Sunday, May 31, 2020
Blue Jay and Chickadees sitting in treetops
This was done a few years before I did my first original watercolour painting of red flowers from imagination. It also seems to be mostly from my imagination although the birds probably used the illustrated Roger Tory Peterson field guide to birds as source material. We had a copy in our family for bird watching in the backyard and on our annual camping trips.
8 x 10" art paper, tempera 1987
Group of Seven homage
This one was a homage to Montreal River by Lauren Harris. Was it foretelling that I would eventually live in Montreal and paint the river?
9 x 12" watercolour paper, watercolour, 1992 (No. 0081)
This is my version of Stormy Weather, Georgian Bay II, by Fred Varley. I had only been painting watercolour for 3 years at this point, so it was ambitious to try and copy masterpieces done in oil. Seeing the originals now, it looks like I had trouble getting the thick juicy coloured brush strokes, and the drawing is off, but I certainly learned a lot in the attempt. If possible I would like to travel to some of these locations and try for real once the pandemic lock-down is eased off.
9 x 12" watercolour paper, watercolour, 1992 (No. 0082)
There was a fourth one I did, Scrub Oaks and Maples by Carmichael. I will make a nice scan of it soon. 9 x 12" watercolour paper, watercolour, 1992 (No. 0083)
Grandma Flowers
Flowers are a great place to start for a beginner watercolor painter because of the variety of shapes and colours. At first I was copying from a flower calendar, then after some time I just freestyled the motifs like in this example. The palette of colours was very limited, just ultramarine blue, alizarin crimson, aureolin yellow, and perhaps a touch of viridian and burnt sienna. My Mother, Grandmother, and Aunt really enjoyed these kinds of paintings, and they kept buying me more paper or buying the paintings and supplies so it was a win win!
Lilacs and One Big Pink Rose, 9 x 12", watercolour paper, watercolour 1991 (No. 0059)
Here is another one, as I remember it was a more direct copy (homage) to one of the calendar paintings. To be fair the calendar paintings were oil paintings and I was using watercolour. As a young watercolour painter there were not too many idols that used the media, so I tended to emulate oil painters. The colour scheme here is a garish purple and yellow. Aureolin yellow (and alizarin crimson) will fade in sunlight, but because these paintings were kept in my portfolio for 30 years the colours are just as bright as when I applied them.
Lilacs and Two Big Yellow Roses, 9 x 12", watercolour paper, watercolour 1991 (No. 0058)
In the third example, the flower style was purely an abstraction, you see a more stylized lilacs, confident brushstrokes, and lots of different leaves. The signature had evolved into the scrawl with paint, rather than the legible writing with pen I had used on earlier works. I kept at the flower paintings until about 1994 when I went to University and actually stopped painting for the last part of 1994. In 1995 I started painting again but my style had clearly evolved, for example Science vs. Art in 1995 was a far cry from pink roses.
Yellow Purple Rust Bouquet, 9 x 12", watercolour paper, watercolour, 1993 (No. 0073)
Saturday, May 30, 2020
Summit Park barrier, Westmount, Montreal
Making this painting was like walking a tight-rope, one slip up and disaster. There were two key elements, one was the 'z' shape of the stone fence, and the second was the orange stripes on the construction barrier. The outline of the foreground scene was completed first using light grey paint for an outline. I slowly worked from top to bottom shifting the colours from cool to coral. As the layers dried I built up stronger volume washes and details on the building, fence, and garbage can. With the strong sun, the painting looked washed out and dull, in fact it was a disaster. Then I added the orange stripes on the barrier and magic happened. The strong orange brought everything to life- the distance seemed farther away, the stone-work glowed, and the whole concept of pandemic lock-down became prominent. Ironically, I spent by far the most amount of time on the garbage can, it has about 10 layers and techniques!
5 x 7" cold press, watercolour, May 2020
Resting Prism (featuring Da Vinci Earth Colours)
After further testing, I took the following notes on each paint:
Summit Park, Westmount, Montreal
Recently I acquired some new earth colours made by Da Vinci Company, sold out of Studio Six Toronto. They were recommended by Jane Blundell a prominent watercolour blogger and teacher from Australia. I made an abstract painting featuring each one which I will blog about soon. In this work, I used the burnt sienna deep (PR101) to create the brick colours and the neutralized brown. The yellowish tree bark in the foreground tree was using raw umber, although it was the old one I had from Holbein Watercolour Company. I used some cobalts in the sky and horizon. Since this painting (done last Tuesday) I removed all cobalts, and the Holbein raw umber from my palette.
7 x 10" rough press, watercolour, May 2020
Friday, May 29, 2020
Lac du Castor, Montreal
I made it up to Lac du Castor (Beaver Lake) on the top of Mont Royale, there were very few people there and it was very hot. I found some shade and painted this concrete structure which I believe is a children's wading pool when they fill it, and in the background there is the turquoise lake, more of a constructed pond than a lake. As usual, there were some fresh dandelions growing in the grass. Cilei liked this one so I put it in a frame and hung it in the living room.
5 x 7" cold press, watercolour, May 2020
Payez Ici, Mount Royal Park, Montreal
7 x 10" rough press, watercolour, May 2020
F
Speaking of respects, there are a number of paint tubes I took out of my collection and will bring to the environmental center for disposal. Most of them I will not replace or use anymore, except where noted. For the sake of record-keeping, here is the list of paint tubes I will dispose of and some notes:
Thursday, May 28, 2020
Light and Shadows
Concentrating on the important things, I did this painting in 2005 during a neuroscience conference in DC. A rare date shows up on the front. It took a lot of guts to paint this seemingly simple scene, which contains an autumn tree, a decorative lamp post, a Gothic window, lime stone bricks, and a slanting shadow. The shadow is what drew my attention, it was similar to a painting I did in Spain. To make the shadow really glow, I used purple tones, and overlaid the near black lamp post and brick detailing. 5" x 7" cold press watercolour
Different eras superimposed in time and space. This old storage shed was part of some farmland being slowly consumed by housing developers in London Ontario. It was interesting to see the large apartment building and the much smaller barn nearly overlapping, and with a common light source from the setting sun. There is a little dark dirt pile at the front right of the barn, it provides dark contrast in order to illuminate the shadowed side of the barn. 5" x 7" cold press watercolour. 2003?
You see the theme here...to paint light you are really painting dark. The visual system will compare mid tones and light tones to the really dark element like the pine trees, the lamp post, or the dirt pile. Clever use of these devices will create a strong illusion of light in a painted work. I accidentally discovered this trick while painting a pile of construction debris.
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Colourful Containers, NDG, Montreal
What does it feel like to make a painting on location? Part of it is fear, like being embarrassed of having a bad result, or sitting somewhere you really shouldn't be sitting ( I avoid private property or secluded places). A lot of it is hope and exhilaration, kind of like waiting in line to go on a roller coaster. Then, intense focus, an almost zen like meditation. In the midst of doing a painting the reality I am seeing, and the painting I am working on start to merge, almost dreamlike. Anxiety is intense because every element of the painting is alive- the water wet, the paper blank, the details waiting. The last thing is 'now I just gotta sign it!'. As I stand up, the pain comes, aching knees a sore back, brush hand sore, thumb holding palette is raw. My mind is mushy and blank, so I walk at least 10 -15 minutes before I can do the next scene. At home, more fear and anxiety to see what the result was like! Finally a sense of pride and accomplishment, and the entertainment of writing a blog, posting on facebook, and seeing some comments and likes.
7 x 10" rough press, watercolour, May 2020
Tuesday, May 26, 2020
Dandelions, dandelions, dandelions, Cote St. Luc, Montreal
To begin the flowers and grass I made a wash of lemon yellow from the Stoneground Paint Co. in order to raise the temperature. Then I painted the green lawn leaving little circles were the dandelions would go, continuing from bottom to the mid point of the tree. Above the tree, I dragged and dabbed the brush with green paint from side to side to create the berm shape. Finally I filled in the dandelions mainly with isoindo yellow (PY154) and vanadium yellow (PY184), with hints of benzi yellow, a yellow-orange (PY110). I used a bit of the verona green earth (PG23) up on the building in the background.
7 x 10" rough press. watercolour. May 2020
But wait, there are more... dandelions.
Heading home, I found this scene in the parking lot of Decarie square mall which is totally empty. I just stopped for shade and water and I was stuck by the contrasting yellows and the "I" shape parking lot barrier full of grass and dandelions. I put some tinted grey ochre on the asphalt, and used the benzi and isoindo yellow on the deep shadow of the painted curb.
5 x 7" cold press, watercolour, May 2020
Monday, May 25, 2020
Crab Apple Blossoms, NDG, Montreal
This is where I made the painting called Cultural Center Looking at Benny Housing, in fact, it is the same building seen here behind the tree.
That grey colour on the right was made from pyrrol red and winsor green, I was waiting for a moment to try it out. In the future I am going to buy a greenish raw umber which may do the trick with half the effort and a less expensive pigment.
5 x 7" cold press watercolour, May 2020
London Ontario
In retrospect, I quite admire the quality of these small paintings. I was on my game, ambitious and well practiced. Soon after these paintings (there are a lot of them, I can scan more), I moved away from landscapes towards abstract paintings and the doodleism style. Perhaps it was getting rather boring painting pictures of parking lots and fire hydrants after painting Cathedrals and epic landscapes in Spain. I never stopped though, every year I have painted at least a dozen or more landscapes mostly from travels or some local scenes. It wouldn't be until 2020 (this year) that I really got back into the landscape groove, partly due to the discovery of Hiroshige, my idea of doing a Montreal landscape series, and partly to do with the pandemic lockdown which deprived us of our normal entertainments.
5 x 7" cold press watercolour, 2000-2003? (these two scenes are on the front side of the same piece of paper)
No Truck Parking! NDG, Montreal
I took the watercolour pans with me for this outing, the ones from Stoneground Paint Co. The grey ochre was used for the grainy, grey asphalt along with some tints added. Buff titanium was used for the cream colour in the bricks, the umbers were used in the treebark and tires of the truck, and roman black for the deep shadows under the truck and aluminum wall. I also used some cobalt blue for the truck. The yellow lines were with PY110, but I feel that it looks too dark, still unsure how to easily make those parking spot lines! Next time I may try buff titanium tinted with the PY110.
I have taken this week off to unwind a bit, and concentrate on painting, so far I have just been able to paint sporadically on weekends or sneaking out for an hour here or there.
7 x 10" rough press, watercolour, May 2020
Friday, May 22, 2020
Bolton's vanashing landscape
Not content with an outside view, I explored further into the abandoned house, creeping up the stairs in into the remains of the attic. In the distance, through the old window frame was the purple and orange development sign. The shadows from the naked beams created a laddering effect on the fallen support beam. In retrospect, I probably shouldn't have been up there.
5 x 7" cold press, watercolour, July 1996
Armenia, World Inspired Landscapes (with Stoneground Paint Co)
To do this painting I used 15 watercolour pans I just bought from Stoneground Paint Company, located in Canada. They make an incredible array of pigments in small batches, and sell them at reasonable prices in half, or full sized pans. A pan is a small plastic holder that has semi solid paint in it, as opposed to tubes which are more liquid, and are squeezed out as needed. I ordered their line of earth colours, and used them exclusively to make this painting. The coolest part was that one of the paints is called Armenian Purple Ochre, it is literally from clay earths mined in Armenia! I used it on the stone arch, in the sky, and on the mountain in the distance. Most of these paints have a natural sparkle, when I tilt the painting in the sun, the whole thing sparkles like a real rocky, sandy terrain. 5 x 7" cold press, watercolour, May 2020 (B side of Ranger Park).
Here is a test of all 15 pigments, so you can see what they look like. They are all amazing! They also came in a nice metal case and fantastic packaging, not to mention a thank you note. So Canadian ; )
The colours are going left to right top: raw umber green shade (PBr7), raw umber neutral shade (PBr7), grey ochre, titanium buff (PW6:1), felsite (PY43), lemon ochre (PY43), light yellow ochre (PY43), raw sienna warm shade (PBr7), mars orange (PY42), Pozzuoli red earth (PR102), burnt sienna deep crimson (PBr7), Armenian purple ochre (PR102), nicosia green earth (PG23), antica green earth (PG23), Roman black (PBk11).
Empty Pool, Confederation Park, NDG, Montreal
One key decision when painting on location is the orientation of the paper, landscape (horizontal) or portrait (vertical). In this case landscape was the natural choice due to the wide lines and angles of the pool and cool shapes of the platform. The 3-D shape of the pool carries the foreground through to the background which creates an exciting composition. Due to the pandemic lock-down the pool is shut indefinitely which made this painting possible. The wealth of rich blue tones include cerulean in the pool walls and cobalt on the umbrellas. I also included a pile of sticks, some deck signs, and the pool ladder in the foreground to help with the composition, but I omitted a complicated lifeguard ladder/seat which would have obscured the scene.
7 x 10" rough press, watercolour, May 2020
Thursday, May 21, 2020
Downtown Bolton
How about one more? This painting was not dated, from the looks of it I would guess it was a little later, maybe 1998 because of the cerulean blue in the sky, and the much heavier application of paint. The scene is from the old Courtyards of Caledon downtown Bolton, which was mostly vacant around then, now it is half lumber yard, the other half donut store? 5 x 7" cold press, watercolour 1998?
Ranger Park, Lasalle, Montreal
Brushes are quite important for painting, otherwise you are finger painting! Most of my brushes are synthetic, with a half dozen sable brushes from Escoda or Winsor and Newton. The sable brushes are not from actual animal called sable, they are from a kolinsky weasel (Mustela sibirica) that lives in the wild and is trapped for its fur. This animal is on a watch list for species, but not considered endangered in any way. To take care of my brushes properly I read the section on brush maintenance from Handprint.com, and discovered a lot of things I did not know. For example, to clean the brushes I acquired some glycerol bar soap from Lufa farms, and used it to soap down the brushes and rinse them well. Then I treated them with hair conditioner (like for people) for a few hours and rinsed that off. They are like new now.
Note, I just got the new paints from Stoneground paint company yesterday, and made a painting that I will blog about soon.
5 x 7" cold press, watercolour, May 2020
The Blue House, Ville St. Pierre, Montreal
Blue has become a theme of the pandemic series, it started with blue skies, and then slides, shorts, and houses apparently! Having trouble with phthalo blue, I decided to go back to some of the other blues including iron blue (prussian/PB27) for the outline and tints, cobalt blue (PB28) for the house paint, and cerulean blue (PB35) for the sky. It made the sky a lot easier to control, in fact I mixed cerulean with a touch of phthalo. After the light blue dried, I layered on cobalt blue to create the brilliant blue paint on the bottom half of the house. I finished with a darker layer of cobalt blue and a touch of phthalo. To complete the tour-de-bleu, I used french ultramarine blue (PB29) in the purple-shadows, and indo blue (PB60) in the dark shadows. Cobalt paints are slightly more toxic than average paint, but they are generally safe with proper handling.
7 x 10" rough press, watercolour, May 2020
Wednesday, May 20, 2020
View Down Lansdowne Avenue, Westmount, Montreal
With all the new colours in my palette I have been adapting to several challenges, such as tree bark and blue skies. In this painting, I left the tree trunk until the end, and then put down one quick wash of iron oxide red with phthalo blue. When it dried I made the bark textures with bloodstone genuine which is a heliotrope/hematite pigment. Heliotrope is a kind of black sandstone, while hematite is a red iron oxide found within the stone. I am quite satisfied with this method of painting trees, it provides the weight of a tree trunk, but still gives the warm reflectivity of the bark. The blue skies have been tricky since the clouds showed up- the phthalo blue tends to flood the whole area and obscure the shapes of the clouds. This time I put the blue last, but it dried with hard edges. The shadows in the clouds are almost the same mix as the tree, but with a touch of magenta and french ultramarine (purple) added in.
7 x 10" rough press, watercolour, May 2020
Tuesday, May 19, 2020
Barn Burner, Bolton Ontario
Not much longer, and the barn burned down, it was in the newspaper! I packed up my supplies and walked down the street to see the burned barn, complete with smouldering ashes. The painting is below. Talk about a vanishing landscape! As of today (2020) the farm lot still sits vacant.
5 x 7" cold press, watercolour, July 1996
Elm Park, Ville St.Pierre Montreal
Convenience mixes are paints that come pre-mixed, like, the company puts two colours together so that the artist doesn't have to do as much work. I never knew that until recently, when I started reading Handprint.com which is a vast resource of knowledge and opinion. I decided to mix my own convenience mix consisting of winsor green (PG7) and benzi yello (PY154), yielding a spring-like lime colour. As spring turns to summer, I added slightly more of the green to represent the increased chlorophyll. The grass and budding leaves both contain ample amount of the convenience mix. Lets call it Montreal spring green.
7 x 10" rough press, watercolour, May 2020
Sunday, May 17, 2020
Stretching Rack, List of Large Paintings with Links to Respective Blog
2002 The Grapes of Tuscany
2003 Superencrypted
2003 Floating Cathedral Statues
2003-2004 Public Highway Drivers (PHD)
2004 Lab Book #4, Finding Space
2004 Blue Flames Consuming the Stylized Image of a Woman
2004 Lab Book # 5, Making Connections
2004 Lab Book #6, Spanky's Fantastic Cathedral
2006 Inner Workings
2006 Failure to Understand, Something to Learn
2006-2007 Summer Scene
2008 Lab Book #9, The End of Colour
2008 Lab Book #11, The Legendary Isle of Sixe
2008 Lab Book #12, Archi-doodle City (W/E)
2009 Life of an Onion
2009 Lost in a Mall
2009 Addictive Puzzle
2009 Preventing the Deterioration of an Otherwise Normal Scene
2010 Current Demand
2010 The Extruders
2010 The Twenty-Ten Solution
2010 The Deluge
2010 Creation's Creations
2011 Insignificant Details
2011 Instant Nostalgia
2011 The Plan (Suburban Escape)
2011 Fertile Idea
2012 Social Networking (Life on Venus)
2012 The Paper Chase (No More Outlines)
2012 The Crushing Delicate
2012 Attempted Evolution
2012 Immortal Time, Infinite Ideas
2013 Where we Were (Ancestors)
2013 Perpetual Load Theory (The 2012 Question)
2013 In Sequence [B side]
2013 Responsible for Reality (Dinosaurus)
2013 The Lemon Sunset
2013 She Was...
2014 New Thoughts and Human Adaptations
2015 Never Done (No Idea)
2015 The End of Ego (High Tide)
2016 Desert Appliances (Applications Unclear)
2017 Community Connections
2018 Tourist Destiny
2018 Apple Eye, Shrimp in the Sky
2019-2020 Lab Book #23, Hiking Elvis
update: I have finally filled in the missing blogs, and updated some of the old scans to make the images better. I needed to be outside on a sunny wind-free day to take good pictures. The Grapes of Tuscany is now posted, I found an old photo of it while it was still on the rack in 2002.
Hiking Elvis
Find Hiking Elvis! Last year I stretched a 22 x 30" paper on the rack, and there it sat for months on end. In December I splashed some colours around including a swath of cerulean blue, green and blue blobs, and some washes of alizarin crimson red. And there it sat for almost six months without any progress. It first occurred to me that this was to be a mountainous scene, and that it would involve Elvis, four Elvis' was the original plan. By accident I had dropped four beads of water on the washes when it was wet, and I became obsessed with the idea that they represented Elvis. At the same time I had a doodle in my lab book #22 that resembled Elvis on a mountain, and the idea started to come together (it was mistakenly labelled lab book #23 on the painting). I also worked out a few compositions in my sketchbook that would fit the background painting. Complicated path just like the painting.
There are a lot of little symbols and jokes in this painting, the main joke turned out to be that the characters are all taking selfies! I also included the abominable snowman as I remember from the SkiFree game, and a Canadian maple leaf to remember Canadian climbers who died on Mount Everest. In the end, this painting is about the absurdity of commercialized climbing in the Himalaya's, which is currently on hold due to the pandemic. There is even a Ferris wheel, fast food restaurant and french fries strewn throughout. Hokusai's wave-drawing style was used in the foreground cliffs.
22 x 30" cold press, watercolour, 2019 - 2020
note, I went over the alizarin washes with quinacridone and pyrrole reds to
make sure they are lightfast, since the beginning of 2020 I dropped
alizarin from use which is a shame since it is such a powerful colour, but
it fades like crazy in sunlight. Here is a crop of Hiking Elvis taking a selfie...
St. Jacques Street, Rusty Store, NDG
I used to sign all of my landscapes, well most of my landscapes, with the P Darlington 'scrawl', barely legible and easy to miss. With few exceptions I signed in cerulean blue or mostly ultramarine blue. In the pandemic blues series, I have been signing with a PJD 2020 inscription using mostly indothrene blue. It is hidden in this painting, but you will find PJD 2020 if you look around. Part of the reason I haven't been signing as usual is just the situation being what it is, and these are very experimental paintings as I work out the new paints and how to use them. I will get back to signing normally in due course. By the way, the blue here was a mix of phthalo blue (PB15) and iron oxide red (PR101) and some adjustments with phthalo green (PG7) to make it turquoise. The rust was iron oxide red, bloodstone genuine (heliotrope with hematite from Daniel Smith co.), some vandium yellow (PY184), and purplish tints.
7 x 10" rough press, watercolour, May 2020
Friday, May 15, 2020
Bolton Valley
Another painting from summer 1996, this one shows the Bolton cemetery looking north. The cemetery is located on the North part of the valley and provides some great views of the town, and it is generally very quiet! This one was labelled 1996 in pencil on the back, but looking at it, I feel like the technique was too good for 1996, but the palette is right (all transparents). So maybe I did do this in 1996. I seem to remember the name on the stone was 'Crowley' but I didn't want to use the full name for some reason, like to not disturb the dead?
5 x 7" cold press, watercolour, 1996 (?)
Benny cultural center and library, NDG
I wrote about the pandemic blues in a previous blog, referring to the brilliant blue sky as well as the feeling of being blue. These paintings are meant to capture the moment with mostly empty scenes of the neighborhood, and with blue accents. In this case, the top part of the cultural center was a powder blue, also known as periwinkle, which is a combination of cyan and magenta. Its CMYK code is 20,20,0,0 meaning that it was a little bit of cyan and magenta in equal proportions, with no yellow or black. I had actually studied that beforehand, and used the knowledge to mix this otherwise mysterious blue colour using phthalo blue and quinacridone magenta.
The red part of the building turned out a little disappointing, it is supposed to be a brighter red but after it dried it looked more brick red. I used pyrrol red but that colour is not mixing well, I guess I will have to work out a new formula for bright reds like that.
7 x 10" rough press, watercolour, May 2020
Thursday, May 14, 2020
Craft Show, Bolton Ontario
5 x 7" cold press, watercolour, 1996
Here is another one from the same day showing the tables, garbage cans, and trees in the background. The purple shadows are cool, I must have mixed french ultramarine blue and alizarin crimson. I also used aureolin yellow at the time, and viridian green. You can really feel the heat of the day! 5 x 7" cold press, watercolour, 1996
Wednesday, May 13, 2020
Farine Five Roses, Montreal
Mixing paints is a big part of watercolour painting. Unlike oil or acrylic, you can easily mix two, three, four, or more watercolour paints together in order to produce variety. In oil or acrylic, based on my limited experience, colour mixing will quickly produce mud, and it is hard to change the colour on your brush especially with oil. In the old days, I used only a half dozen or so transparent colours to make everything. The brick and mud colours seen in this painting were done using an opaque red iron oxide (PR101 mixed with PBr7) adjusted with PR179 maroon or quinacridone red to get it to be more reddish. As I did this painting, it occured to me that I should have just started by painting the whole thing brown, it would have been faster!
7 x 10 rough press, watercolour, May 2020
Sunday, May 10, 2020
Palgrave and Bolton
Dad and I go for bike rides when we get the chance, although it has been too long since our last one! This scene was done up around Palgrave which is north of Bolton, the scene depicts a fish ladder that was part of the river rehabilitation program. In theory the trout would have a chance to jump up the rock steps to reach their spawning grounds. I don't know if it ever worked but the idea was good and it certainly improved the look of the whole river all the way down to Bolton and beyond. Dad was sitting right next to me, we were having a water break and he was patient enough for me to finish this detailed painting.
5 x 8" cold press, watercolour, 2005?
Speaking of Bolton, if there ever was a signature motif from Bolton it would have to be the water tower out in the woods, but a close second would be the outhouse. It was part of a four seasons camp that they ran up in the woods where we would go cross country skiing in the winter or hiking in the summer and fall. It was a favorite place of mine growing up. Seen below is a summer scene of the outhouse. Other paintings of the same outhouse with some embellishment are the very early Winter Palace, and a similar scene outhouse in winter.
5 x 7" cold press, 1997?
Tulip Time, NDG
I packed a lot of detail into this small painting, there are hundreds of elements including two types of flowers (tulips and dandelions). To accommodate everything I started with a fairly detailed outline using diluted black paint and then worked up the details one by one. The last element was the tulips and dandelions. I saved them for last because I wanted to properly judge the colour. If you put the colourful things in first they could end up looking pale and faded at the end. It was still offa little though, so I added red, orange and yellow washes where needed to enhance the tints. The 'PJD 2020' signature that I adopted this year is hidden on the street sign in the foreground.
5 x 7" cold press, watercolour May 2020
Friday, May 8, 2020
Rural Caledon/King township
Here is another one done on the same trip. The paint was drying a bit better there and I could get multiple layers. It really conveys the atmosphere, and I love the yellow/violet contrasts. It is really hard to know when I did these, the techniques and pigments used indicate an early 2000 work. There is obvious use of iron oxide pigments, cerulean blue, and a rose coloured paint in the sky that I got sometime in early 2000. I also vaguely remember the circumstances around the time and it was when I was a graduate student at University of Western Ontario, visiting my parents in Bolton. 5 x 8" cold press watercolour 2003?