Campobello Painting

August 7th, 2013

Plein air set up
Set up on the rocks

Took a plein air workshop on Campobello last week with artist Michael Chesley Johnson. Some days were sunny, this one wasn’t—I love the foggy days! I anchored my easel into crevices in the rocks and had a wonderful time. When one scene misted away I started a close up of a rock that was in view. Took photos of the first as reference to finish back in my studio.

Plein Air in the mist
(taken by Cheryl Sirois.)

This week was my first real stint oil painting outside—I learned so much! I will use this both for creating finished paintings and also as the ultimate sketching to inform other work.

Summer Lilly

July 18th, 2013

Sometimes we just need to take a break and look at something wonderful! I posted this on FaceBook today!

day lilly
SUMMER: heat brings beauty

Mom and Painting

June 28th, 2013

I knew when my mom was a young mother with three young children living in North Windham CT, she took classes—I think at the local high school—learning to paint on tin ware as well as tinsel paintings—two crafts popular in the late 40’s. (I remember my Dad watching us children while she was in class, having us play endless games such as “Who can keep quiet the longest” and “52 Pickup”.) Years later, in the 1990’s she studied portrait painting, continuing until her death last year.

Ruth Shew Reinhardt with Beth, Curt and Senter.
Young mom

I’d forgotten about the earlier classes until going through her things, I came across her earlier paints and studies she had kept stored away all these years. Her later paints were stored in a typical art bin and jars and boxes of brushes stood on her table beside her easel, but this early paint box had been made by my Dad. It was outfitted with pockets to hold her tubes of oils and had a compartment for brushes.

painting samples. Paint Box
Samples and Paint Box

She worked from patterns, painting samples on black board in preparation for the real thing. (I don’t know what happened to the trays but I think Kristina has a tinsel painting.) In reading her notes I realized this was when she learned to mix colors using oils. I think of that as I struggle getting a desired blue or green—knowing color theory is NOT the same as mixing color with paints!

Studies
Learning to mix color and paint

She gave her later paints and brushes to my sister hoping she finds time and peace to continue her own art work. (I helped Mom go through her things, getting rid of this, giving that to someone special and the only time she had a hard time was giving up her brushes. It was only a moment but a very hard one.)

The early paint box is on a high shelf in my studio and the samples in a folder. I also found her early painting shirt which she had made and I gave it to Kristina.

Lazy Sunday Morning

June 23rd, 2013

Lazy summer Sunday mornings.
Coffee and the papers on the front porch.
Little time spent sketching.
Recharging for the week ahead.

Flowers by the porch. Sketches of planters.
Flowers real and sketched

Old Tennessee Barn

June 23rd, 2013

All the things I saw along the parkways will take a little time to settle in my head. In the mean time I’ve started a study painting of the old barn at Senter and Bit’s in TN. There is a new barn with wonderful horse stalls and tack rooms but this old barn with it’s years of use and the side shed so typical of barns in that part of TN…

Old Tennessee Barn
First stages of painting
More paintings.

Trip south part one

May 29th, 2013

Road trip, spring 2013 was great. Our main destination was my brother’s new home in TN but we took some extra time to drive through the mountains and add to our portfolios on the way. We had never been in that part of the country. This was a terrific time to go—the mountains were still turning to spring and the base was summer, next stage up was all spring greens, further up was pastels of flowering trees and spring buds and the top was bare trees—we drove in and out of spring for days.

Blue Ridge Parkway
You can see spring creeping up the mountain!

We stayed in B&B’s (not a doily in sight, thank you) and Inns where we met very interesting people. The first was the Dutch Haus in Montebello, VA. Two Appalachian Trail hikers were also staying there, a man who was doing the whole trail in one shot and the other, a woman who was doing a part each year. We ate dinner there (family style) as it is up and up and up the mountain and far from anything—good food and great conversation.
The next night was spent in Boone NC as I wanted to go to Cheap Joe’s. We stayed at the Lovill House Inn (great southern hospitality), and had dinner at Char. Being a University town (Appalachian State University) and County seat, Boone and neighboring, Blowing Rock have lots of restaurants and shops. It is still high in the mountains and has great mountain air.
The last evening before hitting TN we stayed at the Hemlock Inn in a room with a private deck looking over the forest. Again up and up and up so meals come with the room, All meals were served family style so once again we met interesting people. (My reading of the area since has shown this family style eating was historically typical of remote mountain lodging.) The talk at breakfast was of the black bear who got into the trash the night before. From all our hiking etc, we slept through this adventure!
Then over the Smokies to TN. A tail for another post.

ps: Don’t expect much cell or internet service in the mountains—in fact on the parkways—NONE!