
40" x 30"
Acrylic on wrapped canvas
When the small children in my life want time alone with me, we go up and sit on my bed and talk about this painting at the foot of my bed. We make up stories about the birds that live in this house... whose lives, amazingly, seem to run parallel with ours. They named this painting"Bird Movie."

My friend, Peg, has a lovely garden.  One year she placed a chair like this next to her white picket fence covered in morning glories.  She had a plain birdhouse on her chair, but I owned this one, so I adorned her chair with mine. 

Bird Movie is listed with but not for sale through Dailypaintworks.com.  You can see it on my gallery page by clicking here.

Thank you for stopping by today.
Carol

Birdhouse

"Birdhouse"
12" x 12"
Oil on wrapped canvas 
There was straw and grass from some other yard, but never eggs in this little house. It sat on a table in my courtyard, inviting and safe, but this house never became a home. 

The actual background was gray siding, so I lowered the overall key of the piece by assigning a darker value to surround the sweet little house. At least the birdhouse looks like some birdie's home.

Birdhouse is listed with, and for sale through a Dailypaintworks Auction. 

Thank you for landing here today.
Carol

Wild White Rose

"Wild White Rose"
12" x 12"
Oil on wrapped canvas
In the midst of the ruffled-sunset colors of the rose garden at the Chicago Botanic Gardens stands a cluster of basic Wild White Roses.

I photographed this rose while thinking, I'll never paint this plain ol' rose... but her shadows are nice. Yet, here she is. The stamens and their shadows were quite an exercise for a new oil painter.

This painting is listed with, and for purchase on a Dailypaintworks.com auction.  Please see it in my gallery there, too.

Thank you for visiting today,
Carol

Fountain Head

"Fountain Head"
20" x 10"
Oil on panel
I had walked past him a couple dozen times the first year we were members of the Chicago Botanic Gardens.  He spewed, nonstop into a bowl in the English Walled Garden.  But don't go looking for him in these colors, or any others, for that matter.  He's as neutral as any public fountain and colorful in form only, being cast in concrete.  

I had no idea how to go about painting the spitting head that I had photographed on numerous occasions.   So I did it sideways—spitting to the right. I assigned color to the shadows and painted him simply as shapes.  I was surprised to see how accurate he appeared when I turned him the correct direction when I considered him finished. 

Fountain Head is listed with, and for purchase through a Dailypaintworks Auction.  He can be seen in my gallery on that site by clicking the link in this paragraph.  And today marks 100 paintings listed in my gallery on this site!

Thank you for stopping by.
Carol

Morning Light

"Morning Light"
12" x 12"
Oil on wrapped canvas
 There's a path near where I live that winds through a woods.  It's cool on the hottest day and always peaceful, despite its proximity to motorized civilization


Morning Light is painted on a peachy ground with reds to dull the greens, except where springtime is meant to show.

This painting is listed with, and for purchase on a Dailypaintworks Auction.

Thank you for checking in.
Carol

Pitcher Playground

"Pitcher Playground"
12" x 12"
Oil on wrapped canvas


The cherry kids enjoyed playing on the empty vinegar pitcher after school that autumn.  The vessel was so much easier to climb than when it was full. 
 This is a possible work in progress. I am living with it and listening to comments as people see it in my studio.  I may glaze color over the draped fabric surrounding the pitcher. The values are in place, but I don't know what color I'd use.  Any ideas?

This painting may be listed with Dailypaintworks.com if I decide it is finished.

Peering Inside

"Peering Inside"
10" x 8"
Oil on wrapped canvas




"What do you suppose is down there?" twittered the hollow blue bird wearing cement shoes while balancing on an apple.

This was a value study in sepia of things I have in my studio.  I did it to see if I could.  Being self-taught, I haven't  done things in the same order as the classically trained.  I painted, taught painting for ten years, and thirty years later I found out some of the things they do in art school.  It seemed like a good exercise.  

You can also see this on Dailypaintworks.com, but I probably won't list it for purchase on the auction.  But if you are interested, email me and we'll discuss it. 

Thank you for visiting,
Carol 






Music in the Night

"Music in the Night" 
20" x 16" 
Acrylic on wrapped canvas
They played music with a palpable passion that curled into the night air like it had been slathered there with a spreader.  Each note connected to the next as tightly as puzzle pieces marching toward infinity.  

This is a variation on my primary-colored puzzle paintings.  It is also a variation on what is normally digitally created from math equations "run amok."
Well, not exactly, but it's a computer generated art form.  Jock Cooper is the foremost fractal artist on the planet, and this is my interpretation of a segment of one of his images.  As his friend and agent, I have been given permission to add my own twist to his design.  

This painting will be posted on Dailypaintworks.com in my gallery, and for purchase.    

Thank you for visiting today.
Carol