- ‘Wisdom of winter’
- ‘Cathedral Rock’
- ‘America the Beautiful’
There’s more to it than putting pigment on paper. One of the things I have learned is that, not only do we paint best what we know best, but also, we paint best what we truly love! Somehow that love goes into the painting and other people pick up on it. Every scene ‘feels’ different. Early morning, midday, twilight…winter, summer, spring and fall. It is important to convey the feeling of the subject, I think. If I hear that one of my paintings made somebody feel as though they were there, I know I have succeeded!
Light and color have a lot to do with it. They set the mood in a painting. It is one thing to copy nature but quite another to express her in a painting! We must never loose the big message to all the little unimportant detail. For instance, we need to consider the sweeping energy that a tree has, not so much how many leaves there are.
When working from a photograph, I think it’s important to do a drawing of the scene first. By interpreting the scene in your own way, you’ll paint a better picture than you would by slavishly copying everything on the photograph!
I really like that scene you titled “America the Beautiful”. That strong diagonal running through the piece pushing the waterfall into the light and the mistiness makes this appear so strong. Truly beautiful.
thanks so much, my friend! What a nice thing to say! Almost a triangle in that piece..