Saturday, April 25, 2009

The Veteran's Wall


The Viet Nam veteran's wall has come to Wickham Park, Melbourne, Florida again this year. This is a yearly event which now fittingly salutes all veterans of any conflict. Whatever a person may feel about the inevitability of war or the propensity of humans for war - these are my comrades; my brothers and sisters - heres to you.
This is an unfinished work at this point, I just wanted to display it as a sort of tribute. A tribute to the families of solders at home always wondering if their loved ones are safe - that they are coming home. Oil/canvas 30" (76. cm) x 72" (183 cm)

Thursday, April 16, 2009

And Now For Something Entirely Different...


Well - this is a stretch... I think that taking chances and responding to opportunities are good for me. I do that enough. There has been a call for entries locally by the Brevard Museum the exhibit is titled "Take Out" - the point is that I, as the artist must use a 'take out' container in the piece. Fine; so here it is - a framed canvas with the take-out container and a wire person emerging from it. The working title is: 'To Wong Foo, Thanks For Everything!'. Wish me luck on this one.
The dates of this show are: Dates: 5/9/2009 to 7/5/2009.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Former President



I warned you - I seem to be drawn to painting in series. The thing is - portraiture is really difficult and time consuming! I mean really. I must have redone these two paintings 10 or twelve times. For me if I'm going to do a portrait of a recognizable person, it really better look like them. With the choice of the President's Lincoln and Obama there are two distinct problems beyond the obvious. With President Lincoln I could not find a photo other than black & white - reasonable since the color photo had not been perfected. In the case of President Obama I had no lack of reference photos - that was a problem for me. I haven't had the pleasure of seeing the man, much less meeting him - so what happened when I went through photos of Barak was the vast differences in facial color they represented. Astounding. Lots of color, best guess.

Mr. President



OK, I declare this painting finished. The biggest change in in the background - I just didn't like the previous version - looked to me to be just too contrite. Really in competition with the face, not what I wanted. I like a 'static' background, something that is just there and not something that challenges the viewer or distracts. I wanted color and I used it.