Friday, March 25, 2022

Salem's Abby Road! First Day of school 2021.


              Salem's Abby Road - First Day of School 2021
              oil painting -24x36


Remote learning was hard and unprecedented in my lifetime. It was especially hard for the students.. As a former teacher myself, I am so amazed at the teachers that persevered through covid, with the daunting task of remote learning and constantly facing the unknown of-“WHAT’S NEXT?” I was in awe of Miss Powers as she provided daily inspiration and love to her students  through it all. I was happy to be retired and able to be there for Elouise. She missed her friends. She missed Salem. 

After 18 months of remote learning and being away from friends and classmates, Elo and her friends finally returned to school in Salem. They were together again-at last!  Elouise and her friends met to walk to school together. The exuberance they displayed and the joy at being together once more was a feeling I wanted to capture. Hopefully, the situation that caused remote schooling,(covid), is in the rearview mirror. Hopefully they will always feel excited to return to school in the fall. The excitement on this day  I felt needed preserving: So I painted it.


An added bonus is Webb Street’s resemblance to Abby Road. Thanks to Don Seiffert for taking his life in his hands to capture the moment with his camera and for sharing his photos of the girls from that morning. Thanks Don for allowing me to take liberties with your photo.  (Sorry to the young man I eliminated. ) The resemblance to the Beatles  Abby Road  album cover was too good to pass up. I changed the colors of the houses for a more harmonious painting. I used  reds to help move the viewer's eye though the scene. To establish a sense of the times, one girl is wearing her mask, one has hers dangling from her wrist and the others have theirs in their backpacks. Little did I know the controversy that would result from the masks! 


I hope to preserve a bit of history for the girls. Each girl (as well as Elo's teachers) received a print of the painting.

I hope this painting brings you a smile. We all need one.


Magical moments in Rockport.


When Frozen was my grand daughter's favorite movie, she insisted on wearing either her Elsa or Anna outfit no matter where  we went. So when hiking around Rockport and Halibut Point one day, she dressed like a princess. When she walked out to the end of the path, she became captivated by the ocean and the beautiful view. I loved the composition, the juxtaposition of the blues, and the wonder she experienced  as a young impressionable girl. I hope she continues to love nature and remain in awe of it as she grows.

I blocked in the underpainting using transparent oxide red. Once values were established, I began blocking in large masses. I used the rocks to lead the viewer to the focal point. The warmth of the rocks complimented the sun illuminating the figure. I reserved the most detail for the focal point-the dress and figure, a little looser in the vegetation and rocks and let the water and sky remain fairly loose as the backdrop to the scene. 
I love to  preserve special moments in a painting as I feel it conveys much more of a feeling of time and place than a photo can.



 

It's an annual event!


Merry Christmas!



Each year spurs another little holiday burst of energy. I especially like painting the Christmas balls with their reflective surfaces and cheerful colors. The snowman provides a happy greeting for people as they walk into my gallery of paintings. These little paintings each represent a different year and are fun to use on Christmas cards.



Hull Lifesaving Museum Juried Show

9x12 gallery wrap oil Evening Solitude
11x14 oil-Dynamic Trio

I was encouraged to submit paintings for a show "Sea and Sky" to be held at the Hull Lifesaving Museum in Hull, MA. My painting buddy, J.T. Harding, said he would drive them down and submit some also, so I said "great!". What the Hull Museum website didn't say was that it was a juried show. I probably would have chosen different paintings had I known. I liked that these were opposite; one very calm and evoking a feeling of solitude and the other loud and wild and portraying the crashing surf. I found out yesterday, however, that these 2 paintings were juried in, so I guess it's sometimes best not to know. A gentleman who purchased a painting from me last month said he was in love with my purples. Maybe that was what this judge liked too. When I am in love with a place or an experience, I hope that it comes through in my painting; Maybe that is what the judge liked.