Showing posts with label Painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Painting. Show all posts

11/11/2021

Guest Blogger Master Painter Jess Anderson

 

Meadowlake Studios

Guest Blogger Jess Anderson is not only a master painter, he is a great teacher.  In this guest post he walks us through step by step his process painting “Don’t Be A Chicken”.

Jess Anderson

I hope all of you are doing well.  The rainy season has hit, here in Oregon, and it’s come a bit early.  Usually, it waits until Halloween night.  The kids always seem to have to go Trick-or-Treating in the rain.  I’ve spent a lot of time the past few weeks getting things on the place ready for that season.  You know, new roof on the barn, poured a concrete floor in it too, cut up all the limbs that fell on my garage last winter…. You know, just the ordinary stuff.  I have all of my volatile plants inside the greenhouse now, safe from freezing.  It was time to go back to the studio and do what I love better.

 


The reference photos came from a fine photographer named Steve Carn.  Steve is an incredible photographer and I’m so pleased that he has offered to help me with reference material.  He is from northern Utah and shot these photos in Glacier National Park, at a place called “Goat Lick”.  It seems when the goats need salt or other minerals, this is the place to go.  The stuff leeches out of the rock layers.  It’s their health food store, furnished by Mother Nature herself. 

I have a number of these wonderful people who have helped me a lot with reference material.  I would love to be up there on the mountain myself, but sometimes that stays a dream for longer than we want.  He and I have some trips planned up there in the future.

 

I really enjoyed doing this painting.  I went back and used my acrylics once again.  I haven’t used them since last year and didn’t want to lose my edge, the one I took a while figuring out.  I started off only going to use them for my under painting, but ended up just finishing it all in acrylics.  I’ve entitled this one, “Don’t Be a Chicken”.  It just seems to me that one young one is taunting the other.  I hope you enjoy my journey on this painting.

 


I drew this layout directly onto the canvas.  It’s something I don’t normally do.  Don’t ask me why I did this time.

It’s simple because I have done so much drawing in my life that I know most of it will be done with my brush.

 










I started with my background using mainly a middle tone but filling in the strongest shadows.

A good contrast is something I always try to put into my work.





 

 

 

As you can see, there is absolutely no detail used at this point, just values giving me a shape to work with.  This is where a sense of composition is so very important.

 








 

 

A soft glaze to warm it up and I’ve started doing my detail work.  There are a million little rocks, and little detail parts of all the larger ones.  It’s a most important part to make this work.

 

 

 

 




 

 

 

 

Using strong value changes will give me that contrast that I’m looking for.  It also gives my composition the depth it needs.

 

 

 

 




 

 

 

The rocks break away from the massive rock formation in small pieces.  This is so good for the composition too.  It keeps it from getting boring so that the eyes have many different

Things to ingest.

 

 

 




 

 

 

Now that my background is blocked in I start laying in the basic color I want to work on with the goat.

 





 

 

As I get that back color on the goat I start giving it shape with texture.  There is a lot of texture on these guys.  To me, texture and contrast are some of the most important things to put into the painting.  Who wants to look at a slick haired goat, anyway!

 




 

 

 

With most of the work done on the nanny I’ve started on the upper kid.  They are able to climb on things like this at such a young age.  It’s important to learn this as their lives are focused around it.

 



 

 


 

 

 

One baby down and the bottom one to go.  He looks reluctant to climb on these rough rocks.  Must be his sister up above taunting him to go ahead and climb.  Once he’s blocked in I will then work all over the painting.  A little detain here, some highlights there, a little more deepening of the shadows.  You spend a lot of time at this stage.  There are a million little brush strokes on this.  I’ve used a very limited palette on this, something I like.  I will try to do more like that in the future.

 

 

 

 

 

 

And here is the finished painting.


 




“Don’t Be A Chicken”   acrylics on canvas   24”x12”  Framed  

https://www.jessanderson.com/

    

Here is a photo of the painting inside its frame.  I really like the way this frame finished it off. I hope you are all having a wonderful day!  Mine will get better soon! 

People ask me….”How long did it take you to do this.”  It is probably the most asked question ever asked of an artist.  I have found that this is the best answer.  I got my first set of oils when I was 11.  I am now 74 and have painted my whole life.  So, that being said, it has taken me 63 years to do this.  I hope you enjoyed this.  I certainly loved doing it.   JESS

11/03/2021

It has been a long, long two years

Life was looking good the Fall of 2019.  The annual Arts Alliance of Yamhill County  sponsored Art Harvest Studio Tour  was great.  Driving around Yamhill County with the 2019 Fall colors is pure joy. We were fortunate to interview and film several of the Tour artists. We went to their studios and learned a lot about different art mediums. 

Master Painter Jess Anderson

We visited Master Painter Jess Anderson at the studio just outside of Sheridan, Oregon. 
 
 
Felt Artist Jennifer Bencharsky
 
 
We visited Jennifer Bencharsky who does beautiful felt work and lives in Newberg which is on the other side of the County. 
 
As the Tour does, it gave us an excuse to travel from one side of beautiful Yamhill County  to the other and see some fantastic art and meet and talk with many great talented artists. You can see those at Arts Alive: Art Harvest Studio Tour on Youtube.

 You all know what happened in 2020 and this year 2021.  The Art Harvest Studio Tour cancelled both years. All of the Arts seemed to go into a stress induced shock and a kind of hibernation. For Liz and I at Meadowlake Studios the Arts Alive video interviews were shut down.  At least we hope it is hibernation because there are signs the Arts are beginning to wake up and roam around the landscape again. 

One art exception to hibernation might be writing and writers.  Literary journals expanded across the internet.  I guess for many writers the social isolation was a fantastic excuse to finish that novel, write short stories, work on a movie script, and scratch out some poems.  

Unfortunately with our video productions stymied, with my Poetry On Demand events at art and wine gatherings cancelled, going out to crowded restaurants for dinner or out to clubs to hear music was impossible, I went into a personal hibernation, which I'm finally beginning to wake.  

I really missed the Poetry On Demand events. During McMinnville and Newberg downtown association wine and art nights, we set up a table in a busy wine tasting bar, sat behind our manual typewriters, wrote poems as topics were given to us under pressure to finish while the people were sipping wine or having dinner.  It was wonderful to hand a freshly typed poem to the person who had given the topic and see their reaction to the poem they had prompted. The past two years I missed that stress and creativity.  One good thing. We did publish a collection of our 2018 and 2019 Poetry On Demand poems.

I've been off and on with this blog over the years. I have excuses. Now in late Fall 2021 as I am beginning to stir from my almost two year long stupor, shaking off the stress, emerging lean and hungry, I will try to pick up this blog which I've neglected.

11/03/2012

Yamhill Valley Vineyard's Mural video

This spring our friend John Stromme asked if we would like to do a video of the mural he and Eddie Johnson were painting at the Yamhill Valley Vineyard's tasting room.  A beautiful drive to a beautiful vineyard and winery.  We grabbed the camera the tripod and microphones.  We were there before lunch.

We filmed and interviewed John and Eddie.  We came back about a month later and filmed Denis Burger, Yamhill Valley Vineyard's owner.  Then the summer happened and some technical struggles with color.

Towards late summer, John and Eddie and another idea.  When the mural was finished they wanted to bring the wall to life.  Ariel Eberle, the assistant wine maker at the Yamhill Valley agreed to be painted into the mural.  We filmed her being painted and her emerging from the mural.

Back to the editing bay.  We did the best we could and finally the video of the mural was ready.

Over two hours of film for a 5 minute story.  I guess by industry standards that is pretty efficient.  Every story we work on, I get to learn something new.  Something new from those we are filming and something new technically about the production and editing process.

It makes for a challenging avocation.

9/22/2012

Elizabeth Santone on Arts Alive

Elizabeth's segment of Arts Alive will show the week of September 22nd through 28th.  The schedule is on McMinnville Community Media  Liz talked with Lynda Phillippi about felting, painting and the Arts Alliance of Yamhill County's annual Art Harvest Studio Tour .

This was the first time Elizabeth has been on the Arts Alive show to talk about her felting and painting.

9/14/2012

Painting with Fire

Nike of Samothrace

This summer I worked with artist Dwight Evalt on a video to show one of his painting techniques which uses fire. The beginning of the painting Nike of Samothrace.  It came together and a young local musician Treven Hughes' music fits the action.  The music was recorded last year at McMinnville Community Media studio.

Dwight and I are almost neighbors.  Dwight lives in Carlton Oregon.  His website is dwightevaltart.weebly.com

Liz and I and Dwight were on this year's Art Harvest Studio Tour  A program of the Arts Alliance of Yamhill County which has been sponsoring the Tour for 20 years.  The 2012 Tour was Friday Oct 5, 6, 7 and the second weekend Oct 12, 13 and 14.   With a Student Education Tour during the week between.

It was a pretty good Tour.  I don't think Dwight demonstrated painting with fire.  You can see here.


3/17/2012

Elizabeth Santone, Featured artist at Meet the Artist at Portland Art Museum Rental Sales Gallery


Final adjustments
Elizabeth Santone was one of the featured artists at the Portland Art Museum's Rental Sales Gallery Meet the Artist event on Saturday, February 25th.  She talks about her paintings and her inspiration.


Director for the Portland Art Museum’s Rental Sales Gallery, Jennifer Zika is a wonderful host and although our filming with a big tripod was an slight obstacle in the Gallery’s limited space, she made us feel welcome.


In 1959 the Women’s Council of the Portland Art Museum appointed a Gallery Board which opened the Museum’s Rental Sales Gallery staffed by volunteers.  The Gallery’s mission is to promote the arts in Oregon, to provide a showcase for Oregon artists, and to increase public awareness of the Art community.  Gallery commissions proved revenue for the Museum and help support the Artists.  


According to The Oregon Encyclopedia membership in the Portland Art Museum is a prerequisite for renting artwork from Rental Sales Gallery.  Artworks is consighnment, price set by the artist and rental fees are on a sliding scale.  The Gallery host three artist shows a per year, in April, June and October.  Currently more than 250 artists from Oregon and Southwest Washington are represented.  All work is original and juried.  There are 600 art works in the Gallery at any one time and over 2000 works all together.  Art mediums include; oil, acrylic and watercolor paintings; wood, metal and stone sculpture; drawings; collages; photography; and framed prints.

Monthly Meet the Artists events began in the Fall of 2010.  Each month on the last Saturday the Gallery provides an opportunity to get to know 4 or 5 artists represented by the Rental Sales Gallery.  There is the chance to look around the Gallery, enjoy a nibble, a sip of wine and listen to featured artists talk about their work.

In addition to Elizabeth we filmed the presentations of Ok Ji Radda and Janet Lauvau Holt.
 
 
Ok Ji Radda
                                          

 
Janet Holt

2/25/2012

Elizabeth Santone, a successful feature artist presentation

Timothy Field
Today at the Portland Art Museum Rental Sales Gallery Elizabeth Santone talked about her narrative watercolor paintings and her landscape painting.

As Elizabeth was concluding a gentleman in the back of the room told a story of two young skate boarders who were in an intense discussion just out side the Gallery.  They were in a passionate debate about Elizabeth Santone's painting of a tree that was in the window of the Gallery

We (Meadowlake Studios) filmed Elizabeth's presentation.  We also filmed OK Ji Radda and Janet Louvau Holt and they discussed their work.

Next comes the work of putting together a watchable video.

2/21/2012

Paintings to the Gallery

Maple in Fall
We deliver painting to Portland Art Museum Rental Sales Gallery tomorrow.  Liz has been working on her talk about her work coming up this Saturday.

The rural landscapes are quiet and peaceful.  Her city scapes and urban scenes are full of motion, intensity and humor.



The contrast of her two style is amazing.
Wiggle












The rural scapes are contemplative. They let you breath.  The urban scapes  are wild, complex and engaging. You wonder if you can find your way out.