Through
the course of time spent with painting in watercolor, I've taken on
various subjects,
usually excluding
people and animals, that give varying results. In the end I've found
the outdoors and nature to be the most moving for me. Let's face it,
most people like the unbound feeling of being outside. Travel
brochures rightfully concentrate on the outdoor scenes in warm,
intoxicating sunlight! The indoors are often associated with being
cramped, secluded, confined. Those who live it the temperate zone are
often pining away over the seemingly endless Winter and long for
its overdue end.
Landscapes
would have to be my main inspiration and choice of subject. And this
can be any season, with Summer being the favorite. Though, I do love
the bare tree look amongst the snow, gracing
the sky with lacy branches and twigs. The elements I gravitate to the
most are trees. They can be bold, tall, short, wispy, mangly,
spindly, etc, all of which beg me to capture their many
personalities. Their shapes, foliages, colors and color changes;
their trunk and branch structures and linear peculiarities -all of
these get my attention and respect. I have even been called a "tree
whisperer"! Trees and other plants ask very little and give so
much. They also require less exactness than most structures. And
there's just something about the feeling of space - the feeling of
being surrounded by nature. Ask any hiker!
That
said, I do enjoy geometry, especially the menagerie of angles and
interlocking shapes. The
contrast
of nature and hard, straight-lined manmade structures has its own
merit and delight. But to
go and detail intricate architecture, no, that's for a steadier more
accurate hand than mine.
I
am rather humbled by nature and this would have to be my main
passion. I always think of color,
shape
and texture in my representational work. Nature provides that for me.
And the one thing I'm always
after, whether in the studio or painting en plein air, is the lack of
geometry in nature. This I call
"Perfect Randomity". When something doesn't look right I
change it. It's something I have to do. The
challenge before me is how to retain the different quirks of nature
and maintain good design. Having
obtained that, I'm more confident I've properly delivered my message.
And the message is what it's all about.
And the message is what it's all about.
