Thursday, January 24, 2008

Another Late Bird...


Hey! I’ve been inspired by Bill too! This was from my first outing with this Early Bird Crew back in October, and was from the same spot as the ones Bill posted. Just a quickie 6x6 sketch because the light was changing so fast. I think I was there for a grand total of 45 minutes, but man, what a great way to start the day. I have some pics from that morning showing Bill, Paul Kratter, Ernesto, and Sharon(?) hard at work. Let me know if it’s ok with those mentioned, and I’ll post ‘em.

This one is from a few days later at the same time and area but overcast and hazy and none of the drama of the earlier session.

Friday, January 18, 2008

Snow !

Inspired by Bill, I recently started to pick up pastel, trying to learn the nature of the medium. I'm using what i had in hand, some left over hard pastel, and some 'sticky' pastel, and some new soft pastel Bill introduced me to.
I found all different pastels can serve different functions. Like, soft pastel is easier to mix colors and blend, and sticky ones are good for strong high light or texture surfaces, then, the hard pastels can do good sharp edges and accents of shadows... It's kinda fun to experiment with different pastels, like having a set of different sized and hairs of brushes...
Here are a few sketches I've made during a short weekend trip to Tahoe, I wanted to try out painting snow!
which is a subject that I'm not so familiar with and didn't grew up with. the whole time I was so fascinated with the bright, high key colors of snow,
and some odd funny sceneries, like cars buried in deep snow, or grand scale of ski runs on the hills...


Wednesday, January 9, 2008

A late bird here




Clear Cut west:
~10 x 10.5"
Pastel on paper

Thanks to Dice, Mike, and Jennifer for encouraging and helping me post here. It is great to see the energy of all these painters. Kind of makes it easier to get out there and do it, when other's are painting and posting the results.

Painted the same morning with Nick and Jennifer nearby. Paul Kratter was a few hundred yards away, and Sharon was up on top of the hill. The East Bay hills above Berkeley and Oakland are being systematically clearcut of Eucalyptus, a quick-burning, non-native species which grows in abundance up here. It is a bit ironic that a lot of early California landscape painting celebrated the distinctive Eucalyptus silhouettes and groves in the Bay Area and Southern California.

One result of this clearing out of trees is that new vistas are appearing, as well as places to paint them from. To get to this spot, I hiked over several acres of Eucalyptus 'shreds' that had been laid down over the hillside, burying poison oak plants among other flora. At this point the hill became very steep, so I stopped, and ended up sitting on the ground, as it was too sloped to set up my stool. The wind followed me all the way down the hill, and the chill factor began to kick in after about a half hour. Jennifer and Nick appeared soon behind me and started painting. It's always worth it in the end, even if you aren't completely satisfied with the result.

I was interested in this view as it looked down into a foliage choked ravine, then out onto the ridge line that began to turn blue as it angled away to the right. Beyond that lay Berkeley and Emeryville, providing different texture and color, as it lay in sunlight. Some grand old Eucalyptus are standing up on the ridge at left, catching the light. I don't know if they'll be spared or not.

I'm not crazy about the overall color range, and some of the values are a bit suspect. Specifically the far ridge should be lighter in value against the city. It's easy to get tricked by a contrasting edge, which is what I think happened to me here.


Here's one more, painted a few weeks earlier, up on the hill where Sharon was painting on this morning. It's looking East at sunrise. The North peak of Diablo is visible on the right.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

ok, it's been too long....



Crappy weather in SF and us being "lazy birds" during the holidays made no new uploads for too long...

So here it is. It's no early bird plein air but I'm posting my first figure painting at Pixar Tuesday night's class.

Come on Bill! Jennifer can help you upload your work!!! :)

Monday, December 3, 2007

Tilden Grizzly Hill


yes, it was Very Very cold...
though the view of the bay was incredible !
I could even see the ocean beyond S.F. !

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Tilden

Something of a gouache painting from Tilden park this morning, with Jennifer and Bill; it was very very cold, and very very windy, and my painting is very very value adjusted in photoshop.

Friday, November 16, 2007

back to early bird!


back from Japan and here is at the Tilden.
I have been doing too much cityscape and need to do more landscapes now..(I used to have hard time with cityscapes when I started..)

anyhow, hope to do more of organic nature stuff.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Week in Painting

That can be read as "Weak in Painting" if you prefer. :P But regardless of good or bad, I was very glad to be able to devote quite a bit of time to painting outside the past week. Here's a bulk of the results. Apologies for the poor image quality. Most of these were wet when I shot them. I'll try to scan them in at some point.






Friday, November 9, 2007

paintings from Japan trip

Hi guys,

Awesome paintings all of you while I was absent!
I also heard Bill, Ernest and Sharon came to paint too! How can we ask them to post their pieces?? I wanna see~~!!

anyhow,

I just finished scanning and uploading my sketches from my Japan trip.
I was able to do quite a few paintings considering I had all my friends and family to see over there!

Hope you like some of them!
http://www.simplestroke.com/wp/?page_id=77


Wednesday, November 7, 2007

View from My Backyard

I was really excited about joining up with everybody at Grizzly Peak, but around a quarter mile from the parking lot, I realized I left one crucial piece of material back home..... panels. I didn't even have scratch paper with me, nor a phone signal to see if anyone had any spare panels, so rather than risk the long hike up with nothing to paint on, I turned around. There's some kind of strange curse with me and meeting other Early Birds in the hillside sessions!

By the time I got home, it was pretty much too late to go back up, so I set up in... uhh... my backyard. I painted my rear neighbor's trees and their house. Two crows settled on the highest point in the trees just as I was painting that area, so they're in there too.

"Two Crows" 5x7 inches. Oil on Clayboard