Featured Artist… Randy Sexton!

“Toot’s” by Randy Sexton

“Toot’s” is a fabulous painting! Look at those brushstrokes… the layering of color, especially in the steps, it’s spectacular! Isn’t it amazing how a small brushstroke going a different way really makes the subject look like what it is? For instance the different  building materials used in this structure… you can tell they’re different not only by the different colors but the way the stroke was put on the canvas with the brush. Such wonderful looseness all the while keeping the coolest details. I love Randy’s work. It’s mesmerizing how an artist can be so diverse. Below is a painting I saw that was posted on his Facebook page… it caught my attention. It’s nothing but a dish rack with dishes but LOOK how fabulous it is!?!

“Lemon Press and the Spotfrees” by Randy Sexton – Image: Randy Sexton Facebook

Excerpt from Facebook: “This piece, “Lemon Press and the Spotfrees”, will be included in the upcoming Still Life and Trompe L’Oeil exhibit at the John Pence Gallery in San Francisco, 9/7 – 10/6.”

Here’s a blip about Randy from his website:

The Artist’s point of view:
“My concerns as an artist have always been rather straight forward. The discipline of direct painting, both in the plein air experience and in the studio, has helped me to develop a loose handling of paint that speaks as much about the paint itself as it does any given subject matter. I try to combine traditional methods of painting with a “sense of myself living in the present”. My paintings are a direct response from the world around me as I strive to be “in the moment” while I work. Nature has proven to be the most demanding and inspiring teacher…so I work from life, as often as possible and try to remain open to new ideas and new approaches.

Each painting is a simple sentence in an ongoing story that will take a lifetime to unfold. The tale is a compilation of images that reflect the magic of life itself and the mysteries of light, color, and shape as I respond to the world around me. Painting has enabled me to be more observant and appreciative of the beauty and richness in everyday life”.

Background:
California based artist, Randall Sexton, is nationally known for the use of color and expressive brushwork in his oil paintings of “everyday” scenes. Raised in rural Connecticut, Sexton moved to San Francisco, CA in 1980 after completing a BFA from the University of CT, Storrs.

The Bay area has proven to be home, where he has earned a great reputation for being an educator as well as a fine artist. He taught classes in drawing, painting, and composition at the San Francisco Academy of Art until 2005.

He now leads private workshops- both nationally and abroad. In the fall of 2008, he led a group of Plein air painters on a trip to Tuscany, Italy through a program hosted by the Sedona Art Center in Arizona. Acknowledged by jurors and artists alike, Randall has garnered national awards for his paintings. Most notably, in 2008, Randy was honored with the coveted “Artists’ Choice Award” in Laguna Beach at the 10th Annual Laguna Beach Plein Air Event held at the Laguna Museum Of Art. He also won the same award in Telluride, CO (Sheridan Plein Air Festival) and in Napa, CA (Napa Valley Land Trust Art Festival), both in 2008. . He received the same award in 2006 in Sedona, AZ and Maui, HI at their respective painting festivals. He received Jurors Choice- “Best of Show” in “Northern Views a biennial landscape show hosted by the Napa Valley Museum, and in the Maui Plein Air Festival of 2006.

He has been featured in various national journals including: “American Artist”-August 2000, “Southwest Art”-July 2003, “Plein Air” (currently- “Fine Art Connoisseur”)-November 2004, and “Workshop”-December 2006 He has been a member of the California Art Club, The Laguna Beach Plein Air Painters Association, “The Outsiders”, a group of artists loosely connected to “The Society of Six” and The Baywood Artists Group committed to working on environmentally sensitive projects.

Although his career has enabled him to travel and paint in faraway places, most days Sexton can be found at work in his studio in historic downtown Crockett. His new workplace has provided fresh insights into his process…one that keeps him “in the moment”. In his words, “Painting is an adventure. Each work is a simple sentence in an ongoing story that will take a lifetime to unfold.”

Fabulous work! Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Steve Kennedy!

“Evening, The Bradford House” by Steve Kennedy – Image: AddisonArtGallery

Dusk. Lamps on in a house at dark. Dramatic shadows at nighttime. The wonderful deep dark blue in the sky. Lights on the house. All elements of a great nocturnal painting. This painting by artist Steve Kennedy is a great example of just that. I love his explanation of this painting (from Addison Art Gallery):

“What makes this painting of the Bradford House unique is that it was painted entirely ‘plein air’ — that is, outside, at night, directly from life. The first night a street light was utilized as light source. Before the second night’s painting session I decided a bedside night reader LED lamp would very helpful! And indeed it was. Some nights the fog would roll in while I was painting, giving the buildings an eerie glow. And water could be poured out of my palette by the end of the evening.”

I think it’s interesting hearing the story about a painting, makes it much more interesting if you’re the buyer! Here’s a blip about Steve from the Addison Art Gallery website:

In the mid 1970s, at the urging of a school instructor, Steve Kennedy began painting in the “plein air” tradition. A graduate of Paier College of Art (New Haven, CT), Kennedy moved to Cape Cod in 1981 and began focusing more on the traditional “plein air” manner of painting, working outdoors in all four seasons. He refers to his style as “painterly realism” because he works in a loose yet representational way.

While smaller paintings are typically completed in one session, for larger works Kennedy may return to the same site several times because of the constantly changing light and weather conditions. Kennedy enjoys the challenge of painting outdoors year round; intense heat and sun in the summer, snow, wind and bitter cold in the winter. He utilizes sunlight to strengthen form and create a mood, and his use of color complements the graphic patterns of light and shadow found in his paintings. He’s drawn inspiration from the rooftops of Provincetown, the harbor and streets of Gloucester, the catboats of Wellfleet, and views around cities like New Bedford and Portland, Maine.

“One of my goals is to capture the luminosity of Cape light by working early in the morning or late in the day when color and drama are at their height”, he says. In addition to capturing the light, another objective Kennedy has is balancing loose brushwork against the craft of drawing, especially as it concerns architecture and boats. Subjects are chosen carefully, with favoritism towards older more time worn themes — sometimes with a contrast of something new against it for a sense of realism. Kennedy’s typical emphasis is on street and maritime subjects. In this world of constant change, older things that somehow ‘seem more comforting’ appeal to him. He is especially drawn to places where land and water meet; he considers these areas ‘places of power.’ Influences include the work of Edward Hopper, Frederick J. Mulhaupt, John Carlson and photographer David Plowden.

Steve and his wife, Lucy, have lived on Cape Cod for over 30 years. Kennedy’s work has won numerous awards, and is in many public and private collections including the permanent collection of the Cahoon Museum of American Art, New Haven Paint and Clay Club, Cape Cod Museum of Art, Albany Institute of History and Art, Seamen’s Bank, Wequassett Inn, and the Key Bank and People’s Heritage Bank (former names, both in Maine).

Though he’s committed to plein air painting, Kennedy also works in his studio. Indoor paintings are done from photographs, sketches and field notes. The studio affords him the opportunity to capture fleeting effects of light not easily painted on location.

He has taught painting in Provincetown for many years and is a member of the North Shore Arts Association, Cape Cod Plein Air Painters and Creative Arts Center.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Mara Schasteen!

“Backyard Chickens” by Mara Schasteen

I saw a magnificent still life on Facebook that Mara had done. Whoa! I scooted right over to her site to check out her work. Nothing short of impressive. I love the “Backyard Chickens” painting. The dark chicken right next to the white chicken really makes them both pop out at you. What caught my eye that I really loved was the sunlight hitting the one dark chicken. The areas of sun form a nice little path that keeps your eye nicely in the painting. I guess it’s no surprise that this painting was one of the Top 50 finalist in the America China Oil Painting Artists League 2011 realist painting competition! Great job Mara! If you get a second, check out her site, her paintings are fantastic and she gives you a step by step on many of her paintings on her blog. So amazing!

Here’s a blip about Mara from her website:

Mara Schasteen is a Wyoming native and a lifetime artist. Her passion for art began as a small child, carving drawings into planks of wood with tools from her dad’s shed. Growing up in the beautiful Big Horn Mountains, Mara developed a passion for nature and a desire to express its beauty in unique and exciting ways. Today, Mara’s intense self-study of the arts has produced a fresh technical style that draws elements from many of her heroes in art, past and present.

Studying graphic design and advertising at Oklahoma Christian University provided Mara with a solid foundation in design, color theory and the effort required to become excellent at whatever the task may be. Mara began a family shortly after college and as she set about the important mission of raising four brilliant children, she discovered and slowly developed her true passion for fine art and portraiture.
 
Mara now considers herself an expressive naturalist painter, desiring to convey moods, emotions and energy with textures, colors and intimate subjects. Mara finds great joy in her gift of art and she boldly uses her talent to celebrate simple beauty.
 
Working most commonly as a direct painter, alla prima, Mara is most fulfilled when she expresses a subject in the simplest terms. Her ability to combine illusions of reality with expressive textures treats the viewer to a simple telling of poetic stories, inviting the eye to enjoy the nature of oil paint itself and experience the energy carefully placed into each stroke.
 
Mara currently lives and paints in Sheridan, Wyoming with her husband, four children and six chickens.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Joe Paquet!

“Sprinkler and Spring Greens” by Joe Paquet

I think this is a fabulous painting. I can’t tell you how much I love the sprinkler! Who would guess it could add so much to a painting… Fabulous greens in this painting, lovely light and shadows and an unexpected sprinkler surprise! Joe is a very talented artist. I perused his many paintings via his website and they are SPECTACULAR!

Here’s a blip about Joe from his website:

Joseph Paquet, while pursuing a Bachelor of Fine Arts at the School of Visual Arts in New York, had the good fortune of finding a mentor in John Foote who opened his eyes to the joys of drawing the human figure. After graduating, Joe met another major influence in his life, John Osborne, who was uniquely gifted in producing convincing landscape paintings from memory. Osborne believed a landscape painting should begin on location, but that its poetic essence should be completed in the solitude of the artist’s studio. Paquet experienced a demanding and rewarding apprenticeship, in which he learned to fuse field studies with the image he could see in his mind’s eye. To summarize this experience, he explains, “The intellectual process became married to the intuitive. Paint what you know well as what you see.” He goes on to expand the possibilities, “If I have the need or desire to move a mountain, add a figure or change the course of a river, I can do so. I am no longer shackled to nature. Now, I am painting my picture.” Paquet teaches and paints at Hurinenko and Paquet Studio in St. Paul, Minnesota.

He has been featured in an October 1995 article in the Washington Post Sunday Magazine, the May 2002 issue of The Artist Magazine, the March 2004 issue of American Artist and the July 2005 issue of Plein Air Magazine. Paquet’s recent awards include both Artists’ Choice and Collectors’ Choice from the 2007 Laguna Beach Plein Air Invitational as well as the 2008 Alden Bryan Memorial Prize from the Salmagundi Club of New York and the First Place in Landscape from the Richeson 75: Artist’s Choice Competition.

Paquet is a Signature Member of the Plein Air Painters of America, The Salmagundi Club and an Out-of-State Artist Member of the California Art Club.

Now how many of you remember this?? A DRIVE IN movie?!! With those little boxes that hooked on your window with the sound. How much fun was this?! Actually when I think back, the mosquitoes, the poor sound quality, the heat of the night, it would make you wonder why they were so popular. BUT… it was an adventure. It was fun. I have vivid memories of seeing Snow White at the drive in… my sister started crying, wanted to go home, she got scared… she conveniently got plopped into the backseat, and if I remember correctly was entertained by my mom while my dad and I watched the movie! Funny the things you remember. This is a sweet painting with great memories!

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Sprinkler and Spring Greens – Image via Roger’s Gardens Facebook… 

Two Choices for Saturday Night – Image via Plein Air Painters of America Facebook

Featured Artist… William Berra!

This piece caught my eye. Artist William (Bill) Berra uses a stunning mix of color and light. I stop in my tracks at that warm golden light, with just enough of the sun hitting the landscape to make it so interesting.The light is so radiant and warm, the strokes loose and deliberate. All the great shadows from the cloudy day. THE. CLOUDS. WHOA! Amazing how light is peeking through. Very nice. I was happy to find that Bill Berra’s work is right here in Charleston, SC at the Sylvan Gallery. So if you’re in town… stop by and check it out! This painting is nothing short of amazing, click to enlarge (at least I know I can with my MAC)… hopefully all computers can??

Here’s a blip about Bill from the Sylvan Gallery website:

William Berra was raised in York, Pennsylvania and studied art there at the York Academy before moving on to the Maryland Institute of Fine Arts in Baltimore.  He left his formal training in favor of a nomadic life-style that carried him all across the country seeking subject matter for his plein-air paintings.  A winter storm stranded him in Santa Fe and he has made it his home ever since.  But the spirit of wanderlust still calls as he travels the world extensively in search of new material to paint.

William’s training as a “plein-air” painter is evident in the loose spontaneity of his pieces although he now does a great deal of his painting in the studio using his travel photographs as reference material.  His ability to make the viewer feel “oh, I’ve been there” has made him one of the most widely collected young artists in the country.

William’s work has been featured at many fine galleries throughout the country.  His work has also been exhibited at the Albuquerque Museum, at the Artists of America show in Denver, the Carmel Plein Air Competition and the Americana Museum in El Paso.  He was also the subject of an extensive article in a recent issue of Southwest Art.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Romel de la Torre!

“Katie’s Mom” by Romel de la Torre

I think this is the nicest woman… look at her kind eyes and her gentle smile. She’s about to tell you everything is going to be ok… not to worry, right? You can almost hear the words about to come out of her mouth. I would like to know Katie’s mom! She is so detailed yet the background just makes her stand out that much more. I think this is an amazing painting! Romel de la Torre is definitely one talented artist, as you’ll soon read. What a gift! He’s got a great website, so check it out!

Here’s a blip about Romel from his website:

Born in Cebu City, Philippines in a community of artists, Romel de la Torre’s artistic interest started at a very young age. With the encouragement of his parents he began sketching the world around him. He started getting awards and recognition from school competitions and at age 10 appeared on TV after receiving a medal for his painting.

In the late 70’s Romel and his family migrated to the United States where he began going to museums studying and learning on his own; works of famous artists like Sargent, Sorolla, Fechin, Mucha, and the American Impressionists. The exposure to these masters’ paintings laid a strong foundation to his belief of what great art is.

He attended the American Academy of Art in Chicago, where he was awarded the President’s Foundation Award and the Union League Scholarship Award. After graduating with a fine arts concentration, Romel continued to paint in the Chicago area and joined The Palette and Chisel Academy of Fine Arts, where he began painting with nationally renowned artist Richard Schmid and a community of other painters. It was a turning point of his creative and artistic career.

“My painting is the world, channeled through my eyes, through the prism of my own feeling, emotions and preferences. It is a unity of the visual world and the internal, abstraction and realism…” the artist’s says. A consummate artist in all media, Romel de la Torre is one of today’s most highly regarded artists. His figures, landscape, portraits, and still life paintings display unparalleled technical skill, fluid style, and thorough understanding of light, color, form and design.

The artist has been painting full time and currently instructs advanced painting and portraiture at The Palette and Chisel Academy on Fine Arts, Chicago. He is a signature member of the Oil Painters of America & the Portrait Society of America; his oils, pastels, watercolors, and portraits are housed in private collections throughout the United States and several foreign countries. His paintings have been published in The Artists Magazine, Southwest Art Magazine, U.S. Art Magazine and the American Art Collectors Magazine.

Among his most important honors is the Oil Painters of America National Exhibition/ Grand Prize and the Artists Magazine Portrait Artist of the Year. His most recent award includes; 2007 Raymar Fine Arts Competition, 2008 Gold Medal & the People’s Choice Award from the Palette & Chisel Academy of Fine Arts Gold Medal show and one of the top finalist in the 2007 and 2008 International Portrait Competition given by the prestigeous Portrait Society of America. 

Artist’s statement:
“I find spiritual beauty in all the things that I paint. The innocence of a child’s face, the endlesss blue color of the sky, the smell of flowers in the garden, the sound of raindrops falling on the roof. These gives joy in my heart, inspiration, and gratitude…… of being an artist.”

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Robert Noreika!

“Morning Reflections” by Robert Noreika – Image: Addison Art Gallery Facebook

I have to say… I LOVE ROBERT NOREIKA’S STYLE. Very Charles Sovek-like (a man I thought was such a wonderful artist and such a good person, he is definitely missed!). It amazes me how artists develop a style after years of painting, and it’s just so unique and refreshing. A master of looseness, Robert has this scene down pat. You feel like you’re there. Everything is as it should be. The shack isn’t perfect, but I’m sure in real life its a little rough around the edges, which just adds to the feeling of this painting. A beautiful sunny day, gorgeous water, wonderful water… I am impressed!

Here’s a blip about Robert from Addison Art Gallery (one at the top of my list to go visit one day soon!):

Robert Noreika is a graduate of Paier School of Art and has been a professional artist for thirty-five years. 

A prominent national award-winning artist and illustrator, Robert’s paintings hang in corporate and private collections throughout the United States, Europe and Japan. His work is also in the permanent collection of the New Britain Museum of American Art. 

He is an elected member of the National Society of Painters in Casein and Acrylic, the Salmagundi Club, the Lyme Art Association, the Connecticut Watercolor Society, the Connecticut Plein Air Painters Society, the Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts and he is a signature member of the New England Watercolor Society.

Robert Noreika is a featured artist in 100 Artists of New England published by Schiffer Publishing. His most recent award is the Gold Medal from the National Society of Painters in Casein and Acrylic.

His passion for art is matched by a natural talent to paint a wide variety of subjects, highlighted by expressive coastal scenes, intimate woodland pictorials and seasonal treks through the countryside. He has been inspired by the many pleasurable memories of his boyhood which he spent joyfully fishing, and catching turtles and frogs. Not surprisingly, he has illustrated several children’s books.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Stuart Fullerton!

Juried into American Impressionist Society 2012 Exhibition, by Stuart Fullerton

(Image via Facebook)

The 2012 13th Annual American Impressionist Society National Juried Exhibition is this November. Right now is an exciting time for many artists who’s work has been juried into the show. Artist Kevin Macpherson is the judge of awards this year. The awards are announced on November 8, 2012. Best of show wins $15,000, the other awards given are pretty nice as well! Between now and November I’m going to feature the artists who’s work will be judged. I wish them all the best of luck, their talent is immeasurable!

The first featured artist in this series is Stuart Fullerton, the above painting was juried into American Impressionist Society 2012 Exhibition, great job! I really like the brushwork in this painting. Short strokes, thick paint, nice and loose. Stuart has a fabulous website, I encourage you to check it out. He paints oil, watercolor, gouche, and pastel. Can’t you just feel the peacefulness in this painting? No sharp edges, lovely background… very nice… I can almost hear the woman take deep breaths as she’s resting…

A blip about Stuart from his website:

Stuart Fullerton grew up in north central Wisconsin and studied ancient Greek and Latin at Harvard College.  After a year studying archeology in Greece and Turkey, he returned to Harvard for law school. 

Today Stuart works and paints in Chicago.  He is a long-time member of the Palette and Chisel Club and of the Plein Air Painters of Chicago.  He has studied with such wonderful artists as Max Ranft, Scott Powers, Ralph Oberg, Skip Whitcomb, Clayton Beck and Romel de la Torre. 

 Stuart has been accepted into juried shows such as the Oil Painters of America National Exhibition, Salon International, the American Impressionist Society National Show, the OPA Eastern Regional Exhibition, and the Bosque Art Classic.  He has been invited to take part in the Door County Plein Air Festival and the Los Gatos Plein Air Gala.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Jane Chapin!

Work by Jane Chapin – painting was selected for the American Impressionist Society National Juried Show in November 2012!

This post is second in a series of artists who’s work has been selected for the American Impressionist Society National Juried Show November 1-30, 2012. Opening reception and awards are on November 8, 2012. I’ll keep you posted on that date!

Everything about this painting is EXQUISITE! The beautiful sunlit white against the oh-so-dark trees… so spectacular! The shadows are amazing, the softness, the feeling as if you are there… so, so, so, soooo nice!

Here’s another example of Jane’s work, incredible how she painted this woman:

“Jewelry Seller” by Jane Chapin – Image: JaneChapin.com

Here’s a blip about Jane from her website (great website, you’ll want to check it out!) – To read more, click HERE:

Originally from Pennsylvania, Jane Chapin grew up sketching and painting the people and landscapes that surrounded her. A year as an exchange student in Argentina broadened her surroundings and began a lifelong love of travel. After receiving her Bachelors in Art from Kutztown University in Pennsylvania, Chapin was an art teaching volunteer in the Peace Corps in El Salvador, further reinforcing her connection with the richness & diversity of her visual surroundings.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

First Image – Jane Chapin Facebook

Featured Artist… Camille Przewodek!

“The Open Window” by Camille Przewodek

I think this is such a fantastic painting. I love everything about it from the light and shadows to the open window upstairs. This is another example of Camille’s wonderous painting techniques. She makes it look so simple. This is proof that when you paint often and you are disciplined it is possible to be good. In Camille’s case… GREAT!

Camille has a monthly demo on her website, and it is FAB-U-LOUS!  To see the original photo of the scene  “The Open Window” that Camille painted, along with step-by-step photos of the process, click HERE – It helps so much to see the process. I am beyond impressed!

Here’s a blip about Camille from her website. She has wonderful paintings, a great blog, a website that includes everything, a book, DVD, workshops, the list goes on… I highly encourage you to visit her website:

Something about the paintings of Camille Przewodek stops you, then brings a smile to your face.  Maybe it is the vitality of the colors, or the feeling of intrigue one gets from the houses; windows and doorways beckon us to enter, while retaining dark secrets about what is inside. 

 Przewodek doesn’t quibble about the paintings being happy.  She won’t even set up her easel unless there is something about the scene that grabs her heart and gnaws at her aesthetic adoration of light on color.  “If I don’t care, I don’t paint,” she says bluntly. 

 Perhaps the paintings are a way of reliving a brighter childhood than she had growing up in a working-class neighborhood of Detroit.   “I remember my family home as nil when it came to aesthetics,” she recalls.  “My life was flat until I started drawing and painting with my brother, who was very creative.”

 Rebellion was the spirit of the 1960s, and Przewodek questioned just about everything, including her own desire to be an artist.  But after a year of working as a legal secretary, she enrolled at Wayne State University and began what she describes as “throwing around paint…. It was considered pedestrian to sell your art, so I stored or gave the paintings away.”

 After graduating with her BFA in 1972, Przewodek took a trip to Europe that presaged her future. “I did a series of postcard paintings that I sent to people.  Then I gathered them together into a series I called Art on the Road. “  She’s been attracted to roadways ever since and often paints paths that lead to destinations left up to the imagination to conjure. 

 She is also drawn to water, perhaps a subliminal message from her last name which means “by the water” in Polish. In 1973 Przewodek headed for the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco.  There she continued to paint, but was momentarily sidetracked by an urge to develop her left brain. “I decided to become a history student and get involved in politics,” she says. It was an eye-opener that made her aware of how rich with meaning everything in life is.  “Without history, I couldn’t have gone into illustration.”

 Illustration?  Why would an abstract artist who loved the left side of her brain suddenly return to representational art with a message?  Przewodek took a class in visual communications at City College that changed her perspective on the power of art to persuade an audience. “It was incredibly challenging, and I knew there was a way to combine storytelliing with fine art.”

 That decision drove her to the Academy of Art in San Francisco, where Przewodek met her husband, Dale Axelrod, an artist who introduced her to the artist who would change her life forever.  “Dale asked me if I wanted to attend Henry Hensche’s painting workshop in Provincetown, MA,” she says.  “I had never worked with a master before; it was like becoming a part of art history.”

 Hensche was the catalyst that made Przewodek learn to see in a whole new way. “I’ve been experimenting with his methods for 17 years and I’m still amazed at how complex the system is,” she says.  “Its foundation is using color to build form, and not bringing formulas into your work.”

 Today, Przewodek carries on Hensche’s tradition by teaching his theories to others in workshops. The lineage of her instruction goes back through Hensche to his teacher Charles Webster Hawthorne, who had studied with William Merritt Chase. As with the French impressionists, American impressionism focused on painting outdoors and observing light and atmosphere on color. Unlike French impressionism, however, American impressionists tended to pay greater attention to the solidity of form.  This was part of Hensche’s training: rather than drawing objects, then “coloring them in,” Przewodek learned to see the myriad subtleties of tones and values that create form.

 Przewodek’s style, which quickly became distinctive for its rich saturated color and luscious oil paint, caught the attention of numerous clients during the decade when she worked as a commercial illustrator. “I was one of the few illustrators who didn’t look like an illustrator. I painted the way I liked to paint,” she says. When she landed accounts such as Alfa Romeo and Chateau St. Jean, Przewodek knew it was her commitment to capturing changing light that made the difference.  “Most illustrators would just go to the site, get their reference and go back home to do a slick illustration.  I would go to the sites and stay for hours or days and do several paintings on location, then we decided which best served the project.”  That same working method influences the series Portraits of Places she continues to do today. 

 Przewodek believes that just about any scene is beautiful, if you are willing to seek out the beauty in it.  “I paint light, that’s what I do.  When people say they like a painting that has bright colors in it, they obviously like sunny days.  For others the appeal is found in the cooler colors of gray days .  The abstract relationships of the big structures and the masses of color are where I begin.  How does the sky relate to a hill and to the foreground?  I see the relationships and proportions of color in my mind, and then I go for it!”

 Three paintings of water lilies done at three different times of the day make the case for how atmosphere changes colors and the mood of the overall scene.  The morning painting, which has a tighter composition, is fresh and uncomplicated when compared to the riot of brilliant colors found in the more complex mid-day painting. By late afternoon Przewodek pulls back and takes an expansive look at colors deepened by reflected color and enriched by shadows. 

 Although she paints the gardens, shores and vineyards that surround her home in Petaluma, California, Przewodek is drawn to Europe and has painted throughout France, Spain and Italy.  It is no surprise that she made a pilgrimage to see the work of Spanish colorist Joaquin Sorolla . She senses a special bond to French Impressionist Camille Pissarro and Claude Monet’s wife, Camille.  Przewodek’s daughter, who “radiates happiness,” often joins her in her travels, adding a youthful counterpoint to the history that passes before them. 

 While she paints the moment, history continues to be a major part of Przewodek’s work. The vitality and tragedy she felt in Venice resulted in a series of paintings that document the feeling of transformation the city is making as it slowly sinks into the ocean, burying its incredible record of love and war in the murky memory of legend. 

 In truth, transformation is at the heart of Przewodek’s paintings.  Each time she stops to paint a scene she approaches it without baggage, emulating an almost childlike vision.  Intrigued by a split moment of light, she relies on the sensitivity of her eye and the clarity of her memory to keep the scene alive as she intuitively reaches for opaque pigments that transform into translucent atmosphere when juxtaposed on canvas.  When we look at one of her paintings, we partake of the pleasure she felt in achieving her goal, and thus we too are transformed by her vision.

 We also sense how Przewodek’s endless pursuit of knowledge continues to transform the legacy of Hensche, who wrote: “Only the education of the art of seeing, unique as it is, supplies the possibility of continuous growth.  As a good music teacher makes the pupil aware of finer sound tones and how to produce them, the good art teacher will make his student aware of finer color tones and how to paint them.”

Camille teaches many workshops, I see the one scheduled for Charleston, SC is full with a waiting list, that’s GREAT! Check out all the other locations, including the LDL (Long Distance Learning), Learning to plein air paint with classes ONLINE! The only prerequisite is that you’ve previously taken a five day workshop with Camille. To read more about it, click here!

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Burton Silverman!

“Hanging Out” by Burton Silverman

Isn’t this fabulous? The description that Burton Silverman had to go along with this painting: …”Italy version of the scenes in my neighborhood of women looking out to see neighbors,watch their kids and ruminate”

The woman in this painting looks like she’s doing just that… I love that area to the left of the window… so spectacular with the light… also the shadows from the shutter against the house, the cool draping of the fabric. The fixed stare in the woman’s eyes, like she’s watching something so intriguing… something she can pass on to her neighbors. I think it’s a very cool vantage point that this was painted from, down closer to the street, but zoomed in a bit, looking up, you get the effect as if you were the one she was watching. Such depth, very very nice. Check out Burton’s work if you get a chance, it’s amazing. Very difficult to choose only one painting!

Here’s a blip about Burton from his website, click HERE for more:

Mr. Silverman been painting and exhibiting as a painter for 60 years. He has had had 33 solo shows across the country including venues in New York, Boston, Philadelphia ,Washington, D.C,., San Francisco, Maine and Nashville TN  He has appeared in numerous national and international exhibitions including the National Portrait Gallery, the National Academy Annuals, the Mexico City Museum of Art, the Royal Academy of Art in London and the Butler Midyear Annuals. He has won 37 major prizes and awards from several of these annual exhibitions and the National Academy Museum has honored him with 9 awards including the Ranger Purchase Awards in 1983 and 1965. His paintings are represented in more than two dozen public collections including the Arkansas Art Institute, the Brooklyn Museum, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the New Britain Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the National Museum of American Art, the Columbus Museum and the National Portrait Gallery. His work is included in numerous private collections both in the U.S. and Europe. Since 1993 he has lectured in museums and university graduate programs on the nature of 21st Century Realism. and written articles  extensively on the same subject matter.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Dan Beck!

“A Warm Breeze” by Dan Beck – Gold Medal Award Winner 2011 OPA Nationals

Isn’t this an absolutely beautiful painting? I love everything about this painting! The woman in this painting reminds me of one of my very best friends growing up. This looks like it could have been painted long, long ago, or just yesterday. I love it when paintings are ageless. I like the ruggedness of the trees and the sticks in the foreground. That coupled with the softness of the horizon works so beautifully. Take a minute to peruse through the many fabulous paintings Dan has on his website. The man can paint and that’s an understatement. If you’re a Facebook friend of his you may notice that he’s been posting some older pieces on occasion which are STUNNING. He stays true to his style. If you aren’t familiar with his work check it out!

One more… talk about timeless… whoa! Just look at how loose, yet how detailed this is! Wonderful work!

“Many Trails” by Dan Beck – Images from DanBeckArt.com

A blip about Dan from his website:

Wanderlust was Dan’s primary motivation in the decade following his graduation from high school.  Dan took to the road, working jobs that included ranch hand in Arizona, construction on the beach of Florida, refinishing furniture in Louisiana and four years in the infantry, including a two year tour in Germany.  Wherever he went, Dan filled sketch books and journals for his own enjoyment. Then in Colorado after a couple of years in college, he realized the thing that meant most to him was his sketch books. So he quit his job and college, sold everything he had and decided that commitment to one path was where all the previous had led him.

 Now Dan Beck is an award winning artist and sought after teacher.  His paintings have found collectors in both the private and corporate world on a national level as well as from such diverse places as Canada, Japan and the Middle East.  He is in the permanent collection of the Littleton Historical Museum and has exhibited with the Phippen Museum, Prescott, Arizona.  He has been invited to show in several national invitationals including the annual American Miniature Show at Settlers West Galleries, Tucson, Arizona and the annual “Fall Classic” in Hamilton, Montana.  Dan’s work has also been featured in “Southwest Art”, “Art of the West” magazines and “Art Talk”. He is a member of Oil Painters of America.

 Equally adept at figurative, still-life and landscape, Dan paints both oils and pastels and fees he is firmly rooted in the tradition of Impressionism. His love of nature and a deep respect for the tradition of art serve as both guide and inspiration to his goal of “making a contribution” to the world of painting. Dan’s paintings evoke a timelessness and dignity that are the underlying themes in whatever he paints.  As to his working methods, Dan works quickly and loosely in the beginning, covering the whole surface to establish his major shapes and drawing.  Then he slows down and lets the emerging image dictate the way the painting will be finished.  

 “Painting is a balancing act between opposite ideas – direct observation and instinct, control and spontaneity, even between the literal and the symbolic.  It seems to me that although a painter is deeply involved with his own private investigation, his real aim is to communicate something that only the person looking at the painting really understands.”

 Dan now lives in Lakewood, Colorado with his wife and two daughters.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Paul Bachem!

“The 5th of July” by Paul Bachem 

I think this is the sweetest painting… of course, those of you who know me, know I LOVE a flag in a painting, it truly makes it pop! I love the shadows and light in this painting, and that front porch is amazing! Paul Bachem, now that’s a name that those of you who are familiar with Plein Air Easton 2012 will recognize. He won the Utrecht award for Best Use of Light in his painting entitled “Moored at Dawn”. Very nice! I encourage you to take a look at his website. Very nice paintings, and WOOHOO for the Plein Air Easton award… not easy!

“Fresh Seafood” by Paul Bachem

Here’s a blip about Paul from his website:

Paul Bachem was born and raised on the North Shore of Long Island, east of New York City. He studied with Harold Ransom Stevenson and Alma Gallanos Stevenson from 1975 till 1977. During that time Paul was a member of the Stevenson’s Atelier program which was a two year period of intense study of the traditional craft of drawing and painting. 

Upon leaving the Stevensons, Paul began a long career as a freelance illustrator. He has worked for clients in New York City, across the country and as far away as Sydney, Australia. A partial list of clients includes Random House, Simon and Schuster, Scholastic Inc., Weldon Owen Pty, Ltd., The Pleasant Company, Coty, Field and Stream, Forbes, and numerous advertising agencies. He was awarded a certificate of merit at the Society of Illustrators 35th annual exhibition. Paul’s work is in the permanent collection of the Forbes Gallery in New York. 

Over the past few years he has spent more and more time pursuing his passion for plein air painting. He is an associate member of the New York Plein Air Painters and a founding member of the Long Island Plein Air Painters Society.  He is represented by Gallery North in Setauket, New York, LaMantia Gallery in Northport, New York (where he was named Best in Show at the first annual Northport Plein Air Event) and Robert Paul Galleries in Stowe, VT.  He has been selected twice for inclusion in the Greenwich Workshop’s Small Works North America Exhibition and Sale. His painting “Wild Sweet William” was awarded with inclusion in the Top 40 of that exhibition. Paul was also the featured artist in “Informed Collector” magazine in April of 2009. He has been included in the FAV 15% of the Fine Art Studio Online Monthly painting competition ten times, most recently in March of 2011. Paul has participated in numerous East Coast Plein Air events including Plein Air Easton 2010 and 2011 as well as the Wayne Plein Air event in Wayne, PA and Cranford, NJ “Paint the Town 2011” where his painting “Greetings from Asbury Park” was awarded 3rd prize.

Aside from painting, Paul enjoys playing classical guitar and chess. Of the two he is considered to be a very talented painter!

He lives and works in Locust Valley, New York with his wife Janice, herself a talented painter and sculptor.

Great work Paul, I wish you much success! Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Colin Page!

“Underneath” by Colin Page – Image: DowlingWalsh.com

I’ve featured Colin a few times over the past few years. His work is outstanding, and now… some of his paintings have a new twist. Edgy. I am really liking his new work, I love this painting, how you see “underneath”… its wonderful how he can mix a  traditional painting with some abstractness to come up with something totally unique, that works so well! If you haven’t checked out Colin’s website in the past, I highly encourage you to do so. Colin is an amazing person. He gave a workshop in Charleston, SC this past spring that was a huge hit, everyone loved him, and thought he was a fabulous teacher! Oh! I don’t want to forget to mention his JOURNAL. Full of great information, it’s a “must read” if you love art!

Colin’s show opens at the Dowling Walsh Gallery in Rockland, Maine TODAY! The opening reception is from 5-8PM, so if you’re in the area, give his work a peek! You will be thrilled that you did. The Dowling Walsh Gallery is a nice place to hang out and check out some of the best art around. Colin’s show starts today, August 3rd through August 26, 2012. I hope every painting has a red dot!

Look at this piece… (to me) it’s reminiscent of a painting done by Charles Movalli entitled, THE PATRIOT, oh how we loved that painting… if memory serves me correctly it was the stern of a sailboat, and an American flag, those two things I remember… it was big and it was at Bayview Gallery in Camden, ME many years ago. I’ll never forget that piece!

“Angelique” is one classy painting, with the dark hull, the dark water with pops of the sky and the pop of the flag… whoa!

“Angelique” by Colin Page – Image: DowlingWalsh.com

If you’re lucky enough to make it to the show, let me know how you liked it! It’s going to be fabulous! Read more about Colin on the Dowling Walsh website (fabulous website!), so much to read! Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured artist… Shelby Keefe!

“Alterations” by Shelby Keefe – Image: StudioShelby.com

Best Painting with an Architectural Subject
Easels in Frederick (MD), Painting Competion, June 2012

Isn’t this a fabulous painting? The fabulous architecture, the shadows on the building, the reflections in the window, the vibrant blue facade… gorgeous! Check out Shelby’s website, she’s a fantastic painter. I really enjoy her work!

Here’s a blip about Shelby from her website:

Impressionist Oil Painter

Shelby Keefe is a contemporary impressionistic painter, teacher and performance artist. Born in Whitewater, WI in 1958, she graduated in 1981 with a BFA from Cardinal Stritch University in Milwaukee, WI.  After retiring from a career in graphic design in 2005, she operates her own art studio and exhibition space in Bay View, on the south side of Milwaukee. Her award-winning urban landscape paintings have earned her participation in prestigious national juried shows, plein air painting competitions, and arts festivals as well as garnering commission work for a variety of corporate clients and private collectors. Her oil paintings are found in collections such as The Bradley Foundation, Acuity, Northwestern Mutual, Ozaukee Country Club; WE Energies; University School of Milwaukee; and other businesses around Milwaukee, and in private collections in Wisconsin and around the country.

Artist Statement
“I am influenced by Impressionism and the brighter Fauvist palette and generally specialize in urban architectural subjects. I use my own photographs as reference as well as painting “en plein air”. My creative intentions are to put the viewer in the scene; transporting them to the location and transforming their mood through color and composition. I’m attracted to scenes where the subjects are dramatically lit, which adds a vibrancy and a sense of immediacy to the paintings. I like to apply the oils freely and liberally over brilliant acrylic underpaintings, creating a juxtaposition of contrasting colors that vibrate and illicit emotional engagement as well as excite the eye. I believe that a work of art has a longer lasting, “multi-generational wall life” when the viewer continually finds something new in the work, and the paint, itself, is allowed to do the “talking.”

Catch you back here tomorrow!