Bottle and Blossom

Glass and flowers offer endless experiments in paint. This bottle can hold only a few ounces, but it is always of importance on canvas. Once again, I was after utter simplicity of subject and stroke. Maybe this little painting comes close.
Intermission

Backstage– a reflective pause for a ballerina. Perhaps it is intermission and she has a few minutes to rest and prepare herself for the next stage appearance. This is a small sketch for a larger piece, so I was working out design possibility and color contrasts. It is always fun to try to brush on these billowy tulle skirts. In ballet, the art is in the moment of the dance, and gone in a flash. Could this be why artists try to capture only a gesture of it?
Mist Off the Pond

Not too far from the barn that I posted the other day, is this luring landscape. Several years ago, I took a photo of the cool autumn air of morning rolling over the distant pond; it was revealed in the fog rising up from the water. I tried to give the scene an abstract quality with more muted tones and large masses of color. No doubt the trees are much taller now and cloak the soft mystery of “fogging.”
Sunshower

For one American artist, Dan McCaw, whose work I admire, paintings are about contrasts and interesting shapes; about warm color played against cool color; about patterns of light balanced with patterns of dark. So this simple painting is about all of the above. It is not so much about the young woman herself, but about the striking elements she and nature afforded me one day.
Farm Charm

At one end of our scenic property in Chardon, Ohio, there was once a farm. A few well-kept buildings remind us of this fact. Today this charming antique houses some stored furniture for us, but the barn does not seem offended in any way.
