Fri 21 Sep 2007
Davenport, California
I went out today for a bit of Plein Air with artist Mike Baily. Mike picked an area call Shark Tooth Beach which was absolutely gorgeous. I need some coastal paintings and it is always nice to have a local show you great painting locations. The trouble with the California Coast is many locations are hidden from the road. Unless you know just where to stop you would never know what a great location it is.
This painting started rough but pulled together in the end. The biggest challenge in this painting was the shade area of the rock had to be just right or the painting would never work. Because there is so much reflected light in the cove I needed to find a nice warm/cool gray. Every color affects every other color around it. Towards the end of the painting the light had shifted and I couldn’t help myself and changed it quickly to this. Luckily everything was finished and it was only a matter of changing the shapes of a few things and warming up the light areas. I really am not much of a mid-day painter the lighting is never dramatic enough to inspire me. I usually prefer early morning or late afternoon but we got off to a late start.
I also got a sneak peak as Mike prepares for open studio. WOW! He has tons and tons of paintings for those of you visiting his studio. For more information visit his blog.
| 2007 24×36 Shark Tooth Beach |
This painting started rough but pulled together in the end. The biggest challenge in this painting was the shade area of the rock had to be just right or the painting would never work. Because there is so much reflected light in the cove I needed to find a nice warm/cool gray. Every color affects every other color around it. Towards the end of the painting the light had shifted and I couldn’t help myself and changed it quickly to this. Luckily everything was finished and it was only a matter of changing the shapes of a few things and warming up the light areas. I really am not much of a mid-day painter the lighting is never dramatic enough to inspire me. I usually prefer early morning or late afternoon but we got off to a late start.
I also got a sneak peak as Mike prepares for open studio. WOW! He has tons and tons of paintings for those of you visiting his studio. For more information visit his blog.
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September 21st, 2007 at 11:44 am
Just as I thought. IT’S A BEAUT!!
I am amazed by all the changes this painting passed through to get to this point.
September 22nd, 2007 at 10:38 am
Thanks Mike!
It was such difficult piece to get started because of all the reflected light.
I am just happy that it went so smoothly once I found the right grays in the shadow area.
September 22nd, 2007 at 11:35 am
It’s just astonishing the way those vivid colors read as light and shadow and even capture the bit of mist that is always in the air near the ocean. I love reading about your process and struggles and falling into the traps of chasing the light in a painting. It’s so reassuring to know that even masterful painters like you are still dealing with those things.
September 22nd, 2007 at 11:49 am
Jana,
Thank you for your comments!
Plein air painting is problem solving. You are constantly falling into traps and paintings your way out. Nature shifts and moves and if you go back the next day nature has changed. That is the challenge, the inspiration.
But to me it so much of the process. If the light is better then when I started, then why not change it? To me painting is always about capturing moments and moods.
September 23rd, 2007 at 8:33 pm
Great color harmonys! This is a painting I can just keep coming back to over and over!
September 25th, 2007 at 6:38 pm
Robin,
Thank you for the nice comments…feel free to come back often and look at it.
September 25th, 2007 at 9:01 pm
Elio, wow… I am a fan of everything you have up here… you’ve got some great chops!! I love your bold colour sense and the way you push it.. really ads great depth IMO. Are you using gouache or oils on these pieces??
Mike
September 26th, 2007 at 1:11 am
Mike,
Thank you for visiting and nice comments.
Everything you see is in oil and completed in one sitting wet into wet.