8" x 6"
oil on archival board
8" x 10"
oil on archival board
oil on archival board
Over the summer I had done several small oils on Italian archival board, a lovely surface to work on with a linen-like canvas over MDF board. These were really meant as small oil studies from which to work larger (which I may), but that I like at this size also. They have several layers of oil glazes, each layer adding more detail. On the final layer, I like to scratch back to the layers below to bring out highlights, such as small branches and bracken.
8" x 6"
oil on archival board
This one was such a serendipitous moment -- I had been working on a landscape (can't even recall which) when I just became disgusted with the rigidity and dullness of it all. In frustration I grabbed a rag and wiped the board and was ready to toss it on my pile of UFOs (unfinished objects). Luckily I looked down before doing so and sat in wonderment -- all the colors were blending in a soft manner, the rigid marks were gone . . . ummm!
I began to work with the blendings, suggesting reflections in the marshes that often edge a body of water. I didn't want to lose the delicacy, the fragility of the colors. And at the last moment I smudged the sky and "found" the moon! So often when driving home after work, the CT River is amazing in its myriad manifestations of shadows and light, especially when the moon is rising up over the rim of the hills but the colors are not quite faded away into the night.
Oil glazing is an old technique and sometimes it's forgotten in the contemporary environment. Yet when used it can capture such a softness of tone and yet allow the beauty of the surface to emerge.
Must remember to use it more often!






