Showing posts with label water. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

"Good Morning" original oil painting by Nancy Laliberte

"Good Morning"
© Nancy Laliberte
5" x  7" oil on linen, plein-air 
Sold

Back in Door County! On this day my painting friend Jane Barnard and I were up before sunrise and painted the changing sky as the sun rose and touched the tips of the trees across the shore, and the clouds lifted and moved onward. It was beautiful, enchanting and mesmerizing.

For this piece I kept the canvas white and focused on color notes (shapes of color) and worked quickly to capture what was happening and what I was feeling. It was a blast!

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• Be sure to check out the great classes I have coming up in November including Yoga + Art, Art & Soul Creative Journaling, and Playing with Paint 
• See more artwork at Nancy Laliberte Fine Art
• See what happens behind the scenes, LIKE and follow the studio on Facebook


*free US shipping and discounted international shipping through Dec. 31, 2013

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Petite Peinture: Vacation Sky

 "Vacation Sky"
© Nancy Laliberte
4" x 4" x 1-3/8" acrylic on canvas
SOLD

With a few beach combing finds...

Do sunrises and sunsets seem to be the most beautiful ever when we are on vacation? Is it because we are intentionally slowing down and savoring every moment away from the daily routine? I say, pause and take the time to make every sunrise or sunset a vacation sky.

Perfect for yourself or gift-giving, all of the petite peinture paintings are wired for hanging or can be displayed on a shelf or table top.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Inspiration and Joy

"Lily Reaching"
© Nancy Laliberte
12" x 12" Acrylic on gallery-wrapped canvas
SOLD

From the where we live exhibit at the Center for the Visual Arts gallery in Wausau, now through November 7, 2010. Something I have always wanted to paint: water lilies. Paint what inspires you. It will bring you joy.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

More from the Northwoods

"An Inviting Place"
© Nancy Laliberte
10" x 8" acrylic on canvas panel
plein air study

This is another painting from my recent plein air workshop with artist Ken DeWaard. One of the things Ken talked about in the workshop was, "What's your story? What do you want to say (with your painting)?" With this piece, I thought the sandy shore in the midground looked like an inviting place. I used the foreground grass and pine trees as a way to lead the eye in by keeping the values a bit darker (which they were); and exaggerated the grayness of the background to create a greater sense of distance (which it wasn't so much). With plein air painting you learn to push and pull values and color to help "tell your story." Painting exactly what you see, may not be the best way to tell your story. I may add some people and a canoe to the beach. They weren't there at the time, but that is the beauty of artistic license.

In a nutshell...
More tips and techniques learned from Ken's workshop.
• Have several panels prepared with a couple of different color washes. Lots of green? Try a warmer, reddish panel. (I like transparent red oxide.) Lots of sky or winter? Try a ochre or transparent yellow oxide wash. Experiment! (shown above)
• Starting: Draw a line around the panel about 1/2 inch in or so as a visual reminder for composition and framing. (shown above)
• Look for verticals, horizontals and diagonals in your scene. Make thumbnail sketches of the basic SHAPES (not objects!). (shown above)
• Step back.
• Color and value notes: Lay in your lightest light, darkest dark, and brightest color.
• Step back.
• Squint for value, look at the edges of shapes for color.
• Step back.
• Mass in local color.
• Step back.
• Go back and define the color shapes with cools and warms. Keep values close to original, then go into temperature changes. Build up the subtleties.
• Step back.
• Add details to the focal point. That area should have the most contrast and detail.
• Step back. I think you get the idea on this one : )
• Keep in mind, your darkest darks are not shadows, they are underneath objects. With sunlit objects, the dark color under them will be warmer because the ground is warmer, or sunlit around the object.
• Be saturated in your color, it is easier to gray down color than it is to jack it up.
• If you paint a warm color note, follow it with a cool color note, vice versa. For some great examples of this, see Ken's work, Dan Gerhartz's and Scott Burdick's to name few.

This is the second time I have studied with Ken. Not only is he an incredible artist, he is also a great teacher and person. I highly recommend his workshops.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

From the South Shore of Lake Superior

"Water Play"
© Nancy Laliberte
8" x 6" Acrylic on panel
$95

I love the sound of moving water from the ocean, a brook or even a garden fountain. It is so peaceful and relaxing. While visiting and painting with my good friend, Val Berkely, I was captivated by the waves coming in and dancing on the rocks along the shore. My challenge was to capture the color changes in the water as it ebbed and flowed over the iron-rich rocks indigenous to Lake Superior.