Showing posts with label lemon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lemon. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

"Yellow Still Life" (oil on stretched canvas; 12" x 9")


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Danni Dawson, my teacher, assigned her portrait painting class a color study of yellow on yellow.  I put together a yellow ensemble of a lemon, banana, clementine, and cherry tomatoes with a Wedgwood oil cruet on an orange cloth.  Perhaps I learned my lesson with the red color study about the value differentiation; this one went much easier.  I was pleasantly surprised to see the painting pulsate with warmth and cheer.  No wonder I like the yellow color!

Sunday, February 3, 2013

"Lemon Tart Love" (oil on linen; 4" x 5") sold


sold


Some people don't like the orange color.  To me, it's like a burst of sunshine.  Put a mini lemon tart on a yellow orange fabric.  Look at the blue purple shadow.  I am about to swoon!

In case you missed my blog yesterday, I am going to repeat my goal for February.  It is to paint 20 small pastry paintings, five a week.  At the end of the month, I want to create another collage like the one I did for the January paintings.  So please follow my blog to see if I live up to my promise.  Hopefully my blog will hit 40,000 pageviews by the end of the month so that I can give away one of my delicious food paintings.

In order to be eligible for my painting giveaways, you have to follow my blog.  Thanks!

Saturday, May 12, 2012

"Still Life with Yellow Sand Pail" (oil on canvas; 14" x 18") sold


sold

Still life setup

Last Thursday evening, my still-life teacher, John Murray, decided to make us do a one-color exercise, the color of choice being yellow.  Since it is one of my favorite colors, I was initially happy with the day's challenge.  Unfortunately, I soon felt my enthusiasm dissipate, as I couldn't figure out what colors were the shadow side of the yellow bucket (I loved it though!), lemons, golden delicious apple, or bananas.

If you can name a color, you can mix it.  If it simply looks like a dull, darker version of the color in the light, you are in trouble.  Oy!  John eventually came around to the rescue.  He helped me with the bucket, which was giving me the most trouble.  The class turned out to be an exercise in humility.  I was perhaps becoming too confident as I breezed through the two previous classes.  John's mantra is: "paint as if you have never painted before."  Yes, sir!  I will do that from now on.

Friday, April 27, 2012

"Golden Delicious and Lemon" (oil on stretched linen; 14" x 18")



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Last night, I went to John Murray's still life class, feeling refreshed and ready to paint.  But I didn't like the setup John was arranging for my corner of the studio.  Red apples on yucky green fabrics--not my cup of tea.  I looked back to see the above setup, of which I forgot to take a picture.  Wow!  I persuaded two classmates to move a bit to make space for me.  John told us to wait for the night's lesson.  I couldn't.  I started painting right away.

By the time the teacher gave us the instructions (mass the apples in one color, then separate them into individual fruits), I was done blocking in my golden delicious.  John shook his head, saying something about "nobody listens to me."  Oops.  I was unstoppable, putting down one color after another, without hesitation.  He came around occasionally to help me modify small aspects of the setup to help the design.  Other than that, he loved the painting; so did I.  I was channeling Paul Cezanne, John's hero, for the first time in his class.  I was fearless.  The painting is not quite in my style, but who cares!

Friday, February 3, 2012

"Three Oranges and White Tureen" (oil on linen; 11" x 14") sold


"Three Oranges and White Tureen"
sold

"Yellow and Violet Still Life" (oil, 11" x 14")
sold

"Two Red Peppers" (oil, 11" x 14")
sold

"Red and Green Apples" (oil, 11" x 14")
sold

I am beginning to see the pattern in the still life setups by my teacher John Murray--the harmony created by complementary colors.  In the first class he gave us red and green apples with neutral draperies.  In the second week, he challenged us with the intensity of red bell peppers against two different shades of green cloths.  The third week's setup was all about the yellow/violet vibrations.  This week he not only baffled us with the orange/blue juxtaposition but also with the octagonal planes of the white tureen! 

His choice of draperies is deliberate.  They may someday come with stripes and all sorts of patterns and textures.  The white bowls, which are clearly included for their reflective qualities, are becoming more complex in their shapes; one even flaunts floral patterns. In the midst of the ever-mounting challenges of painting fruits, vegetables, and fabrics, we are also constantly reminded of the crucial importance of composition and paint application. 

We struggle valiantly to mix the right reds, blues, greens, oranges, violets, and yellows we see in the setups, and often end up with disgusting colors.  The prominent colors in "Three Oranges and White Tureen" are blues and oranges.  For whatever reason, my original color notes were oranges and violets.  John's comment was that I have the violet tendency!  I had to work hard to depurplize the violets and steer them toward blues.  We can, of course, ignore what we see and paint the way we like, as one student was doing with the extremely limited palette of only three colors, plus white.  Or, we can try to mix colors correctly.  Argh.  The vexing still lifes!