Lavendar, Calendula, Canyon Sunflower and Nasturtium flowers are lighting up the garden these days. I thought I’d paint a couple of still lives to mix things up a bit. Click to View on Daily Paintworks
Plein air lanscape paintings from Santa Barbara and beyond…
Lavendar, Calendula, Canyon Sunflower and Nasturtium flowers are lighting up the garden these days. I thought I’d paint a couple of still lives to mix things up a bit. Click to View on Daily Paintworks
Oil on Canvas 2’x5′
I finished a commission for a really nice young family of the view from the wharf. It was painted from a small casein plain air that I made in December. The last shot is just to show the tomatoes coming still in the middle of January. If we don’t get too much more frost I think that plant might lap the calendar. : )
Cul de Sac Here you see a fifth acre of desert scrub. A black plastic weed barrier buried under decomposed granite with soggy cactus, overwatered mesquite, and Mojave natives poking their heads through circular holes. A tall century bloom swarms with hummingbirds. Next door, you find a formal lot imported from colonial England, with gingerbread epoxied to the stucco. A trimmed lawn with an ornamental plum sprouts bushes and hedges trimmed like lollipops. A red-brick walkway sways pleasantly to the red front door. Apparently, a fifth acre chunk of Hawaii has been excavated shipped overseas, and dropped into the plot next door... Plop! Bermuda grass, palm trees, ginger flowers and trailing bamboo... (the curse of colonial England next door) all flank a pink mailbox in a pad of black lava rock. Down the street, an awkward crispy orange pine tree and some ceramic squirrels create the high mountain ambiance of a Swiss glen. The Dutch annuals explode along the sidewalk like red, yellow, blue and green fireworks (miracle-y growing so far from their Nordic relatives) with their plastic name and care tags sprouting from the salt-and-pepper soil like fuses. The Hawaiians, Mexicans, English and Swiss gossip in their driveways, rolling eyes and cursing the house at the end of the block, so flagrantly violating the HOA... Just look at its weedy, unwatered yard going to seed: an unpruned wild oak planted by jays, dandelions, chickweed, lambs quarters, Red Maids and coastal sage overflowing the mowing strip... No gardeners here but the wild birds. Look at them munching wild seeds, checking their migration maps, and wondering “where on earth are we, anyway?”
“The secret to finding four leaf clovers,” she tells me, “is this- If you look for them, they disappear, but if you DON’T look for them, they DON’T disappear.” She should know, she finds them all the time. "I’ve been not looking for them my whole life," I tell her. “Maybe you haven’t been not looking hard enough.” “Another way to find them,” she tells me, pitying my misfortune, “Is to wait until you feel really lucky- like I just did when that moth let me touch her. Then, you KNOW one is nearby and you find it.” I smile at her, so sincere with sunny freckles, her eyes squinting in the light. I’m feeling so fortunate there’s no need to bother even looking down at the meadow of shamrocks that must be there now, sprouting between my toes.