Tag Archives: representational

Sunrise over the Gulf of Mexico

Sunrise over the Gulf of Mexico
Sunrise over the Gulf of Mexico

I created this circa 2009-2011, when I was living in Corpus Christi, Texas.  It is latex and spray paint, 36″ x 24″.  I tried to give the sun some texture by dribbling paint onto it, but I did it miserably and ruined the painting in my mind.  I write it off as a lesson learned. Though it is hard to tell in this photo, the upper right corner has been damaged in storage.  It is an interesting work, nonetheless.  I was experimenting with complementary colors and a sort of impasto technique for the waves.  The thin gray line in the lower right is not part of the painting, but a screw-up in my photography, which I shall correct when I have time.  Now I must paint.

Winter Sun

Winter Sun, 2015
Winter Sun, 2015

Here is another I created on May 18, 2015.  I wanted to give the impression of a bright, dominating sun on a clear winter’s day when the cold has that snap to it.  I used the colors associated with such a day.  The paints are acrylic and latex and the canvas is 16″ x 20″.  I will be showing this in Farmington during June.

Blue Jupiter

Blue Jupiter, 2015
Blue Jupiter, 2015

In preparing for the upcoming show I found two small tabletops lying around that I had purchased months ago from Lowe’s for experiments with something other than traditional canvas. For me, the most obvious thing they could represent would be planets, particularly with NASA’s latest exploratory expeditions being so prominent in recent headlines.  After contemplating what could be done with the smallest tabletop, I thought that the wood grain could represent the bands around Jupiter.  There is also a small defect in the wood in almost the same location as the Jupiter’s famed red spot.  Therefore I decided to mask the defect with red latex.  I used a yardstick to approximate Jupiter’s band and it worked fairly well.  To bring out the red spot, I made the rest of the planet various tones of blue. I used white and shades of brown to enliven the work  “Blue Jupiter” is fifteen inches in diameter. .