Tags
abstract, art, forest, Mixed Media, Nature, oil pastel, painting, Paintings, trees, watercolor

I’ve started painting again, keeping toward the abstract, still experimenting with water-color and oil pastel, letting them show me how well they play together.
I’d been inspired by some of Rick Steven’s paintings, his intense close-ups of trees and barks. I love the colors, the texture, the shapes.

The painting above was my initial attempt. At first it seemed too vertical, too placid, so I began to build up the horizontal elements, the “foliage,” and finally came to the place where it seemed “done.”

Next I wanted to do a close-up of a shapely tree trunk, and again I was dissatisfied. Too vertical, no clear focus. So I began to add areas of “lichen,” I suppose you could call it, at the lower right and upper left. Something to attract the eye and allow it to move up or down the trunk. At some point it too seemed “complete.” This one may be my favorite of the three. I like the richness of the colors, the texture.

I’m not sure where the last one came from. I wanted to add a human element into the natural, something partially hidden, peeking out, more figurative than figure. The blue sprite appeared. But further down the tree trunk another face emerged, unbidden. With that addition, the painting took on a more ominous than playful feel. Not what I had intended at all. I’m not sure I like this one. But it haunts me.
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I am I nspired by your depth, intuition, and connection with that which is more than we are.
I see a woman with arms raised in the painting that you describe as the tree with lichen.
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Yes, I can see that too. The tree trunk definitely has a feminine form. Abstract art, enticingly, is open to that kind of varying interpretation. Held horizontally, it looks like a range of mountains with a lake below and sky above.
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awesome…hope you find painting as therapeutic as I do …
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Yes I do find it therapeutic. I was resisting returning to painting, not inspired at all, not in the mood with other things draining my energy. But when I did return, reluctantly, I slid right in, the energy and inspiration returned and I felt refreshed.
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awesome!
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I especially love the first two. So fresh and open. And what colors!
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Thank you, Claudia!
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WOW! These are incredible.
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Thank you so much!
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I love lichen, trees, etc. you have a distinct style. Lovely capturing of trees’ essence.
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I love them too. What a lovely thing to say. Thank you, Raven.
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Really stunning work, Deborah.
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I really appreciate that Cody. Thank you.
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I wonder if circumstances (as alluded to in your prior post) helped nudge you back towards your (he)art…
I often resist that deep urge and crush it thinking, ‘no, it won’t help any and I’ll just muck up technique, etc’ But you didn’t – Brava!
BTW: the last painting grabbed me to where I couldn’t continue scrolling down without really taking it in…
😉
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I’m sure that had something to do with it, especially the last one, I think. I don’t really like the last one, but something about it, when I look, it’s hard to turn away. Maybe there’s something there I need to see that I’m not yet seeing.
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I think your “initial attempt” is my favorite. I have a very serious love affair with trees, and your playful, colorful interpretations made my day. Thank you!
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Thank you, Bethany. I too have a serious love affair with trees.
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I love them all, Deborah. I always get excited when you share your art work. The initial attempt speaks to me most somehow as it depicts leaves, trees, earthiness and living things. The second painting resembles a woman dancing. In fact, the eye seems to get naturally drawn to seeing figures in the abstract. Well done! ❤
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Thank you so much, Joy. Perhaps that’s why I’m drawn more to the second tree painting, that resemblance to a woman joyously dancing.
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congrats!
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