Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts with the label garden

Herb Garden Yucca

   It's November, and every morning now there is frost on the ground. Even so, t his yucca plant is thriving in the middle of my herb garden. Although not an herb itself, it is surrounded by bee balm, lavender, spearmint, peppermint and catnip in the spring and summer months.  It's a robust perennial, so it stays put long after all the herbs around it have died with the frosty November air.         I love the view looking straight down from the top of the plant. I am also fascinated with the silvery white threads that swirl out playfully from the stalks. The tall stems that radiate from the center shoot out stately spikes of white flowers in the summer.        The yuccas are such a beautiful part of my herb garden that I decided to do some paintings of them. Here they are, along with some photos from my actual plants and a video of the painting process. See those cool white threads?! The paintings and more are ...

Original Hand Painted Art Cards

I am super excited to announce my very own series of  Original Hand Painted Art Cards. Note cards and more are available  on my  Etsy store here   For the rest of the story and to see a video of the entire process of the making of hand painted art cards: Instagram at parts.of_art These hand painted art cards measure 4” x 6” and are painted on white card stock. The card is first folded, painted, and printed with paint using hand carved linocut stamps, inspired from the pages of my illustrated journal.  Each card is an original acrylic painting, and is left blank inside. The card will arrive with envelope in a protective plastic sleeve.  

So it’s a Butterfly Bush

   When my husband and I visited Bavaria in celebration of our 40th anniversary, we spent a few days in a delightful garden cottage in Gebsattel. Right outside the door was a patch of fragrant blossoming bushes that were absolutely populated with butterflies.     The whole garden space was alive, not only with plants, but with the fluttering activity of glorious winged creatures that covered the many blooms. I was inspired by this sight and wanted to capture it with my camera for future paintings. I determined that, once stateside, I would find out whatever this exotic flowering bush was.   Come spring, I started my quest to identify the flower. At my local nursery I showed the picture to the gardener. Her reply?  "I have no idea what the plant is, but the photograph is beautiful! You should be an artist!"        I chose not to go into detail about how I AM an artist, and that's the whole point here. That by then I had done sketches...

Green Tomatoes

Yes, it’s an Indiana thing.  And in my salsa garden, the time is now. This is a recent entry in my illustrated garden journal.  And here’s tonight’s dinner:  Green Tomatoes paintings are available at my shop  here              

Garden Painting

Want to learn how to paint right from the garden? Watch here as a garden grows on watercolor paper right before your eyes!  We have some classes and workshops coming up soon.  Stay tuned right here  for our class schedule.

Waiting for the Paint to dry

    My time in my peaceful country studio revolves around waiting for the paint to dry.         This expression implies mind-numbing boredom. After all, what could be more dumbing down than watching paint dry? I recently saw an experiment where a group of adults were tasked with watching paint dry, just to document how it affected them mentally. It’s pretty easy to guess what happened. Mind. Numbing. Boredom.     Because it actually does take time for paint to dry, it’s a good idea  to have other tasks and projects going on in the studio.  My day starts here, at the watercolor easel, with my current illustrated journal. It’s a new day, which translates into a new white, blank page.  The first thing I do is fill a brush with water, wet the paper, and add color.          One beautiful feature of watercolor paint is that it’s simply colored water. Its very nature is to bleed into the w...

When the Shenanigans are Over

       Shenanigans  | SHəˈnanÉ™gÉ™nz |  pl. noun  informal  secret or dishonest activity or maneuvering :  “ widespread financial shenanigans had ruined the fortunes of many .” •  silly or high-spirited behavior;  mischief . ORIGIN  mid 19th cent. : of unknown  origin .         There will come a time when said shenanigans are over and our lives  will return to some version of normal. So what, until then, do we do?           This past year and a half, as you may already know, I have been immersed in a body of work called “Of the Woods ”. It has been quite an exercise of patient endurance for me, to come up with a series of new pieces and get them completed, photographed, and professionally framed. It’s been like planting seeds in ground that would produce fruit eventually, but its artwork instead of food. And because I had made the decision to give it a year and...

Spring!!

    Around here, Spring doesn't just slowly emerge, it absolutely unfurls with unrivaled exuberance. If it was musical it would be a trumpet. If it was a scent it would be of  freshly cut grass. The  perennial ferns that have been under the ice and snow for months are now shooting up with life and unstoppable vitality. Even though we have had days and days of rain and cold temperatures, it is officially Spring and I for one am so happy to move my inside life outside. Even it its only for one or two days a week, between rains.      This is the season for taking lots of pictures of the vibrant plant life around me, and then translating those photographs to paint and collage.  I am continuing my series “Of the Woods”, but my color palette is keyed to the palette of Spring.         The Spring palette is warm and clear. More yellows and less blues. More pastels and less gray. Ahh, how refreshing! ...