Passerelle Côte-st-Paul night snow, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
Silo dumpsters snow storm, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
Instagram: pjdart42, Facebook: Pjdart42
Passerelle Côte-st-Paul night snow, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
Silo dumpsters snow storm, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
Pine trees near Decarie tint, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
Strong white flood-lights illuminated the local skateboard park which was blanket in snow. In the background is the local school with a few orange lamps. It was very quiet here, almost silent due to the time of day and the snow, which absorbs sound effectively. To do the glow-effect of the lamp, a series of rings are made wet-in-wet starting with greenish pale yellow, then merging with the soft purple sky.Snow covered skateboard park, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
First piles of snow, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
A large tree on Somerled accumulated snow on all its branches, with some yellowish leaves poking through. A traffic sign was plastered in snow making it impossible to read, while cars went by also covered in snow. Painting watercolour, or any colour, in these conditions is difficult to say the least but I have been doing it for years, or decades rather. I built a drying rack, its a balsa-wood frame, sized to the paper (6 x 7.5") that I place on top of the paper and use elastics to fasten it to a stiff piece of cardboard. This device will protect the surface of the painting from smudging when it goes back into the bag, and makes it easier to handle in rough conditions. I made a second drying rack this season so I can paint two at once. Its possible to reload it on location with fresh paper, but keep in mind, I am wearing oven-mitt style gloves for the entire process. I think today's paintings have the most amount of detail possible to do while wearing oven-mitts in the middle of a snow storm! They are not really oven mitts, they are dear-skin insulated gauntlets from Canada Outfitters, where I also got my wool base layer.Snow covered tree Somerled, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
Train bridges ice fog, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
Light rail overhead and commuter trains on the lower rails were crisscrossing with a rattle and rumble. New construction had a greyish chartreuse, while the old bridge was painted in a bluish charcoal. In the bottom right corner is a small piece of the obsolete train bridge, it is a rusted iron structure covered in graffiti now.Two trains bridges, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
Somehow, this writer (graffiti person) got on top of an enormous 20 story silo and rappelled down the side, making a large piece with paint rollers. The writing looked to be about 7 stories tall, located on the upper portion of the structure. It wasn't there last week, so it must have been done very recently. The actual name was mentioned in the first painting, here I changed it to my initials. Although graffiti is illegal and there are enormous amounts of it now, one has to admire the audacity to do something like this. It made me think about my paintings... I need to go bigger and more impressive... but on paper and not with spray paint!Thinking big, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
Ice fog downtown, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
At the tops of these yellow trees at Dorchester square there was a large squirrel nest and squirrels hopping around the branches. Thick ice fog enveloped the buildings in the background, and a thin layer of mist was everywhere.Living high life, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
This old artillery piece, likely from world war II sits next to the war memorial. One day before remembrance day, we remember those who lost their lives in the war. Once again the paint was being stubborn today making details elusive. At the illusion of fog is quite authentic.Artillery ice fog, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
Across from Cabot square sits the old Forum where the Canadiens used to play. Nowadays its a mall with several street-level shops and restaurants including a dollar store. The dollar store is barely visible in the painting, just a streak of yellow off to the bottom right. I was mostly standing on this location because there is a wide ledge overhead which provided some shelter from the brief snow storm that hit Montreal this afternoon. People even had umbrellas, and I was wearing a combination of winter wear and rain wear. For a more pleasant view of this area check out the sunflowers that were growing in Cabot square this summer.
Old Forum corner, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
To complete this painting, I stood next to a bus stop shelter which blocked the direct wind and snow which was coming down close to vertically. The old Forum building is in the background, with the Cabot square paths and landscaping in the foreground. There were a lot more trees than this, but the conditions precluded any overlay detailing. Its always an adjustment period going into the winter. The truth is, that I enjoy painting in the winter, in fact I did a few on a trip out to Montreal in the 1990's, I will paste one below...
Cabot square snow storm, watercolour 5 x 7" cold press, November 2025
Here is one of the old paintings I did on a trip to Montreal in 1997, it was the first one I remember doing on the trip, which probably makes it the first location painting I ever did in Montreal. Prior to that, I had been painting on location in Ontario for a few years.
Big Bottle, Winter, watercolour 5 x 8" cold press, 1997 (No. 1056)
Wet snow construction, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
Looking west, and there was a view of an old building that the city plans to renovate, or perhaps demolish, I believe its the old Packard building, based on some google searching and a fuzzy image of the logo over the front door. Its all shuttered now, but it used to have shops on the ground level and studios on the top levels. Despite the shelter, snow still pelted down onto the painting.Packard building profile, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, November 2025
The entire upper two floors of the building are encased in a re-enforced black mesh to prevent debris from falling onto the sidewalk. It was once a glorious building it would seem, hopefully they can clean off all the graffiti and bring it back to life. For the first painting I had salt water, but the temperature was slightly above zero so I switched to fresh water for the remaining paintings. Salt water wont freeze easily, but it makes the paint dry a lot slower.Packard building front, watercolour 5 x 7" cold press, November 2025