Wednesday, June 12, 2019

Water Tower, Bolton, Ontario

When in Rome paint the statues, when in Bolton paint the water towers in the forest, at least that was always my motto! This painting was done a long time ago probably around 1995 when my Mom got me new paints, paper, and a 'how to' book called Everything You need to Know About Watercolor. (but were afraid to ask). Okay I made up the part in parenthesis but the book does actually exist. They mentioned that you can use the end of your paintbrush, the pointy end that is, and scrape out lines to create the look of trees, or in this example the wispy grass at the bottom of the painting. The water tower is a simple negative shape created with the skyline and the surrounding foliage. I am quite sure this was done from a photo since I was not painting outdoors a lot in the mid nineties, I really starting painting on location (en plien air) in the later nineties. I did several other water tower paintings, most of them are framed and hanging in the personal collection of Mom and Dad! Maybe this one will too one day, but the price has gone up since now I am internet famous. This  one was done portrait format, there is a water tower painting in landscape format from the same photo. 

8 x 9" cold press (300lbs), watercolour. 1993 (No. 0041)

Tulips and view from Chalet, Montreal

Quality art on location is never a guarantee. The results can never be sure until it is all dried and ready to hang on the wall! In this painting I was sure that it would be a disaster because the whole scene was a mess of different parts, in congruent and overlapping. But I knew that once that flower bed went in, and the details were finished on the ice cream stand that it would be spectacular. I will let the viewer be the judge. You see a bed of yeallow and peach coloured tulips and the great vista of Montreal and the St. Lawrence river all the way to the south shore. It was a beautiful sunny day and I was part of a group walk led by the conference organizers. The conference was the Canadian Society of Chronobiology (CSC) meeting of scientists, it was a fantastic conference and I learned a lot, not to mention got to make a few paintings in my old neighborhood.

To paint the tulips I put a wide wash of yellow and red (windsor or scarlet lake) across the painting, it looked more like a sleeping bag than a bed of flowers. Once dry, I overlapped the green foliage, and added some red and orange details to create the bulb shape. The initial wash was the key in creating a dense, warm flower bed even though the finished product does not contain very much actual detail the feel is what is more important when painting. 


5 x 7 " hot press, Watercolour, June 2019

Avenue Parc, Montreal

Some themes are timeless, like construction in Montreal and the ever present orange cones. This scene was done from the vantage point of Mont Royale park approximately near the new gazebo that was reconstructed recently. The field of grass was dotted with dandelions, and the Parc Avenue was dotted with traffic and pylons. In the background you see some downtown Montreal skyline and the hospital in the mid ground with its typical copper roof and peach bricks.
5x7" hot press, watercolour, June 2019

Real or Plastic?

Zenith of the skyline, distant ocean, a picnic table, two misshapen vases containing twisted flowers. Are they real or plastic? This painting started out as a watercolour, and then I overlapped generous amounts of oil pastel and some acrylic paint for highlights and effects. With the heavy outlining it took on a graphic novel look, like Monet drew a comic. The final effect is pretty stunning even though it breaks the 'old English' rule of not using white and not mixing medias. But then again rules were made to be broken. (The person who first said that may have received a fine). Maybe this is the theme of our age, is it real or plastic?

10 x 14 "  mixed media 2005 (No. 1346)