Literally fresh off the easel – I hope you enjoy
I completed Scent of Spring yesterday actually. I can tell you that I did a lot of self reflecting while working on it. There were some painting sessions where I literally spent hours working and you know, you could not tell I even touched it. It developed slowly. I knew it would and thought I was prepared for that. I stayed with it and am sure happy that I did. In one of those moments of when I was questioning myself, this quote found me:
“Every artist dips his brush in his own soul, and paints his own nature into his pictures.”
― Henry Ward Beecher
I think it spoke to me so profoundly as I often wonder what it is I am doing. I question almost everything. This painting took a lot of energy and determination to complete. Fact: artists second guess themselves. I know I evaluate and re-evaluate my work often and question a lot of what I am doing. Another Fact: I painted this large painting with a ridiculously small brush! However, it gave me a lot of joy to see it develop. I actually giggled and smiled when working on it.
How I describe me
I like to think that on some level I am painterly – I like to imagine that i am sculpting with paint. Creating images that are strong and dimensional. That I want to see my subject almost lift off the surface! I like to call it painterly realism. Modern realism. I pay attention to value and colour shifts. You know… detail!
It’s ok
Thinking this quote may have been exactly the message I needed to receive. That it is ok to be true to who I am as a person and as a painter. At the end of the day I am a precise and detail-oriented person. This applies to much of my life and is certainly evident in my artwork. And that is ok
Pure. Painting. Magic.
I see the incredible work of so many artists that I admire, and you know… most of them are far looser painters than I am. Often bordering on impressionism. It takes a lot of skill to paint to paint loose well – especially when viewed from across the room it presents like realism! I so admire the work of artists who can work this kind of masterful magic.
A better perspective
Personally, I have tried so many times to “loosen up”. Not giving into “slavish detail” a term that I heard an established artist use to describe another artists work. It literally stopped me in my tracks and made me really look at my own work with a new lens. Finally I think I understand. Detail alone does not make a painting good. The combination of value, composition and colour is what makes a piece strong. Back to the quote.
“Every artist dips his brush in his own soul, and paints his own nature into his pictures.”
I believe I resemble this and that is OK!
Leaving you with a video I assembled from some of the painting sessions showing the development of this painting. It’s a first attempt:
Looks beautiful! So real looking I can almost smell them.
Thank you so much – you know when I was painting this one – I was actually dreaming about it at night and in my dreams, I could smell them. That is why I called it Scent of Spring!!
Love this, and love your quote: detail alone does not make a painting good. So true of any art. I know so many photographers who do all the technical details right but only a real artist makes the magic. This painting is definitely MAGIC!
Thank you so much Jenn. I was a bit philosophical with this post. I did a lot of reflecting on it as I beat myself up so much painting such a large painting with such a small brush. The trend today is more impressionistic or photorealism – I am neither and was feeling funny