16 January 2010 - I didn't want to miss this beautiful light I saw from my kitchen window last winter. Grabbed my trusty digital camera and shot the photo right through the window. The 48"x36" canvas is gesso toned with Payne's Grey. The "cartoon" of the painting is Prussian Blue. I ran the photo through my large Epson printer to get a 16"x20" print of the photo as a point of reference. Yesterday I placed a grid on the photo (not the canvas) to guide me in proportions. This is one of the five large canvases I want to complete this year. I will begin to lay in the underpainting this afternoon. DC, Taos, N.M.
MY PROCESS--DOCUMENTING "WORKS IN PROGRESS"- NEW PAINTINGS AND PRINTS. -- INCLUDES PALETTE AND COLOR NOTES.
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Thursday, January 14, 2010
"CALYPSO" - Work in Progress - Underpainting
A perfect day today -- kind of cloudy, waiting for snow. Here is the underpainting - am working mostly with pure colors - ochres, cadmium reds, cobalt blue, chrome oxide green opaque, cadmium yellow. Background is a combination of Payne's Grey, a little ochre and MG Fast Drying Underpainting white. Will let this canvas dry for about a week while I block in new canvases.
"CALYPSO" - Work in Progress
14 January 2010 -- Here is the "cartoon" for my new 24"x24" oil painting "Calypso". I have done the drawing in Prussian Blue -- working loosely. I love this color for sketching in paintings because I believe the strength of the blue comes through the eventual layers of colors. This is an important week for me -- I have been gathering sketches and photos for about ten new paintings. The background work is to decide the sizes and shapes of this material, then purchase and prepare the canvases for each work. Sometimes it takes as many as 100 sketches and photos to make ten paintings -- they need to be edited for composition, color and light -- always subject to artistic license, of course. Stay tuned. Am hoping to post my progress on this new work more frequently than usual. DC, Taos.
Saturday, January 09, 2010
"VETERAN'S DAY/SANTA FE PLAZA" - SOLD
"VETERAN'S DAY/SANTA FE PLAZA"- SOLD In one of my recent "clear outs" I found the slide for this painting which I took sometime in 1969 or thereabouts. I worked on this painting today and all the while debated whether I would disclose the surprise it held for me as I worked on it. Normally I don't "explain" my work, but after forty years and some quiet moments of sketching and painting this piece I realized what it was.....three veterans from different wars on the same bench on the Santa Fe Plaza. The man on the left is a WWII vet -- dressed in his afternoon best and not quite comfortable with the other two. The fellow in the middle is transitioning from Viet Nam, dressed in his old sport coat and slacks, hoping to find some kind of normal. The fellow on the right has been home a while and hasn't been able to find "normal" nor does he want to try any longer -- he lives quietly in a commune somewhere in northern New Mexico.
Peace!
Wednesday, January 06, 2010
AFTER -- Getting Organized
6 January 2010 - Today is the Feast of the Three Kings at Taos Pueblo -- dances, celebration. Cleaned up the studio finally -- all prepared for my New Beginning......
Tuesday, January 05, 2010
#820 - THE NEST (NEW BEGINNINGS) - NEW ORIGINAL OIL
4 January 2010 - "THE NEST" (NEW BEGINNINGS) - NEW 10"X10" Original Oil on Linen, Framed in Gold with Linen Liner. Call (575) 758-7454 for price and availability.
"Every new beginning comes from some other beginnings end" Seneca, Roman Philospher, mid-1st Century AD. Found two quotes from Seneca recently. Another is "Begin at once to live, and count each separate day as a separate life." Am a firm believer in starting over -- and the New Year is a great place to begin! New Year's resolutions don't work for me -- I do, however, have some goals for my work this year (always subject to change, of course). I'd like to complete at least four large "environment" canvases, do more field work, complete my 100 small paintings project - and work on a book I want to self-publish in time for next Christmas. My all time favorite quote when I dream big..... "How do you eat an elephant? -- One bite at a time!" DC. Taos, N.M.
Monday, January 04, 2010
810 - THE NEST (NEW BEGINNINGS) - WORK IN PROGRESS
#810 - "THE NEST" (New Beginnings) - 10"x10" New Oil Painting - A solid start today -- here are three phases of this new oil painting. The photo of the nest - the oil sketch - outlined mostly in Prussian Blue - and the glazes. Will let this set up overnight and am hoping to complete this canvas tomorrow or Wednesday. HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
WINTER GIFTS........
Sincerely,
Donna Clair,
Taos, New Mexico
Monday, December 21, 2009
BEFORE -- AN OVERWHELMING URGE TO GET ORGANIZED!
21 December 2009 -- The New Year is almost here! Yes, it's time for me to roll up my sleeves and get organized! HAH! Perhaps some Christmas elves will show up this week while I am dreaming of Sugar Plums dancing!
Saturday, December 19, 2009
"ADOBE WALLS/SANTA FE" - NEW 24"X30" Original Oil (Completed)
"ADOBE WALLS/SANTA FE" - NEW 24"x30" Original Oil Painting on Fine Belgian Linen, framed in Gold with Linen Liner. This painting was completed about an hour ago. Have worked on this canvas over the past two months -- wanted that coziness one feels after a good ol' New Mexico snowstorm. For price and availablility, please e.mail or call (575)758-7454. Visa, Mastercard, Amer. Exp. and Discover.
"The moment I saw the brilliant, proud morning shine high up over the deserts of Santa Fe, something stood still in my soul -- In the magnificent fierce morning of New Mexico one sprang awake, a new part of the soul woke up suddenly, and the old world gave way to a new. There are all kinds of beauty in the world, thank God -- but for a greatness of beauty I have never experienced anything like New Mexico."
D. H. Lawrence, published in Survey Graphic Magazine, 1931.
"The moment I saw the brilliant, proud morning shine high up over the deserts of Santa Fe, something stood still in my soul -- In the magnificent fierce morning of New Mexico one sprang awake, a new part of the soul woke up suddenly, and the old world gave way to a new. There are all kinds of beauty in the world, thank God -- but for a greatness of beauty I have never experienced anything like New Mexico."
D. H. Lawrence, published in Survey Graphic Magazine, 1931.
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
"ADOBE WALLS/SANTA FE" - Work in Progress
16 December 2009 -- Worked all day yesterday on the foreground, after putting dark glazes (burnt sienna, ultramarine blue and burnt umber) on the walls. There is a heavy impasto in the foreground - added cadmium red and cadmium yellow to Permalba White for the snow. This is the stage of a painting where I could happily quit -- my mind races ahead to the completed canvas -- what I want it to look like - and the painting really has a mind of it's own -- in a way it tells me what needs to be done. It's a very strange collaboration! DC - Taos
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Friday, December 11, 2009
"ADOBE WALLS-SANTA FE" - WORK IN PROGRESS
"ADOBE WALLS-SANTA FE" - A Work in Progress -- This photo is of the painting after it has been glazed; now I will work on the opaque paints and hope to finish it sometime this next week..... DC, Taos, N.M.
Thursday, December 10, 2009
"LAST LIGHT" - 9"X12" ARCHIVAL GICLEE (Click here to purchase)
"LAST LIGHT" (TAOS)
A late afternoon view from my kitchen window
NEW SIZE! 9"X12 STUDION EDITION PRINT
Thursday, December 03, 2009
TAOS SNOW DAY!!
3 December - View through my kitchen window - First significant snow of the season. Am ready! The "extra" snow day groceries are in the pantry, all my painting supplies are in -- going to varnish and frame some small paintings today - and prepare my palette to start some new underpaintings tomorrow! I love it! DC
Tuesday, December 01, 2009
GESSOING CANVAS -- PREPARING TO PAINT
PREPARING TO SPEND THE WINTER PAINTING! GESSOING CANVAS. For large and medium paintings I usually use a double-primed linen canvas. I mix up gesso with Payne's Grey. This creates a "grisaille", or a grey ground, much favored by the Renaissance painters. Letting each coat dry thoroughly between applications, I apply two or three coats, depending on the coarseness of the canvas. Personally I like to smooth out the brush strokes on the gesso. Because I work with glazing, I find that this is the best preparation for my paints. Let these canvases "cure" for a week or so -- don't stack them together until they have dried thoroughly. This is the first step to good painting -- once I start, I don't have to worry about "white spaces" and this "toned ground" mellows out my colors. Stay tuned! DC
Monday, November 30, 2009
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
"VALDEZ AFTERNOON" - SOLD
"VALDEZ AFTERNOON"-Sold
NEW! 8"X10" Original Oil/Fr. in Gold
7-Day Auction beginning Wed. November 11th
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