New Works Posted

Now that the Art Crawlers have had a chance to see my new works, I want to share them with a wider audience. You’ll find new landscapes in oil, new ‘kids on the beach’ in pastel, and a few oil paintings in a new figure series I’ve just begun. Have a look in the WORKS pages to see what catches your eye.

I met this model when she was working as a hostess in a local restaurant. Inspired by her elegance and presence, I hired her for a photo shoot. The resulting images were stunning, and continue to motivate me to capture her diverse expressions and moods in paint. Hope you enjoy these first few—expect to see more over the coming months!

Glowing Light (Tashina #2) Oil on canvas 24 x 20 framed $800

Glowing Light (Tashina #2) Oil on canvas 24 x 20 framed $800


It's Art Crawl Time Again!

It’s my favourite time of the year—gorgeous fall colours, the last of the summer’s warmth—and a chance to connect with hundreds of art lovers! Yes, the Art Crawl weekend is fast approaching. My studio (along with 164 OTHER artists’ studios from Langdale to Earls Cove) will be open

10 am-5 pm

Friday, Saturday and Sunday (Oct 19-21)

Hope you’ll drop by my studio at 5472 Hydaway Place, Halfmoon Bay, BC. Watch for the colourful polka-dots on the Art Crawl signs to make your way to my door. Pick up an Art Crawl map at any location (or on the ferry) to plan your travels.

I am especially excited this year, because I have been working really hard over the past months to advance my oil painting skills. I’ve always loved the look of oils, but my passion for pastels (and acrylics) kept me from experimenting much with them. No longer! I have 26 new oil paintings to show this weekend, including landscapes and a handful of figure paintings that are, I believe, some of my very best work to date. Come by and see!

I also have a new collection of ‘kids on the beach’ in pastel—these images are always popular, and I’ve got some very sweet ones this year.

Enjoy the Crawl!

Stalking Sorolla pastel 12 x 12 $250 framed

Stalking Sorolla pastel 12 x 12 $250 framed

Acceptance into Annual International Representational Exhibition (AIRE)

I was thrilled yesterday to receive acceptance of two of my submissions into this year’s AIRE exhibit at the Federation of Canadian Artists (FCA). This show is one of the most competitive of the year, and it is an honour to have two works included.

This one, Twilight at the Flying U, was inspired by a very fuzzy and poorly lit photo I snapped on my phone during an early evening horse-drawn wagon ride at the Flying U horse ranch (www.flyingu.com) in the Cariboo region of BC. I was attending a 5-day plein air retreat sponsored by the FCA and enjoying every minute of my experience, but this wagon ride was truly a highlight. After the sun set behind the rolling hills, the moon appeared, and the sky turned a brilliant sapphire blue. In the distance, one of the horse ponds glimmered silver. Magical light! This piece will be in the AIRE physical show at the Federation Gallery (Granville Island, Vancouver, BC) from Oct 9-28. UPDATE: This piece sold to a collector in Poland!

Twilight at the Flying U 16 x 20 oil on deep canvas framed $600

Twilight at the Flying U 16 x 20 oil on deep canvas framed $600

The piece also represents a couple of recent experiments. I’ve been working almost exclusively in oils lately, determined to build up my skills to my desired level. At the end of the painting day, there are inevitably a few blobs of paint left on my glass palette beside the easel, along with some leftover Liquin medium (which thins the paint a little and also helps it dry more quickly). Rather than discard these, I’ve been mixing them into a pile of dark and a pile of light value ‘neutral’ colours and then using a wide metal putty knife to scoop, scrape, and spread these two values into abstract shapes on a clean canvas. The use of the putty knife—a new technique for me— ensures that I make only broad shapes rather than details or recognizable objects.

The next morning, this underpainting is dry enough to begin a second coat of paint, and the value study is a ‘kickstart’ to a new composition. In this case, the dark warm value (mostly umber) was easily shaped into the dim fields of the pasture, and the lighter cool value (mostly indigo) morphed into the glowing sky. With very few details, the mood and landforms appeared. The final touch was the luminous moon, created with a judicious thumbprint of pale yellow paint. I was pleased with the result, as I feel it has captured my experience of the moment. It just goes to show—even a poor photo can inspire a successful piece!

The second accepted piece, Solstice Shine, below, is another unexpected success story. I originally painted this piece about three years ago, based on some photos taken during a Boxing Day hike through a local forest. It turned out ‘okay’—you know how that happens, a piece will be acceptable but somehow be lacking the ‘magic’ we’re always chasing. I stashed it away in my storage rack and essentially forgot about it. Then a few weeks ago I happened upon it while looking for something else, and pulled it out again. I still liked the composition and the subject matter; I was happy with the rendering of the objects in the scene. What, then, was missing? It seemed to me that it was a problem both with values (too many middle tones) and temperature (somehow too warm for the season I was portraying). I decided to sleep on the problem, as I often do. My sleeping brain works away and I often wake up with a solution—and I did this time, too!


Solstice Shine, 24 x 24, oil on panel, framed $1200

Solstice Shine, 24 x 24, oil on panel, framed $1200

The answer came in a vision of the scene cloaked in snow. I live on the very temperate Sunshine Coast, and even on Boxing Day (Dec 26th) there was no snow to be found in the actual scene. However, adding snow would solve both of the perceived problems—it would add lighter values and a cooler hue. Sure enough, as soon as I spread the blue hue over the snow-in-shadow area, the painting improved. And when I judiciously added both bright white and warm white highlights on branches and across a selected area of the path—well, the painting suddenly came alive! There was that missing magic! The lesson: don’t give up on the ‘almost-made-it’ ones—but don’t frame them until you’ve fixed the problems, either! This piece was accepted for the extended online AIRE show, and will be seen on the FCA website during the AIRE exhibition.

Acceptance into this show completes the required seven acceptances for me to apply for the next level of membership in the FCA (Associate Member), which I plan to do in 2019. Wish me luck!

Art of Healing Event tickets now available!

I wanted to briefly remind you that tickets went on sale today for the October 20th Art of Healing event in benefit of the Sechelt Hospital Foundation.  As both a participating artist, and a Foundation Director, I am very excited about this event, the first of its kind on the coast.

If you've missed the articles and ads, here's the overview: 36 well-known coast artists have donated works valued from $500 to $5000, and your $500 Collector ticket entitles you to select one of these works in an exciting lottery at the gala event (one ticket per household; admits two).  $50 Supporter tickets enable you to attend the event and bid on seven really exciting experience packages including a trip to Haida Gwai, local art classes, an insiders' guide through New York's design district, and many more. It's shaping up to be THE art event on the coast this year--don't miss it! 

Can't make the event?  $20 raffle tickets for a trip for two to Paris are also available!  With only 1,000 being sold, the odds are very good!

There are only 26 Collector tickets (of 36) left, and 72 Supporter tickets (of 100) after less than one day of sales--so don't delay!  Click here https://www.sechelthospitalfoundation.org/art-of-healing-exhibit-event/ to buy your tickets--at whatever level interest you!

The piece I donated is shown in the previous post, below.  See them all at https://www.sechelthospitalfoundation.org/art-of-healing-exhibit-event/ (scroll down to the image gallery). Which one will you choose when your number is drawn?

I hope you'll join me in supporting high-quality health care on the coast, where the best medicine (and art) is local!

 

Art of Healing submission

I am privileged to be a Director on the Board of the Sechelt Hospital Foundation, and in that role I am currently chairing the Art of Healing event committee. This event will take place on Saturday October 20th at the Sunshine Coast Golf and Country Club and the proceeds will support health care for all on the Sunshine Coast.

The gala event will include

  • a 'fixed-price lottery' of 36 works of fine art by well-known coast artists;
  • a live auction of a number of high-quality experiential packages (trips to Haida Gwai, Puerta Vallarta and New York included);
  • a raffle for an expenses-paid trip to Paris for two!

Purchasers of the 'collector' tickets ($500) will have the opportunity to select a work from the 36 on offer.  Here's my submission, a 20 x 30 framed oil.

Interested? Watch this space and your local paper for more details on when and how to buy YOUR ticket to what is shaping up to be the premier art-related event on the Coast this year!

For Rest and Repose; oil, 20 x 30, framed

For Rest and Repose; oil, 20 x 30, framed