Sunday, July 30, 2017

Beach Day at Birch Point

Beach Day at
Birch Point I
at Birch Point State Park in Owls Head, Maine
painted plein air on July 21, 2017
19.5" x 6.75" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam,
and Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness
and most permanence, and Uniball waterproof fade proof ink
on 140 lb. Arches cold press fine grain
100% cotton watercolor paper
$340 USD including frame and shipping, $300 unframed


Beach Day at
Birch Point II
at Birch Point State Park in Owls Head, Maine
painted plein air on July 21, 2017
19.5" x 6.75" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam,
and Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness
and most permanence, and Uniball waterproof fade proof ink
on 140 lb. Arches cold press fine grain
100% cotton watercolor paper
$340 USD including frame and shipping, $300 unframed


The Hand of David
David Dewey painting his demo at Birch Point State Park
in Owls Head, Maine, sketched and painted
plein air on July 21, 2017
7" x 5" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam, and
Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness and
most permanence, and #3 graphite on 140 lb. Fabriano Artistico
cold press rough 100% cotton extra white watercolor paper
NFS, gift to the artist


Ruth and Skye Observe
David Painting
Ruth Kaldor and Skye Maher studying David Dewey's
painting style during his demo at Birch Point State Park
in Owls Head, Maine, sketched and painted
plein air on July 21, 2017
7" x 5" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam, and
Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness and
most permanence, and #3 graphite on 140 lb. Fabriano Artistico
cold press rough 100% cotton extra white watercolor paper
NFS, gift to the artist


David Dewey Watercolor Workshop Day 5
2017 07 21
At the far end of the beach at Birch Point State Park we gathered
by the rocks that David has painted many times before.

1
"How do you paint rocks? 
How do you paint light?"

2
"I'm painting light. I'm not painting stones."

3
"Okay, the sky, there's yellow in the sky, and not a cloud."
"I'm going to bring that light down into the rocks
so that it pours over it."
"That's how you paint rocks."

4
Slow deliberate, well thought out, brush strokes,
more on the rocks, and a pause . . .

5
"Value is flat, color is form."
Cue the gull. And action...

6
Hmm. This bird is dreaming. No way is he going to be
painted today. David Dewey doesn't include birds,
including sea gulls, in his paintings.
Got that Óskar?

7
No John James Audubon treatments today.
Onward.


8
"I need to put another color in here,
a skin color (for the rock),

before I get to the blue."

David uses Kleenex to dab his brushes,
to dab his painting,
to lift watercolor.
How much did he paint this week?

"Three packs of Kleenex this week."

9
A sure steady hand guiding well worn brushes.

10
"I draw during the painting, instead of doing
the whole drawing first, to break things
down into smaller pieces."


11
Under the rock: "That's just it, there."

12
"I'm not sure what I want to do with the water yet."

13
"Okay, water...

14
...just a little lighter, just to get a sense of it."
Done.

15
Like others painted and done, each one unique,
in his Birch Point Beach Rocks series. 

See David's 2014 painting demo
of these rocks on my blog HERE,
which hangs in our home. 

See Ruth Kaldor's 2017 painting of the same rocks
on her blog HERE, where you may leave a comment.

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Dock View of Houses Views . . .

The view that I painted
across the harbor at Sharp's Point South
on Mechanic Street in Rockland, Maine

Dock View of Houses Views
across the harbor at Sharp's Point South
on Mechanic Street in Rockland, Maine
painted plein air on July 20, 2017
12" x 9" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam,
and Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light
fastness and most permanence, and Uniball waterproof
fade proof ink on 140 lb. Fabriano Artistico cold press
rough 100% cotton extra white watercolor paper
$240 USD including frame and shipping, $200 unframed


Critique
of
the painting
above by David Dewey:

"It's Stuart Davis like.
It has a slight
recklessness 
that holds the composition."
Egg Beater No. 1
Stuart Davis (1892-1964)
Oil on linen, 36" x 29" (w x h), 1927
Whitney Museum of American Art, NY

Two Sailboats Too
at Sharp's Point South on Mechanic Street
in Rockland, Maine painted plein air on July 20, 2017
5" x 7" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam, and
Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness and
most permanence, and #3 graphite on 140 lb. Fabriano Artistico
cold press rough 100% cotton extra white watercolor paper
$120 USD including frame and shipping, $100 unframed

David Dewey Inside
His Color Full Workshop
at Sharp's Point South on Mechanic Street in Rockland, Maine
sketched plein air on July 20, completed July 26, 2017
7.25" x 5.5" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam, and
Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness and most
permanence, and Uniball waterproof fade proof ink on 140 lb.
Strathmore 400 Series cold press 100% watercolor paper
$160 USD including frame and shipping, $140 unframed

David Dewey Watercolor Workshop
Day 4, 2017 07 20

"Sometimes I see a painting."

1
"I'm going to do a two-minute thumbnail,
a values snapshot."
2
"I'm painting color over value.
Value simplifies everything and then
the color pulls it together."

On to the painting . . .
3
"Mixing my paints I'm watching the value."
4
"I want to make the space around the
paper dynamic, to control the brilliance
of the page by the way I add value, shaping it,
and the color makes it dance."

While painting David says, "I'm just piddling around."

piddle verb (used without object), piddled, piddling.
1. to spend time in a wasteful, trifling, or
ineffective way; dawdle (often
followed by around).

"Watercolor is the subject,
not the subject matter."
5
In the middle of painting David stops,
picks up his pencil, and explains.
"I'm drawing a little so I can
see where I am in this painting."
6
"The baguette, I wet the paper first,
just to give myself some elbow room."
Paint flows. "Then I weight the bottom
of this down (paint flows on the tilt) to
ground it. And add a little more red
on the bottom, not changing
the values."
7
David seems to look more at the scene that he's
painting, constantly taking it in, more than
looking down at what he's painting.
8
There was a granite statue of a nude woman
directly in front of the view where David
was painting. He stated, "What's that
woman doing in a boatyard?"
We all laughed.
9
That woman, that sculpture,
had been carved by the night watchman
who works here in this boatyard, Joe Auciello.

"Joe Auciello is a self-taught sculptor. His primary passion is the human form, and he has demonstrated his versatility in public and private art commissions. Joe's work has a large following throughout the northeastern United States, where he has sold functional and representational art and garden sculpture through such venues as Directions: Mount Desert Island, Three Rivers Arts Festival and the Philadelphia Furniture and Furnishings Show. Joe's work for the garden uses the natural shapes and properties of stone that comes from Maine and beyond. The grace and beauty of field stone and granite lend themselves to gentle and dynamic carvings that enhance private and public spaces. A founding member of the Maine Stone Workers Guild, Joe can be seen each fall at the Common Ground Country Fair, where he joins fellow guild members in demonstrating his craft. He is a resident of Rockland, Maine, with a workshop in Warren. A man of few words, Joe prefers that his work speak for him." Source: HERE

"Okay, now a little bit of the reflected color
and that's it. I'm ready, ready to glaze the sky."

He was going to wait for it to dry, but . . .
"Aw, what the heck, I'm going to paint the sky."

"I'm going to make the sky luminous,
maybe throw some yellow into it, sunlight."
10
Holding the painting upside down,
then right side up, both at an angle,
so color flows through the wet over the
paper. David evaluates the whole painting."
11
"Look what happened to the water."
The white pops. "Notice the horizontal
division. It's a one, two, three division."
12
Then we painted in this idyllic mid-coast Maine location,
some of us, like Ruth Kaldor, in their
plein air bare feet.
13
David popped by to observe and comment.
He observed Kathy Baribeau's work in progress,
and said, your mast could use some Jaune Brilliant #1,"
which she didn't have. No problem. David dashed over to
his palette, which he'd loaned to Amelia since she'd
lost hers, was back momentarily with a fingertip
full of Jaune Brilliant #1.
It was a Michelangelo moment.

That evening we gathered at Millers Lobster Company
on Wheelers Bay in Spruce Head, Maine (HERE) to eat.
It was a beautiful evening. There was a moment,
observed from the float, and seen by only
the curious few who ventured down,
when our day closed with another
Michelangelo moment.
14
Way to go Sistine.

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Every House Has a Dock . . .

Every House Has a Dock
Almost
at Criehaven Raggedy Island, Maine
painted plein air on July 23, 2017
20" x 14" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam, and
Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness and most
permanence, and Uniball waterproof fade proof ink on 140 lb.
Arches cold press fine grain 100% cotton watercolor paper
$480 USD including frame and shipping, $400 unframed
online at my art blog HERE where you may leave a comment



Every House Has a Dock
Almost, Study
at Criehaven Raggedy Island, Maine
painted plein air on July 23, 2017
10" x 7" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam, and
Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness and most
permanence, and Uniball waterproof fade proof ink on 140 lb.
Arches cold press fine grain 100% cotton watercolor paper
$240 USD including frame and shipping, $200 unframed
online at my art blog HERE where you may leave a comment


The sublime painting setup

While I painted on the dock Ruth,
her painting done, relaxed.
 

Monday, July 24, 2017

Breakwater at Criehaven

"Breakwater at Criehaven is a terrific watercolor."
 
Breakwater at Criehaven
on Ragged Island, off Owls Head, Maine
painted plein air on July 23, 2017
11" x 13" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam,
and Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light
fastness and most permanence, and #3 graphite on 140 lb.
Arches cold press fine grain 100% cotton watercolor paper
$380 USD including frame and shipping, $340 unframed

Saturday, July 22, 2017

Davis Point and Afterward

Photo in evening fog light of the Olsen House,
Andrew Wyeth's headstone and Ruth Kaldor
in Cushing, Maine on July 19, 2017

Afterward
After an art day,
she ambled past an art life
where the hay was mown.


© 2017 Bruce McMillan



 
High Tide Somewhere Else
at Drew and Peter's cove by Davis Point
painted on July 19, 2017
20" x 14" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam, and
Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness and most
permanence, and Faber-Castell waterproof fade proof ink on 140 lb.
Arches cold press fine grain 100% cotton watercolor paper
$380 USD including frame and shipping


High Tide Somewhere Else
Study II
at Drew and Peter's cove by Davis Point
painted on July 19, 2017
20" x 14" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam, and
Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness and most
permanence, and Faber-Castell waterproof fade proof ink on 140 lb.
Arches cold press rough 100% cotton watercolor paper
$280 USD including frame and shipping 


High Tide Somewhere Else
Study I
at Drew and Peter's cove by Davis Point
painted on July 19, 2017
12" x 9" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam, and
Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness and most
permanence, and Faber-Castell waterproof fade proof ink on 140 lb.
Arches cold press fine grain 100% cotton watercolor paper
$120 USD including frame and shipping



Painting Fog
at the Drew and Peter's boathouse on Davis Point
painted on July 19, 2017
14" x 10" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam, and
Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness and most
permanence, and #3 pencil on 140 lb.
Arches cold press fine grain 100% cotton watercolor paper
$320 USD including frame and shipping 


Critique by David Dewey:
"This little mark (the purple/black of the
portable seat's backrest)
makes the whole thing.
It's a little Milton Avery-ish."

"But you are an original."

Sketching by the Sea
Milton Avery, 1944
See forty-three more paintings
of Milton Avery's at Wiki HERE

David Painting by
the Boathouse
of David Dewey at Drew and Peter's boathouse
on Davis Point painted on July 19, 2017
7" x 5" (w x h), Daniel Smith, Schmincke Horadam, and
Winsor & Newton watercolors, selected for light fastness and most
permanence, and Uniball waterproof fade proof ink on 140 lb. Fabriano
Artistico cold press fine grain 100% cotton extra white watercolor paper
$120 USD including frame and shipping


David Dewey Watercolor Workshop
Day 3

On a foggy sunny day
2017 07 19
Quotations by David Dewey

 
1
"You approach the subject, not go through it."

2
On the sky: "The paper is bone dry. Here we go.
Soft clouds. I'm letting the under painting suggest it."
 
3
The fog rolled away, the tide went out 
and David Dewey painted on...
"You approach the subject, not go through it."
 
4
"Work through the first stages, the pairing of the colors."
"As I build up the painting I go darker."

5
For an artist, a pencil had many uses.
 
6
"Detail, I'm just flicking it in."
"I'm going to get into the water so I can just go,
baguette, and get out of here. I'm going to paint in
the baguette, the famous baguette."

7
Baguette: the horizontal long shaped islands on an
ocean's horizon with a flat bottom, and round ends,
resembling a traditional French Bread Baguette.
"Notice the baguette's as they get further and further away,
they get darker, more violet with blue. It's just mingling.
Put in the color and let it do the rest."
 
8
Bruce and Ruth, in circle,
photo by Kathy on the other side of the circle.
 
9
"I try to get the voice of the color down.
And then I can bring it down, strong and then let it out."
 
10
"There," with the there.
 
11
Fog rolled back in for the critique.
 
12
"This one wins the prize."
Boat by Linda Von Rosenvinge
 
13
Down the Path

At the end of the day
Ruth sauntered down
through fresh mowed hay
into the fog
to the shore-side headstones
of Christina, Alvaro, and Andrew.