Tuesday, December 26, 2006

RUST BUCKETS

(Click image to enlarge)

This painting is from another photograph by Bruce Fingerhood. Bruce has a great eye for composition. These two rusting Chevy trucks sit abandoned in Bruce's father-in-law's backyard in Hood River.

I like the colors in this painting and the light playing off the headlights and the front bumpers. Until I added the dark shadows below the bumpers and the background grass and trees, the image looked a bit flat. Once the contrast was added, the two trucks seemed to come to life. I put in the greens and yellows in the grass quickly without trying to be too detailed.

My favorite parts are the front bumpers, especially the rusting bolts that hold them onto the trucks, and the left headlight. I also was satisfied with how the side windows turned out. I left them reflecting light from the sky as opposed to being transparent. I think I stepped away from the painting at just the right time. I was tempted to fiddle with it some more. Perhaps this proves the maxim that a painting is never done; you just stop painting.

Saturday, December 16, 2006

Watercolor Journal

Over the past six months I've taken a small watercolor tablet, a small watercolor set and some brushes along when we travel. I try to keep a journal of our trip by painting and writing. Below are a couple of pages from the journal:



Saturday, December 09, 2006

HARLEY



(Click image to see enlarged view)

I laugh every time I look at this painting. If you had told me 6 months ago I'd be painting a Harley-Davidson Motorcycle with an American flag background, I would have thought you had lost your senses. But here are two traditional American icons painted by a life-long leftist. Who would have thunk?

I started by calling the local Harley-Davidson dealer and asking if I could come out and take some pictures. I convinced them that I wasn't an industrial spy for Kawasaki and just wanted some pictures to paint from. It was one of the few sunny days we had in Eugene in November and I was at first disappointed that they didn't have any of the bikes out in the sunlight. However the showroom was bathed in sun through large plateglass windows and the bikes reflected not only the light from the windows but the colors from the other bikes. One of the salesmen, after being a bit suspicious, started pointing out bikes that had a lot of chrome.

It took me about 5 hours to draw the image and then mask off the white areas. It took another 15 hours to paint. When I had finished painting the motorcycle, the background was still stark white. I couldn't decide what color to put in the background. So I took a digital picture of the unfinished painting and put it into PhotoShop with the intent of testing out different background colors. But before I could do that, the American flag image just popped into my head. I wish I could say that I thought long and hard and came up with the flag idea, but it literally appeared uninvited. I found an image of the flag on the Internet and, using PhotoShop, plopped it into the background to see how it would look. I laughed out loud to acknowledge the force that sent me the idea. It was perfect! I drew in the flag, masked off the stars and had the background done in about 2 hours.

There are a couple of things that I wished I had done better/differently, but overall I like the painting a lot.