6 x 8 inches, oil on panel
Today Nowell and I went to the Embarcadero waterfront area downtown here in San Francisco. Nowell experimented with his new HD video camera while I did this painting of the Ferry Building. It was very cold and as the sun sank lower the wind picked up, so by the time we packed up our equipment we were shrieking with the cold and forcing our numb fingers to work faster.
We dropped everything off in the car (where I balanced the wet painting on the dashboard) and managed to recover from the cold at the bar of the nearby Slanted Door restaurant with a snack of sherry and oysters.
Overall, a pretty satisfying day.
For a decade I recorded every aspect of my artistic development, almost every day. This original version of the blog records the first 4 years that I was introduced to Classical Realism. I consider these to be the most formative years of my art career.
Thursday, November 30, 2006
Wednesday, November 29, 2006
Monday, November 27, 2006
Alley in Tuscany SOLD
It's nice to be painting again after a few days off! From now on I'll be doing a painting a day on weekdays.
This is one of the dozens of picturesque alleyways we admired while travelling in Italy earlier this year.
Tuesday, November 14, 2006
Day 30 - Pears in Wax Paper SOLD
Monday, November 13, 2006
Day 29 - Mermaid SOLD
I bought this little ceramic figurine on eBay a couple years ago.
(eBay link will not work until 6:30 pm PST)
(eBay link will not work until 6:30 pm PST)
Sunday, November 12, 2006
Day 28 - Croissant
Future Plans and Pricing
My first 30 days is almost over!
After Day 30, this Tuesday, I am going to take a break from painting while we travel for Thanksgiving. I'll be back posting daily paintings starting on Monday November 27th. From then on I'll be posting daily paintings Monday through Friday only.
Several of you have expressed interest in the "in-progress" shots, and I thought it might be interesting to show the steps of a longer painting. So in addition to the small daily paintings, I also hope to do some larger paintings and post photos of their progress each day.
Finally, pricing: After these first 30 days are over I'll be starting my daily auctions at $100, with a "Buy it Now" price of $120. I've been thrilled to sell so many of this first batch of work, thanks to everyone who has supported this project! There's a list of all the paintings in the right column, the ones still for sale are marked with the price or the link to their active eBay ad.
Thanks again for all the support! This project has been more challenging and more rewarding than I ever imagined, and all your comments and emails have really kept me going.
Ok, gotta go figure out what to paint today.....
-Sadie
After Day 30, this Tuesday, I am going to take a break from painting while we travel for Thanksgiving. I'll be back posting daily paintings starting on Monday November 27th. From then on I'll be posting daily paintings Monday through Friday only.
Several of you have expressed interest in the "in-progress" shots, and I thought it might be interesting to show the steps of a longer painting. So in addition to the small daily paintings, I also hope to do some larger paintings and post photos of their progress each day.
Finally, pricing: After these first 30 days are over I'll be starting my daily auctions at $100, with a "Buy it Now" price of $120. I've been thrilled to sell so many of this first batch of work, thanks to everyone who has supported this project! There's a list of all the paintings in the right column, the ones still for sale are marked with the price or the link to their active eBay ad.
Thanks again for all the support! This project has been more challenging and more rewarding than I ever imagined, and all your comments and emails have really kept me going.
Ok, gotta go figure out what to paint today.....
-Sadie
Friday, November 10, 2006
Thursday, November 09, 2006
Wednesday, November 08, 2006
Day 24 - Figs on Black SOLD
Tuesday, November 07, 2006
Day 23 - Antique Bottle SOLD
5 x 7 inches, oil on panel
This little medicine bottle has raised letters on it, making it a pretty daunting little object to paint. Today I finally felt brave enough to tackle it.
My "soft edge" experiment is really helping me; until recently I felt I had to paint a sharp edge where I saw one. The softer feel more accurately describes the light I think.
Ok, gotta run, I have a lunch date with my husband - to VOTE!
My "soft edge" experiment is really helping me; until recently I felt I had to paint a sharp edge where I saw one. The softer feel more accurately describes the light I think.
Ok, gotta run, I have a lunch date with my husband - to VOTE!
Monday, November 06, 2006
Day 22 - Garlic SOLD
8 x 8, oil on panel
This may look like a black and white painting, but in fact I use no black paint at all. And the light areas are made up of many colors to make cool and warm whites. There really aren't any "pure" whites at all.
This closeup shows more of the color:
To make this painting I used a palette of no more and no less than:
- ultramarine blue
- raw umber
- cadmium yellow medium
- permanent violet medium
- titanium white
These are the colors I use to make most my paintings. Sometimes I also use cadmium red and cerulean blue, but not today.
I have been reading a painting instruction book by David A Leffel, who does beautifully dark and mysterious still lifes. I decided to try today to approximate some of his ideas in a 1-day sketch. I'm interested in how he paints edges, and I tried to focus on leaving some edges soft and making some hard, so the objects really seem to emerge out of the darkness.
I am excited by this experiment and am looking forward to trying a multi-day painting like this. It will be much easier to build up the full tonal range after some layers of the paint have dried; in these one-day paintings I am always working wet on wet.
This may look like a black and white painting, but in fact I use no black paint at all. And the light areas are made up of many colors to make cool and warm whites. There really aren't any "pure" whites at all.
This closeup shows more of the color:
To make this painting I used a palette of no more and no less than:
- ultramarine blue
- raw umber
- cadmium yellow medium
- permanent violet medium
- titanium white
These are the colors I use to make most my paintings. Sometimes I also use cadmium red and cerulean blue, but not today.
I have been reading a painting instruction book by David A Leffel, who does beautifully dark and mysterious still lifes. I decided to try today to approximate some of his ideas in a 1-day sketch. I'm interested in how he paints edges, and I tried to focus on leaving some edges soft and making some hard, so the objects really seem to emerge out of the darkness.
I am excited by this experiment and am looking forward to trying a multi-day painting like this. It will be much easier to build up the full tonal range after some layers of the paint have dried; in these one-day paintings I am always working wet on wet.
Sunday, November 05, 2006
Day 21 - Ladies' Vanity Table
$65 - Click title to buy
8 x 8 inches, oil on panel
I worked all afernoon on a painting of this still-life, and hated it. So I started over and did this one which I am much happier with. Lucky for Nowell.... living with me after a bad painting day is not fun.
I bought this ladies' compact on eBay, it's really beautiful and I hope to paint it in more detail soon.
8 x 8 inches, oil on panel
I worked all afernoon on a painting of this still-life, and hated it. So I started over and did this one which I am much happier with. Lucky for Nowell.... living with me after a bad painting day is not fun.
I bought this ladies' compact on eBay, it's really beautiful and I hope to paint it in more detail soon.
Saturday, November 04, 2006
Day 20 - Figs on Gold SOLD
Last night our friends came up for a visit to the Big City from where they live down on the Peninsula. Before our dinner reservations we hung out at our house and I introduced them to the wonderful combination of sliced figs on basil leaves with goat cheese.... mmmm!!!
Thanks everyone for all your continued support! I'm 2/3rds through my "30 days" project and trying to decide what my next steps will be.
I bought a few trinkets on eBay recently, maybe they will appear in my paintings soon. I'm amused at the idea of painting eBay items and then selling the paintings back on eBay - sort of a full circle experiment.
Friday, November 03, 2006
Thursday, November 02, 2006
Wednesday, November 01, 2006
Tuesday, October 31, 2006
Day 16 - Golden Hummingbird SOLD
Monday, October 30, 2006
Day 15 - Gardenia in a Box SOLD
Day 15 - Halfway through my 30 days!
I worked on this painting longer than most and it was nice not to have to rush, although I still ran out of light near the end. "Daylight savings" has robbed me of another hour of afternoon light.
The background is built up with alternating layers of gold leaf and tissue paper and brown stain. The tissue paper soaks up the glue and becomes nicely transparent.
Two seashells and a quartz sphere sit on top of the box, I like the contrast of the perfectly machined sphere next to the wobbly spirals of the shells. I think the skull looks less menacing in this context - more like part of a naturalist's little collection. I think of this as my tiny "cabinet of curiosities".
Gardenia petals are quite thick, evident from the fat curls at the edges. I'd love to do a more detailed study of this flower, it was so enjoyable to paint. And for once my studio smells better than the usual turpentine and rubber cement fumes.
Edited to Add: Blogger was being cranky about uploading images yesterday but it's faster today, so here are the process shots:
Sunday, October 29, 2006
Day 14 - Dahlia and Seashell - SOLD
Today was lovely - I went to brunch in the Castro with my friend Lisa, and after stuffing ourselves on gourmet San Francisco versions of sausage 'n' biscuits and corned beef hash, we walked off our meal by wandering the neighborhood. I bought a bunch of fun little things for potential use for still lifes, including this dahlia.
I'm excited about the idea of arranging my miniature still lifes in a little box like this, I might do it as a series.
I'm excited about the idea of arranging my miniature still lifes in a little box like this, I might do it as a series.
Saturday, October 28, 2006
Day 13 - Pop Pops SOLD
Friday, October 27, 2006
Day 12 - Rodent Skull on Gold - SOLD
10 x 10 inch oil on golden leafed panel
This is a small rodent skull I found with my friend Jaimee while walking on the beach at Point No Point near Seattle.
It's probably not possible to paint the lovely forms of an intricate skull without the inevitable associations of death. The narrow arch of the bone around the far eye socket is the whole reason I wanted to paint this object. But it can't seem to escape it's morbid associations.
Oh well, call it my Halloween contribution.
Thursday, October 26, 2006
Day 11 - Heirloom Tomatoes SOLD
9 x 12 inches, oil on panel
Today was the first day I thought I might not complete a painting. I started one, but at 4:30pm it wasn't working, so I scrapped it. Then I started this one. I had to work fast because I can only paint by daylight, but I finished by 6:30pm, while there was still a pale glow. Someone asked me today and I didn't know - when is daylight savings time?
Some process shots:
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