It was fun watching the swans in Creamer’s Field basking in the sunshine last night. The snow melt creates many ponds for them to enjoy.
8″ x 10″ oil painting by Raven, Fairbanks, Alaska USA
See a higher resolution image of this painting here.
Art in Alaska. Story of an Alaskan artist.
by alaskanraven
It was fun watching the swans in Creamer’s Field basking in the sunshine last night. The snow melt creates many ponds for them to enjoy.
8″ x 10″ oil painting by Raven, Fairbanks, Alaska USA
See a higher resolution image of this painting here.
by alaskanraven
Don’t you just love a perfect morning when everything comes together after a delicious cup of hot coffee?
A few weeks ago in February, I couldn’t wait to get my brushes into paint and get started on a canvas.
Mount pochade box onto tripod. Squeeze out color. Brushes available and warm fire in the wood stove. Perfect.
The sun rises and shines on the birch. Mountains appear across the river valley. I pile on the paint and push the color to capture the scene.
Fire crackles in the wood stove. It entertains and warms me.
I start with bright colors. I will tone them down with more layers of paint but the orange of the morning-sun-sky needs to shimmer through the trees. I like to have little edges of bright color intensify the whole visual experience.
Adding color to the canvas affects the other colors in dramatic ways. It’s a whole world that’s being created with its own relationships. Colors contrast and enhance each other. A brush stroke with light orange tint can make the light blue shimmer and appear more intense.
“Sunrise”
8″ x 10″ oil
Morning sun shines orange through the trees and lights the sky behind the silhouette of Mt. Hayes.
The day begins in the Tanana river valley. I love morning sunlight. It warms up the sky and contrasts with the cool blue shadows.
by alaskanraven
Warmth and hope
January in Alaska. I stand on the warmer side of the glass. Cold dark trees give me an idea. Grab the pochade* box and mount it on a tripod in the dining room. Smell of oil rises from paint squeezed out.
Cup of tea.
Sketch ideas.
Wait.
Faint blue patch of sky at last above the horizon.
Go.
Large brush pushes paint around on canvas.
Outside, pinks and peach and lavender take over the blue sky patch.
Light. Warmth and hope rise again.
Tree shapes reach out to the light. I paint sky colors and then back to the stand of trees. Back and forth. Add the fallen tree with snow pile on it. Define shapes with more dark. Push paint until I don’t know what the next brushstroke should be.
Stuck.
Frustrated, I step back fifteen feet to look at it.
Pow.
Surprise. It works. The light jumps out. Trees stand strong. Loose, bold and free brushstrokes, patterns of light and dark, warm and cool tones tell the story.
I am not sure if the painting is about First Light or if it is more about the joy of painting. Putting one color next to another and delighting in the way the notes of color make a harmony.
The painting works for me, but does it work for you? Do you see something different in it?
I hope this makes you want to go to a window and feel the sun warm your cheeks. Treat yourself kindly, like you would treat a dear friend. Stop beating yourself up and be warmed by the light or by knowing the sun is shining on the other side of the cloud.
I hope these suggestions make a difference in your world today.
*Pochade—What is that?
A pochade box is a compact portable painting studio in a small box. It holds tubes of paint, brushes, palette and the lid will hold the canvas upright and secure so it can be painted. The bottom of the box often has an insert that will fasten onto a tripod turning it into an easel. Some pochade boxes also hold the finished wet canvas securely within to protect them and make carrying a wet painting out of the field easier. Painting in the field ‘en plein air’ means painting outside looking directly at the subject. Is it painting plein air when the artist stands on the warm side of the glass? There are different opinions on that question.
contact me with questions or comments
Alaskan Raven Studio
PO Box 80231
Fairbanks, Alaska 99708
USA
alaskanblackbird@yahoo.com
Represented by:
Well Street Art Co.
1302 Well Street
Fairbanks, Alaska
907 452-6169
Stephan Fine Arts
939 West 5th Ave.
Anchorage, Alaska 99501
USA
(907) 274-5009
http://www.stephanfinearts.com/
I ventured to Alaska before there was an oil pipeline and fell in love with the gnarly spruce trees, intense weather and mountains I could touch. Very different from the landscape in St. Louis. I was looking for different. The spruce trees: those scraggy, wizened, lanky conifers danced onto the first page of my sketch […]