Featured Artist… Gay Faulkenberry!

GayFaulkenberry SwirlingTideSharkHarbor GF

“Swirling Tide, Shark Harbor” by Gay Faulkenberry

NOTE: I made a little theme change… let me know if you like it, or if you don’t… I’m trying to freshen things up for the new year… (To comment, click on the LEAVE A REPLY link directly under the title of this post)… happy reading!

Gay Faulkenberry is a plein air painter who has a nice loose style. What a nice peaceful painting! If you can’t make it to the coast, you just need a painting like this to make it FEEL as if you’re there! I love those rocks in the foreground, then the rougher churning water with it’s fabulous colors and finally the distant water with hints of the rock colors. Very nice painting! I enjoy looking through the host of paintings on her website, I think you will too!

Check out Gay’s work, it’s quite impressive. Looks like she’ll be teaching a few workshops this year as well, one in Easton, MD and the other in Italy, more info on her website!

A blip about Gay from her website:

“My love of color inspires me to take on one of the greatest of challenges: painting from life. I am driven to capture the excitement and subtle nuances of myriad reds in a poppy field, the values in a stand of golden aspens, reflected hues in a shadow, or glow of a backlit flower petal. Each of these encounters demands that I see the world with a fresh eye, which is what I hope to convey to viewers.” –Gay Faulkenberry

Gay Faulkenberry has been a force on the American art scene for more than two decades. Known for her impressionistic approach to color and light, she is renowned for plein-air paintings of urban and rural landscapes and for studio paintings of intimate still lifes, florals, and interiors.

“Taking my pochade box outdoors into nature excites me as much as designing a still life arrangement or re-creating the ambience of a room setting. Whatever the subject, I’m inspired by the way light reveals form and essence,” Faulkenberry says. She takes equal pleasure in designing her environment, including the French Cottage-style home and flower gardens she shares with her husband Roger, and her vaulted studio/loft with its ironwork cabling and antique shutters.

A native Oklahoman, where she continues to live, Faulkenberry was raised throughout the West and has traveled extensively in Europe. Her grandmother and “best friend” was a painter and Francophile, who favored the French Impressionists and displayed Taos artists at a lodge she and her husband operated in Northern New Mexico. Luminous color made an imprint on Faulkenberry, who worked in watercolors from childhood through her studies at Southwestern State and Oklahoma State universities. Focused on detailed dry-brush renderings of homes with architectural ornamentation, she first encountered alla prima paintings on several trips to Taos in the late 1970s. Her transition to oils was facilitated by independent studies with Russian master Sergei Bongart. Subsequent workshops with Ray Vinella, Ned Jacob, and Mark Daily refined her skills. “I remain a student of art, always reaching for higher levels of excellence,” she says. “However, it is the artist’s job to discover his or her personal voice in creating a language that communicates beyond words.” 

For the past decade, Faulkenberry has been a popular instructor herself, conducting workshops throughout the United States and abroad.  As a mentor, she shares her insights and technical expertise in using the eyes, heart, head, and hand in translating the joy of life onto canvas. She also encourages her students to see and study art by past masters, including artists who have influenced her: the bravura brushwork of Nicolai Fechin and John Singer Sargent, William Merritt Chase’s attention to textures and colors indoors and out, and  the “quiet magic” of Emil Carlsen’s still lifes.

Faulkenberry’s work has been featured in leading art publications, and she is frequently asked to jury art shows. Her work is represented in corporate, private, and museum collections across the country. A Signature Member of the prestigious Plein-Air Painters of America since 1996, she served as PAPA president and spokesperson in 2008-2009.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Bill Davidson!

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Plein air painting by Bill Davidson

WHOA, right?! LOOK at this painting by Bill Davidson. I mean REALLY look at it. The mountains are magnificent, the deep shadows and that oh-so wonderful sunlight hitting in just the right place, the rocks and shore in the foreground is gorgeous against the water. THE WATER. Looks so real I swear I just saw a fish jump! The lights, the darks, the warm and cool the very loose style with which the paint is applied is stunning. This image comes from Bill Davidson’s Facebook page. I look so forward to seeing what’s next! Each and every painting is gorgeous! And lucky you… he gives workshops! So if you’re interested be sure to check out his website or Facebook page!

Bill does show his work at a fabulous gallery here in Charleston, SC – M Gallery of Fine Art check out their website as well, or better yet, if you’re in the area be sure to stop in. That’s one gallery you don’t want to miss!

Catch you back here tomorrow!

 

Featured Artist James Richards!

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Gloucester Harbor by James Richards

James Richards has some downright jaw dropping paintings on his website and on his Facebook page. Isn’t Gloucester Harbor absolutely incredible? The looseness of the strokes is out of this world. The colors are out of this world. His ability to get rid of all the unimportant “stuff” in the actual landscape amazes me. He left what was interesting and downright GORGEOUS! It wasn’t easy to choose only one painting, each and every one is so good! I love when an artist posts photos of what they’re painting. It makes them (the artist) kind of like a magician to me. It’s magical how they portray what they see so differently and so much better than it is!

Here is the photo of what James painted (from his Facebook page) – Now do you see what I mean?! Jaw dropping, right? Look how he gave the painting some twists and turns and not boring straight lines everywhere… no little stuff all over the place, oh heavy sigh, I can tell you mine would be quite different… it would be straight lines and all the little stuff, yuck yuck yuck. Why don’t you paint like the paintings you like I wonder? Well, I guess it all starts with picking up a brush… (I hear ya Ken! hee):

Photo by JamesRIchards

I love this little blip about James Richards (from his website):

Every time I go out to paint, I’m amazed at the beauty, 
complexity, and originality of God’s creation. Every 
day is unique and offers different challenges and 
opportunities for the artist. Being true to these 
differences, accurately mixing the appropriate color, 
value, and relationship I see before me achieves a 
result of a certain realness in the painting.
In painting, light is always the main theme of my work. 
Light gives form, color, and atmosphere to everything 
we see. Without it, we would see nothing.
Thus, as it is in the natural world, so it is in our 
spiritual world. Light gives meaning, reason, and 
purpose to our existence. In nature, the source of 
light is the sun. In our spirit, the source of light is 
God’s Son, Jesus Christ. 
My entire life has been a search for truth. Until I 
learned of Jesus and asked him into my life, I existed 
in the darkness of my own interpretation of life. As 
Jesus filled me with his spirit, he has filled my life with 
the light of God and an understanding of truth. 
With this talent God has given me, He has also given 
me vision. A vision to see the glory of God in His 
creation. This is why I paint.

May God bless you in your journey through life, and 
may the light of Jesus shine through you.

What a great guy! Give his website a look and I’ll catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Ann Larsen!

“Winter Color” by Ann Larsen

This is a beautiful winterscape. Look at all those colors that make up the snow. Just like in real life… snow certainly isn’t all white when you look at it, since reflections and shadows appear as different colors. I love a snowy painting WITH SUN. It just makes everything pop. Nice brushwork and great flecks of light throughout the painting! Her paintings lack the fine details that end up making a painting ‘fussy’. Take a peek, I’m sure you’ll enjoy them!

Here’s a blip about Ann from her website:

Ann is an award winning artist living in upstate New York’s Adirondack Mountains.  Born in Louisivlle, KY, Ann began traveling and living throughout the United States at the age of 18.   After completing a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Central Oklahoma, she and her family moved to Denver, CO where Ann began to focus on her painting and fell in love with the western landscape.   Even though she lives in a beautiful part of the country, where plein air painting is a challenge almost any time of year, Ann also spends time painting on the coast of Maine and throughout the Southwest.   

Ann’s approach to the landscape is to simplify as much as possible in order to create the strongest paintings.  “I want my viewers to know how I felt about a place when I painted it.  I’m not trying to copy what I see nor am I interested in lots of detail.  I want to suggest a subject with the buildup of paint and exciting brushstrokes.”

Northlight Gallery in Kennebunkport, ME states, “Ann’s work exhibits the careful, thoughtful hand of an artist deeply committed to both her medium and her environment.   Ann is able to suggest the power, grace and mood of her subject as she captures the essence of New England in her landscapes and seascapes.”

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Eleinne Basa!

“Afternoon Light” by Eleinne Basa

Normally I like to feature a painting that is still for sale. This is an exception. Even though this gorgeous painting has sold, I just had to share it with you. STUNNING! LOOK at that light. Absolutely incredible. That beautiful warm golden light alongside the dark sky is perfection! This painting won the $15,000 First Place Award in the 1st Annual Plein Air Salon Online Competition! Woohoo Eleinne!
The awarding was announced during the 1st Plein Air convention in Las Vegas.

Here’s a blip about Eleinne from her website

A Classically trained artist, Basa began painting at the young age of 8. Her early training still influences her as it is when she is painting “en plein air’ that she is brought back to a time in her childhood when “painting was pure and comes from someplace deep within.”
Basa’s landscapes allure the viewer to move into the work with their radiant light and luminescent qualities reminiscent of the early Luminists and Tonalists of the American School. She is inspired by painters like Thomas Moran, George Inness and is continually striving to achieve a certain timelessness to her work.

A professional and full time artist since 2004,
Basa participates in several national shows and have been invited to participate in prestigious events such as the Maynard dixon Country show in 2009 . She has also been invited to show her works at the National Arts Club and at the Salmagundi Club in New York, New York.

D. Eleinne Basa lives in Jackson New Jersey with her husband and two children.

Check out Eleinne’s website, see all the amazing paintings…  and I’ll Catch you back here tomorrow!

CFADA Fine Art Weekend Photo: Mark Horton

I love Charleston Fine Art Dealers (CFADA) weekend… specifically the first Saturday in November. Watching these amazing artists paint is always a treat! There was a nice turnout. I packed my camera and off we went, headed downtown… ran into several road blocks, there was a run in town that had streets blocked off. Eventually we made it… we jumped out of the car, camera in hand and headed to Washington Park. I turned my camera on, ready to snap away, and what did I see?

B A T T E R Y  E X H A U S T E D ! 

ooooh…m…geeeee.

Ok, next I resorted to my Blackberry. I was so disappointed not to get the photos that I wanted. Fred offered to go home and get my spare battery (WHY didn’t I put that in the camera bag??!!). But we made do… so here’s the first photo… Mark Horton, from Horton Hayes Gallery in Charleston, SC, painting away. Effortless. Or at least it appears that way. I don’t suppose you can look like you paint effortlessly unless you do a heck of a lot of painting!

Great work Mark! Next year… I will have ALL my batteries!

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Brian Stewart!

Isn’t this the sweetest painting? This was done by artist Brian Stewart. I love that house… what a wonderful place. A magical green, the light hitting the house, the person on the porch, the gingerbread on the house, the flowers on the porch, it all comes together and makes a very nice painting. I like how Brian has descriptions on his website… here’s the one for this painting (on Brian’s website under “Plein Air”).

Sunday Morning / Nicollet Island
Nicollet Island is an inner city oasis that has many fine, older Victorian style homes. Some grand, some quaint. Loaded with Ginger bread, these homes were in neglect for many years, but in the last few years people have been slowly restoring them to their original beauty. One more reason why the Riverfront is one of the more desirable areas in the Twin Cites. This Sunday morning scene looked like a nice way to start the day. 12 x 9, oil on canvas on board in a turn-of-the-Century style gilded frame.

One more, well, because I think it’s so interesting…

Where Stars Were Made 
This old, overgrown and abandoned motel is on the Pacific Coast Highway in California just as you enter into Malibu. Since the 30ʼs it has been a favorite of fast laners, rock stars and the Hollywood crowd. A trip to the beach wouldn’t have been complete without a stop there. I’m drawn to this kind of subject matter because it is so rapidly disappearing from our landscape and I look at it and think “If walls could talk”. 12 x 16”, oil on canvas on board in a gilded turn-of-the-Century style frame.

I want to go see this in person! Can you imagine fixing these up??! Brian’s description underneath image… I wonder who stayed there? YES, if walls could talk!

Catch you back here tomorrow!

All images: stew-art.com

CFADA Fine Art Weekend begins TONIGHT in Charleston, SC!

Laurie Meyer at CFADA painting in the park… Charleston, SC 2011
Laurie Meyer at CFADA painting in the park… Charleston, SC 2011

This weekend is one of my favorites. It’s Charleston Fine Art Dealers Association (CFADA) Fine Art Weekend here in Charleston, SC!
Tonight you can visit the galleries, meet both the local and visiting artists and tomorrow, ahhhh, tomorrow…!

Tomorrow (Saturday, November 3rd) you can watch them paint from 9AM until Noon in Washington Park. Nothing gives me greater joy than to watch an artist I admire paint a fabulous painting while I’m standing there with a cup of coffee in my hand, hee hee… It amazes me how everyone approaches a painting differently, yet they all end up so wonderful! I just cannot wait!

Paintings will be auctioned off Saturday night and  benefits go towards helping local schools provide art supplies…

Hey! Maybe I’ll see you there? I’ll be one of the ones with a camera around my neck! Catch you back here tomorrow!

Sonoma Plein Air Event… Starts TODAY! October 1-6, 2012

The Sonoma Plein Air Event begins today! So many fabulous artists in one location! As you can see the gala is SOLD OUT! Here is a list of events from the Sonoma Plein Air website:

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS FOR 2012:

Artists check in on Monday, October 1st
Artists paint in various locations throughout Sonoma Valley during the week of the event.


Tuesday, October 2nd
“The Quick DRAW”
Please join the artists on Tuesday in the Sonoma Plaza at 5:30 p.m.
Take a look at the 2011 Quick Draw here.
Easels will be set up all around the colorful Sonoma Farmers Market for paintings to be created and sold on the spot!

Artists will have an hour and a half to take in all the vivid colours, sights and smells of the Farmers Market while creating a painting for you to take home with you that night!
4:30 Quick Draw begins
5:30 Farmer’s Market begins
6:00 Artists finish
6:30-8:30 Art available for purchase
Check out at the Charles Creek tasting room on the Plaza….


Friday, October 5th
The Gala Dinner and Auction with the Artists

This year’s Gala Dinner will be held at the Lasseter Train Barn
Be sure to join the Live Auction at the Gala….

THE GALA DINNER IS NOW SOLD OUT!
Contact us to join the waiting list….

Sonoma Plein Air Foundation
19201 Sonoma Highway
Number 321
Sonoma, CA 95476


Saturday, October 6th
ART EXHIBITION & SALE
Historic Sonoma Plaza
Napa Street East and First Street East
Public invited

10 a.m. EVENT OPENS
Meet the Sonoma Plein Air artists
Fine art they created during the week on location
in Sonoma Valley will be on display and for sale

LIVE MUSIC
To be announced

10 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Hands-on-Art classes for children
Thank you Sonoma Community Center staff and volunteers.

ART DEMONSTRATIONS:

11 a.m. Oil painting demonstration
12:30 p.m . Water color demonstration
2 p.m. Pastel Demonstration

4 p.m. EVENT CLOSES

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Featured Artist… Roger Dale Brown!

“Harbor at Dusk” by Roger Dale Brown

Roger Dale Brown… this is another man who can paint anything! The twinkle of the lights in this painting is pure genius! It drew me right in and made me love it right off the bat! Very, very nice!

“Creekside” by Roger Dale Brown

“Creekside” is a plein air piece that Roger did and I think it has such character. As simple as it is, I LOVE THOSE WINDOWS! The fabulous shade on the sunny building, and in the sunlit grass, so very nice! I think character adds so much to a painting, and lines that aren’t always straight really gives it that character, doesn’t it? I see that Roger does a lot of the plein air events all over the country, check out his website to see when he’ll be near you!

A blip about Roger from his website:

Originally from Nashville, Tennessee Roger is avid about traveling studying, teaching, and competing in national painting competitions.  These experiences expand his knowledge of history, nature, and architecture, which inspire his oil paintings. 

 Roger believes, as the historical master artists, such as John Carlson and Edgar Payne, that “plein air” painting is an essential element in being a great artist.  He spends countless hours studying and painting on location, to continue to perfect seeing important nuances of a scene, a day, or an object, which are necessary in creating a great painting. Roger works hard to balance the emotion of a scene, with the knowledge of painting, in every painting he paints.

Roger’s oil paintings have been displayed in galleries throughout the United States and have won many awards which include: First Place in the Barnes and Farms National Juried Art Show, Museum Purchase Award and third place at the Easton Plein Air Competition, Best of Show at the Central South National Juried Show, as well as the Gold Medal Award from the Hudson Valley Art Association.  His work has also been accepted in the Oil Painters of America National Juried Exhibition, and Salon International. Roger has been published by: International Artist Magazine, American Artist Magazine, American Art Collector Magazine, and the Artist Magazine. His works are owned by private collectors across the country and include many well-known celebrities and major corporations.

 Roger shares his knowledge teaching workshops throughout the country. He believes in capturing the essence of his subjects and instills this in his students whether teaching plein air, figurative, studio or still life.

Fabulous work! His work has that step-back-in-time feel to it, how wonderful! Catch you back here tomorrow!

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… 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!

Featured Artist… David Santillanes!

“String Lake” by David Santillanes

Don’t you just feel as if you right there on the edge of the water, overlooking the lake? This painting brings me into the moment, which is pretty cool! “String Lake” received an Award of Excellence at the 2012 RMPAP (Rocky Mountain Plein Air Painters) Plein Air for the Park in Grand Teton National Park. I especially love the reflections in the water, the hazy trees on the horizon and the more vivid foreground. Very nice! 

Here’s a blip about David from his website:

As my painting style continues to evolve my goal with each piece is not a literal rendering of the scene.  Instead it is to capture and convey its essence.

In terms of composition, I look for simplicity.  I’ve found that there are many opportunities to simplify a scene without compromising its sense of ‘place’.  Therefore I’ll seek out the big abstract shapes in the landscape and  use them for the underlying design concept.  And because I’ve departed from a literal interpretation, I’m free to rearrange elements to fit this concept.  In this way I am able to describe the scene in my own “words”.

Finally, capturing the essence of a landscape involves a realistic rendering of color, light and atmosphere.  This requires direct observation and is why most of my paintings begin in the field with a plein air study.   But studying the physical aspects of nature isn’t the only reason I paint outdoors; for me, the sensory experience of being there is equally important. There’s no better way to get to know a place on earth than to sit for a couple of hours and contemplate it while painting. This intense observation brings a spiritual intimacy with the scene that can’t be achieved in mere passing and allows me to “speak” with complete sincerity in each painting.

Dave Santillanes
Fort Collins, Colorado 2011

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Image: David Santillanes Facebook

Featured Artist… Katie Dobson Cundiff!

“Merriewoods” by Katie Dobson Cundiff

I just love this painting for so many reasons. The cabin feels rustic and like something that fits within a perfect vacation, the trees are loose and full of character, the shadows are amazing and the clothes on the line, whoa! Those nicely added pops of color just make this painting extra special. This was one of the paintings that Katie had done for the Cashiers Plein Air Paint Out (Cashiers, NC) that just ended on Saturday. What a delightful time that must have been. How great to be a spectator in such a beautiful location full of fabulous artists!

Another painting that I just love, also from the Cashiers Plein Air Paint Out:

“Toll House” by Katie Dobson Cundiff

I absolutely adore how the underpainting shows through, it just adds so much! The little bits of light on the house, the cool picket fence and gate, the bright green sunlit grass and the beautiful flowers in the foreground all make this painting what it is… fabulous!

If you happen to be in the Charleston, SC area, you’re in luck! You can see some of Katie’s work at Galerie On Broad… if you aren’t in the area, check out their website!

Here’s a blip about Katie from her website  (click HERE to read in full), she sounds like such an interesting person!:

I am primarily a landscape artist, although I enjoy painting many different subjects including portraits and figurative, animals, still life, rural landscapes, boats, and urban scenes.  I think my work differs from that of other artists because of the influence and instruction I received from my father.  As a child, I loved to sit and watch him work on his illustrations, and would often pose for him.  He would let me look through his art books and by the time I was a teenager, we had long discussions on art and artists.  He showed me the works of master artists Degas, Lautrec, Sargent, Sorolla, and Zorn (to name a few). Frequent visits to the Art Institute provided me the opportunity to study these and other great painters. This strong foundation in drawing and painting, and exploring the works of fine art masters has been the most important element in my journey and quest to becoming a “painter of life”.

Catch you back here tomorrow!

Images: Katie Dobson Cundiff Facebook

Featured Artist… Robin Weiss!

“White House” by Robin Weiss

Artist Robin Weiss works magic with a brush! His subject matter is very diverse, which makes it so interesting to follow his career, see what he’s painting. This painting is so sweet. It is amazing. I absolutely love the light and how it hits the house, the picket fence, and plays with the shadows in the road. So much detail has been added, the gingerbread on the peaks, yet this is not tight… not an easy task! Robin clearly knows when to stop and not overpaint a painting!

 Images: Robin Weiss Facebook

I love it when artists post photos of the art as well as the location, so that you can SEE what they’re painting. Most of the time whatever they’re painting looks much better than the real life scene. I wonder if that’s how they naturally see the world… hmmm… interesting! The first painting above entitled “White House” won the poster contest for a plein air event sponsored by Gallery North… (Image: Robin Weiss blog: In Plein Air).

Here’s a blip about Robin from his site on Daily Paintworks:

I began drawing at a very early age. In the early seventies my high school art teacher , Louis Penfield , took on the role as my art mentor. We spent many hours collecting material for massive found art sculptures made of metal. We would draw and paint from life, in class, after school and on weekends at his estate designed by Frank Lloyd Wright . Wright also designed an art studio for Lou that was never finished . We hauled stone from the Chagrin river in northeast Ohio flowing through the property and worked on the studio. Then we would set up still life compositions and paint in watercolor.

After a stint in the US Navy I moved to Washington and started studying for architectural engineering. While attending Olympic college I began taking art courses and made the decision to focus on my art. At the time I was working in watercolor and started taking workshops from successful local artists. Deanne Lemley, and Jane Wallace were among them.

In 2006 , I joined the daily painters movement after reading about Duane Keiser and Julian Merrow Smith. I was desperate for more motivation to produce art and while I never actually achieved daily painter status , that is, completing a painting every day for an extended period of time, it was a good move for me to get involved with dedicated artists online. This resulted in a vast improvement in the quality of my artwork and I am now very thankful to be a full time artist.

Now working in oil I continue learning as much as I can from other professionals in the field. I have attended workshops with Darrell Anderson, Jim Lamb, Ned Mueller and others. 

I am currently painting and teaching at The Knowles Studio in Poulsbo WA. alongside printmaker and art instructor , Leigh Knowles Metteer.

My paintings are represented by The Directors Gallery on Bainbridge Island and Alki Arts gallery in West Seattle.

I have work published in, City Living; The Longborough Festival Opera, UK; Daily Painters, Color, Obsession and Joy; and others.

I have sold hundreds of paintings from my blog site and have work in private and corporate collections worldwide.

I wish Robin continued success, he is an amazing artist! I look forward to seeing his paintings in person one day!

Catch you back here tomorrow!