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Archive for May, 2012

These elegant lilies were a paint-along that I did with one of my students a few weeks ago.  I finally completed mine last night.    Lilies, oil on canvas, 24″x12″, available by contacting kwalker@kellywalkerstudios.com .

Day Lilies always make me think of my mom.  They were her favorites and they are Allen’s favorites so I have painted a few over the years.  I love the way they look when they sprout up naturally out in the county by the road.  Mama had them all around the house where we grew up.  And now when I see them they always make me smile.  I miss my mom.

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While in Newport last week I took loads of great photos for my reference file.  This was one of  my favorites.  I couldn’t wait to paint it.

Here is the start of the painting.

 

 

I love the way this building looks with all the blooming trees around it.  Still planning to touch up a few more things on it and then it’s done.  I really like this one.

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Monet, Grainstack (Snow Effect), 1891, oil on canvas

Renoir 1841-1919, Girls Picking Flowers in a Meadow, oil on canvas

Renoir, Grand Canal Venice, 1881, oil on canvas

Monet, Grand Canal, Venice,1908, oil on canvas

Monet, Ships in a Harbor, about 1873, oil on canvas

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Claude Monet’s Field of Poppies near Giverny, 1890, oil on canvas.

 Of course, one of the favorite galleries I visited at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston recently was the Impressionist and Post-Impressionist.  In 1874 a group of young  painters including Monet, Renoir, Degas, Cezanne, and Pissarro, organized in Paris an exhibit to demonstrate their independence from traditional  painting.  They were criticized because much of what was on display was unfinished canvases based on “hasty impressions of nature” and the group was dubbed Impressionists.

Pierre-Auguste Renoir, The Seine at Chatou, 1881, oil on canvas

This Renoir is a great example of this period.  This radiant landscape on the Seine just west of Paris shows distinct feathery brushstrokes from long to short, thick to thin.  Renoir wrote to a friend at the time of the painting, “I’m struggling with trees in flower, with women and children, and I don’t want to look at anything else.”

This is what happens when painters begin to work outside in “plein-aire”.  You begin to see everything differently and can’t wait to get out there and try to capture it on canvas.   

Monet’s Poplars at Giverny, 1887, oil on canvas.

Renoir, Rocky Crags at L’Estaque, 1882, oil on canvas

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Many artists want to try painting out-of-doors in the grand tradition of the impressionist painters Monet, Degas, Van Gogh and others but few give it a try.  And those who do are often overwhelmed by the enormity of their surroundings. 

On Saturday, May 12 at 9 a.m. join us for a Plein Air Painting Workshop that will give you all the tips and guidance you need to begin painting out-of-doors.  Email kwalker@doubledogdesigns.com to register for this informative workshop no later than Thursday, May 10th.  And click here for more information.

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There were so many interesting exhibits at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston last week.  One was called Paper Zoo.  It was a variety of prints, drawings, and photographs of animals dating from about 1500 to the present. It featured about 35 pieces by Rembrandt, Audubon, Picasso, and more. 

Porcupine, Leonard Baskin (American, 1922-2000), 1951, woodcut.

Toad, Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881-1973), 1949, Lithograph on Zinc Plate. 

 American Flamingo, Robert Harell, Jr. (English) based on a water-color by James Audubon, 19th century, Etching and aquatint, handcolored.

Top, Prowling Cat, Theophile-Alexandre Steinlen (French 1859-1923), Pastel and black chalk.

Bottom, Cats, Gerhard Marcks (German 1897-1969), 1921, woodcut.

 It was very interesting to see so many different artists take on the same animal.  And there were many children looking at this particular exhibit.  I could see why it was so popular. 

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While in Boston last week at the Museum of Fine Arts I got to see several terrific exhibits.  One of the most fascinating ones was called “Art in Bloom”.  All throughout the museum there were about 75 floral arrangements that had been provided by international and regional designers who had been invited to interpret specific works of art.  It was interesting seeing them setting in front of beautiful paintings and sculptures.

There were small ones.

 

 

 

 

 

And some really huge ones.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And I kept running across groups from the Garden Clubs who had designers who had been invited to participate and they were sharing information with their members about the floral works of art.  It was fun to watch and hear.

There is always something interesting going on at museums.  So lucky that I was there on one of the two days that the arrangements were on display.

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Emma

Maggie

Olivia

 

 

Here are Emma, Maggie and Olivia with their “Main Street” pop-up paintings.

They did a splendid job with these unusual mixed media paintings.  Great work girls!!!

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The least fun part of a great vacation is the trip home.  Yesterday I had several hours to wait at the airport.  Luckily I had packed my travel watercolor kit so while I waited at the cafe with my tea I worked on a little sketch of a photo I took in Newport of the “Trees by the Chinese Pavillion”.

This is the photo I used for the sketch.  The challenge was looking at the little screen on my phone, which was where I had the photo.  And of course, the phone screen kept timing out so I had to continually press the button to refresh.  Ugh!

But I kinda like the end result.  It was fun and kept me occupied for a couple of hours so the time at the airport went by pretty quickly.

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Art.in Many Forms

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We visited the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston
yesterday.  The building itself is art.  She built it to house her amazing collection of art – sculptures, tapestries, paintings, books.  So much to see.  But this center garden was my favorite.

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As we were leaving the museum we saw these dancers posing for photos.  Never did find out exactly why but the poses and lines were lovely so I had to take a few photos to try to paint.

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You never know what you might run across that may make a lovely painting!

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