Warm breezes blow through the palm trees at the edge of the beach, of an
early evening moon rise in the tropics. This impressionist landscape of
Caribbean blue skies and ocean tides, fade to an aqua Florida glade
over the distant waters. Acrylic on canvas, UV varnish, wired and ready
to hang. Painted with a palette knife for a special blending technique. 8x10 available at
Bringing together Artists who paint with the palette knife, from around the world.
Friday, October 30, 2015
Languid Evening, by New York artist, Celeste Plowden
Labels:
BLUE,
Caribbean,
Celeste Plowden impressionism,
dusk,
Florida,
landscape,
moon,
ocean,
Palm Tree,
seascape,
tropical
I learned the art of acrylic and pastel painting through private instruction, after having spent my career as a designer of printed fabrics in the New York market place. I am a graduate of the College of Design, Art and Architecture at the University of Cincinnati, with a major in the History of Art, 1977. Later, I studied printed textile design at Parsons School of Design, in New York. Immediately afterward, I began free lance work for several design studios in the garment district of NYC, where I did re-coloration work for printed apparel fabrics, and sold my own designs through Bread and Butter Designs,also located in New York. In addition, during the 1980's and 1990's, I designed a number of needlecraft and stencil books for Dover Publications. Currently, I am working on a series of exotic birds and other animals done in acrylic paint, with a palette knife, for texture and brilliant color. I consider my paintings to be representational or impressionistic in nature, and I use fantasy colors because what I see often makes me feel these colors,and what would make an interesting composition, rather than using realistic colors.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
We love receiving comments about our posts! Thank you for leaving us a comment - have a wonderful day.