Late Afternoon Camellias

"Late Afternoon Camellias" Oil on 12x12" canvas. 2016.

"Late Afternoon Camellias" Oil on 12x12" canvas. 2016.

Another plein air piece from the Norfolk Botanical Gardens in preparation for an upcoming spring show. This one was a serious challenge with the composition and the tricky lighting that was changing so rapidly as I painted, but it was well worth the effort. (Frozen solid hands and all.)

 

Mind vs. Mouth

When your brain and your mouth can't agree on what's going on.

"Mind vs Mouth" Acrylic & oil on canvas board, 2016.

"Mind vs Mouth" Acrylic & oil on canvas board, 2016.

Twenty Sixteen

I can't remember the last time I was so excited for a new year! I've got a lot in the works, and one of the projects I started nearly at the stroke of midnight on the 31st of 2015 is this:

"Wandering Meadow #1" Acrylic on 6 wood panels, 2015. SOLD

"Wandering Meadow #1" Acrylic on 6 wood panels, 2015. SOLD

"Wandering Meadow" #2 SOLD

"Wandering Meadow" #2 SOLD

"Wandering Meadow" #2 SOLD

"Wandering Meadow" #2 SOLD

"Wandering Meadow" #2 SOLD

"Wandering Meadow" #2 SOLD

If I could realize this dream in large scale it would be that of a long wall stretching out of sight with carefully arranged canvases telling the small stories that a sprawling meadow keeps to itself.

In the Ancient Maze

Needed a break from all the holiday work to create for myself. Out came this little guy. I don't know why, but recently I'm very interested in revisiting my time spent in Venice. I guess I just miss that lovely, lively water.

"In the Ancient Maze" Gouache and acrylic on 5x7" pine panel. 2015.

"In the Ancient Maze" Gouache and acrylic on 5x7" pine panel. 2015.

The Love Affair Continues

The stories this garden tells, I want to know them all. Two new plein air pieces from the past few weeks at the Norfolk Botanical Gardens.

"Sitting in the Zinnia Patch" 2015. Oil on canvas board.SOLD

"Sitting in the Zinnia Patch" 2015. Oil on canvas board.
SOLD

"Fall by the Fountain" 2015. Oil on canvas board.

"Fall by the Fountain" 2015. Oil on canvas board.

Velvet Dusk & The Glimmering Dawn

Because sometimes you just need to spend about 100 hours of salvaging, repairing, filling, sanding, staining, gilding, and painting a 1940s vintage armoire thus saving it from a life of slow decay. How does one do this? With hand painted Art Deco "wallpaper," gold, copper, and silver details, hummingbirds, flowers, and lightening bugs. 


Before


This piece was in need of some serious love. Old, peeling paint, delaminating wood, broken parts. The damage was worse than what first appeared, but structurally she was sound enough to make the effort.


After


The Outside: A Chinoiserie Wallpaper Inspired Hand Painted Mural
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Details

The mural features camellias and fuchsia flowers, hummingbirds and fireflies, all highlighted with silver leaf on the branches where the moon illuminates from above. The legs are silver in both the front and back, and 3/4 up the front legs they're stained a deep, rich brown. The top as well was stripped to the wood and stained a deep coffee color with silver leafing along the edge. The copper "tulip" drawer pulls are new-old-stock from Ajax Hardware Corp. circa the 1960s.

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The Inside: A Hand Painted Art Deco Pattern with Gold Detailing

Details

The inside is probably my favorite and most hated part of this restoration. To understand what I mean, it took about 30 hours to hand draw, paint, and gold edge each inch of this vintage Art Deco palm pattern into the inside of this. It was a hellish task, as creating most sumptuous things are, and I couldn't be happier with the result. Opening the armoire from the outside moonlit garden scene to the burst of sunshine within - worth every backbreaking effort.


Some more photos for you to check out the details. Click to enlarge.

Wonderful Nothing!

If you ever have visited my site before you'll notice there's a lack of words on this page. I've decided a clean, blank slate was what I'm in need of right now. There's too much noise on the internet, and I personally don't like the weight of all my words stored here. From now on, just art, and a few simple thoughts.