Showing posts with label sunlight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sunlight. Show all posts

Monday, October 10, 2016

Shadowland, finished and WIP photos by Marion Hedger

Shadowland
by Marion Hedger
24x30cm oil on canvas panel.

The 30 painting in 30 days challenge has finished - Well it finished at the end of September of course, I have just been a bit slow in collating all my paintings and posting.


The 30 day challenges are fun and it really does make you think about painting and producing art. Some work out and others are not so good but it is the palette knife (or brush) miles that count. I included more larger paintings than my usual 18x24cm than I normally do to allow myself more freedom - sometimes making a composition fit on the smaller boards is difficult, especially if, like me, you have a tendency to put in too much detail. Consequently I had a many more not quite finished paintings than normal.

I am gradually working my way through them adding the final touches. I shall share these as I go along.

Today's painting is 'Shadowland'. It needed more work on the shadows and some touching up on the background colours. I am now happy with it and it reminds me of the day we walked through the dappled shadows in the woods at Chateau la Coste.

Here are some work-in-progress photos:

Monday, September 26, 2016

Light Catcher Day 23 of the challenge, by Marion Hedger

Light Catcher WIP 
by Marion Hedger
Provence Landscape
18x24cm oil painting on MDF canvas panel

The light filtering through the trees and catching the leaves appealed to me.
Some work still needed on the path.


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Thursday, June 9, 2016

Last Light oil painting by Marion Hedger

Last Light by Marion Hedger
30x40cm (approx 12x16") oil on 2cm deep gallery wrapped canvas

A modern impressionist Provence landscape painting of the remains of a Roman Fort near Le Rouret in the Alpes Maritime, France. I liked the way the sun gave the tree a glow and the evening light formed some great shadows.

 The edges of the canvas are painted black, so can be hung without a frame for a contemporary look.

Price includes international shipping


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Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Modern Impressionist painting, Last Sunlight, by Marion Hedger

"Last Sunlight, knife painting"
by Marion Hedger
Oil on artist quality on stretched canvas, painted with a palette knife
Size = 30x40cm (approx 12"x16")

An modern impressionist Provencal landscape painting featuring the remains of a Roman Fort near Le Rouret in the Alpes Maritime. Amazingly after all these years some of the battlements are still standing and can be reached after an arduous (for me) walk up the mountain. The tree stands guard over the remains and catches the light in what is now a shady spot.

Painted with a palette knife, the knife strokes are thick and juicy giving this painting a lot of texture as can be shown in the close-up photos. The use of the palette knife means the colour stays fresh and vibrant giving a vibrant painting.



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Saturday, October 24, 2015

Early Spring Morning, by New York artist, Celeste Plowden

This abstract painting has many of the colors I see on an early spring morning, aqua, yellow, blue, lime green, orange, light violet.  The trees on a hillside catch the bright sunlight, which also reflects light over the colorful fields of wildflowers and meadow grasses beginning to grow.  Acrylic on canvas, UV varnish, sides painted, wired and ready to hang. painted with a palette knife for texture.
11x14, available at my Chairish store

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Wooded Landscape Palette Knife Painting by Impressionist Karin Neuvirth

New Day

18"x24" Acrylic on Canvas
by Karin Neuvirth
$425.00
One of my many wooded landscapes.  This is a subject matter that is very near and dear to my heart.

I will be exhibiting and Demonstrating my techniques at Mercury Studios Friday Night September 18th from 6pm - 9pm. 

401 W Geer St, Durham, NC 27701




Thursday, August 20, 2015

Sun Showers, by New York artist, Celeste Plowden

In the golden sunlight of a summer's day, raindrops can be little prisms of color, ending in a rainbow. 16x16 acrylic on gallery wrap canvas, sides painted, UV varnish, wired and ready to hang. Available for sale at Chairish

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Vegetable Still Life, Daily Oil Painting, "Ravanello Danza"


The past few months, I have been painting landscape after landscape.  I noticed that most of my favorite still life works have found new homes.



So this week, I have been painting new ones.  It has been a nice change of pace for me.



These radishes seemed to be involved in a complicated tango, so I named this "Ravanello Danza" which is Italian for Radish Dance.  It sounds much better in Italian.


Purchase here
100

Saturday, August 1, 2015

Night Must Fall, by New York artist, Celeste Plowden

 I was thinking of the purple shadows that emerge out of my woods when daylight begins to fade. 8x10 acrylic on gallery wrap canvas, UV varnish, sides painted, wired and ready to hang. Available at 


Sunday, July 26, 2015

The Sunlit Path, by New York artist, Celeste Plowden


The bright reds and oranges melt into a peachy light, illuminating a clear path into the shadow of the woods. 8x10 acrylic on gallery wrap canvas, UV varnish, sides painted, wired and ready to hang. Available for sale at Saatchi Art

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Sweet Chestnut Walk WIP by Marion Hedger Day 8, 30 paintings in 30 days

Sweet Chestnut Walk WIP by Marion Hedger
Day 8, 30 days hath September Challenge
Oil on canvas panel
Palette knife painting
Contact me about this or any other painting HERE

Last Friday we took a drive around the vineyards in the Var region so I could gather some photos of the vineyards before the grapes were harvested. As part of the drive we went through the Les Maures hills national forest. Sweet chestnut trees grow wild amongst the cork oaks.
Capturing the light
Generally the day was overcast but every now and then the sun shone through and I managed to capture the sunlight in this view. This is not quite finished, I still have to work on the edges of the shadows.
Marion Hedger art website


Monday, September 9, 2013

Sherwood Forest walk oil painting - Day 7, 30 day challenge by Marion Hedger

Sherwood Forest walk oil painting
Day 7, 30 days hath September challenge
18x24cm (approx 7"x10") oil on canvas panel
Palette knife painting

Sherwood Pines
At the end of May this year, we went to Sherwood Pines park in Nottingham my home town. While my brother and the kids did the bicycle circuit, I went for a walk and took photos.

Sherwood Pines is a managed pine plantation right in the heart of Sherwood Forest (quel domage) where they used to grow the pines for pit props in the coal mines. That industry has now died and they are gradually replacing the trees with native species.
My Walk
Naturally it was the regenerated part of the forest where I went for my walk. The sun was shining through the fresh green growth of trees and all was OK in my world.
Does it need people?
I am uncertain whether or not to put a couple in at the end of the path to:
  • add a focal point and scale
  • To add a touch of red (a shirt maybe) as a foil for all the green
Please let me know what you think.

Marion Hedger art website
 

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Green Cottage



6"x8" oil on Belgian linen mounted on archival board

"I can envision a small cottage somewhere, with a lot of writing paper, and a dog, and a fireplace and maybe enough money to give myself some Irish coffee now and then and entertain my two friends."
- Lt. Richard Van de Geer


The second painting on Friday during my Chincoteague Paint-out last week-end:

Over on Maddox Street, about 9am the sun is still moving quickly and making some interesting shadows under the eves and porch roof on the front of this house. I love to see the varying temperatures of light as it glances across the angles of buildings. Top that off with the gorgeous crepe myrtle on the front corner of this cottage and I've got a wonderful complimentary color thing going here. I'm set up on the lawn of a hotel just across the street, in the shade of the hotel sign, so there is no direct sun on my canvas or palette (makes it easier to see what you're doing!) Now if you've been to Chincoteague, you'll know that there are several bands of roaming ducks- being surrounded by water, this should not come as a surprise. I was wondering if they would come up and start pecking at my paint tubes, but they kept their distance. Whew, dodged that little bullet. So again, to start a painting, I indicate the large masses- with 'masses of paint' and block that in with these considerations in mind: warm vs. cool colors and light vs. dark values. As a painter, you'll find that if you allow yourself to block in with simple shapes first(and fairly abstractly), and get that canvas covered, the details you add on top of that will finish things up easily. And I am so glad I chose those shadow shapes immediately and got them indicated with the initial block in. As the sun continued to rise, the shadow shapes continued to change and weren't near as interesting as when I first saw them!

*Painters, make your decisions early and stick with them, see them through to the end. If you really must change for something 'better' you can always do that later. But if what you saw at first is the best, and you haven't gotten that down on canvas, it's more difficult to go back to the shadows that "used to be there". By 11am I was wrapping things up, the sun is high in the sky and I was ready to move to my next selected painting
spot.

Contact me to purchase this painting: roxannesteed@gmail.com
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