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Showing posts with label France. Show all posts
Showing posts with label France. Show all posts

Friday, May 2, 2025

Chamonix Postcard

 


Another in my series of paintings inspired by antique postcards... I enjoy recreating the ambiance from back then. Look at all the well-dressed people hanging out in the middle of the street with their hats on. What would they be wearing today? Chamonix is a winter resort in the French Alps but the umbrellas may indicate they were expecting rain or possibly summer sun so it must be off-season. As I started to paint and examine the details more closely I was surprised to see there was a couple embracing in the center. The women on the left seemed to be wearing the same outfit so I imagined that they were working in the hotel to the right and gave them a blue and white uniform. What are they gossiping about with the woman in a brown coat?

In the background, what appears to be a white river coming down the mountain is a glacier: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mer_de_Glace 

"La Mer de Glace, circa 1920"
24x30cm oil on canvas

 

Saturday, February 8, 2025

Street View Paris

 

 

Marla Laubisch is launching a new virtual painting project called "Virtual Hike" (see her blog). This month Paris is her location so I decided to join in. You find a spot you like in Google Street View, paint it, and then send her the image along with the Google link and your blog link. Let's try it out...

Here's my tiny oil painting of "La Rotonde" in the 6th arrondissement. Looks about how I remember it. Also it's great seeing how bicycle-friendly the city has become since my student days there. Makes me want to go back and visit.

 

"La Rotonde"
oil on 15x15cm canvas 

Friday, December 2, 2022

Les falaises d'Etretat

"L'aguille d'Etretat"
30x30cm oil on canvas

I couldn't resist painting another view of the iconic cliffs at Etretat. Since rock formations on the Normandy coast usually have names, I did some research. To my surprise, I found videos of some recent landslides near Etretat. Here -- YouTube -- a young photographer caught some of the action on camera. The town mayor is worried there could be more rocks falling and points out some crevasses in the cliffs. On another video, an expert explains that the entire Normandy coast is threatened by the phenomena, partially caused by global warming.

More on the cliffs:  les falaises tourism


Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Etretat


"Etretat"
40x40cm oil on canvas

There's a Landscape Art Club on Instagram that published some photos of Etretat this week. I've always dreamed of painting there. Well, this was the next best thing: exploring another of Monet's haunts via the Internet. Again, I wanted to stay away from turps. So this is nothing but oil paint and linseed oil. I tried to keep it loose while putting more texture on the surface and used a variety of paint brands -- all the odds and ends that have found their way into my paintbox. For instance, I discovered that the weird Rowney Georgian "flesh tint" was useful on the cliffs. I'm happy with the way this one turned out. 

Thursday, November 17, 2022

Quelque Chose de Monet

"Quelque chose de Monet"
60x70cm, oil on canvas

At the start, this was going to be an exact copy of Monet's "Belle-Ile, rochers de Port-Goulphar". I discovered this series in Denise Delouche's book: "Monet à Belle-Ile". I'd never read such a thorough analysis of Monet's working methods. She includes photographs of the locations he painted so you can see exactly how he interpreted what he saw.

After all my tiny ACEOs, and after watching a documentary on the American abstract painter, Joan Mitchell, I felt the urge to paint big: Arte Documentary on Joan Mitchell

So I prepared a 60x70cm canvas with some extra gesso (the original Monet is a close 65x81cm), selected large brushes and started this with Cobra water-soluble oil paints. For my initial sketch, I tried not to resort to turps or odorless mineral spirits (which, I've learned, also produce toxic fumes even if you can't smell them) but the Cobra idea didn't work. The paint was still oily when I applied the next layer. So I wiped it away with a cloth and just used regular oil paint, applied as thinly as I could. Later I added more linseed as needed. As I progressed I found I liked the airiness of the unfinished copy so I put the book down and just touched up here and there.  

Some notes on Monet's palette:

It's difficult to judge colors from a photograph in a book but I read on line that Monet once revealed his palette: Flake White, Cadmium Yellow, Vermilion, Deep Madder, Cobalt Blue, Emerald Green. Of course, this is a translation which can lead to confusion (ref: Monet by Himself, by Richard Kendall, MacDonald & Co, London, 1989). I'd rather read this in the original because I've learned that the French "Emeraude" is sometimes translated as "Emerald Green" but is in fact "Viridian." Emerald green refers to Paul Veronese green. In any case, the point is that he used a limited palette. Interestingly, he stopped using black paint in 1886, which is the year he painted these boulders in Belle-Ile. I think I tend to mix ultramarine with alizarin to get close to black. But I thought I saw some green in the blacks in the water. Later I was surprised to read painters use green and alizarin to make black. I did that here without knowing. I would like to read "Monet by himself" but the reviews say he doesn't often talk about his technique.*

Working on a canvas nearly the same size as the one Monet used in the field brought me closer to understanding his methods. I could almost feel his concentration and enjoyment, as he strove towards the outer limits of what was then acceptable in the art world and also the urgency of finishing the painting in what must have been very uncomfortable conditions given the wind and ruggedness of the terrain. Wouldn't it be fun to visit Belle-Ile and paint there: Tourist office

--------------------------
added 9/5/23:

* I've since found a better resource for studying Monet's paint palette: Roy, A. 'Monet's Palette in the Twentieth Century: "Water-Lilies" and "Irises"'. National Gallery Technical Bulletin Vol 28, pp 58–68.
http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/technical-bulletin/roy2007

Roy gives you the original French as follows: "Blanc d’argent, jaune cadmium, vermillion, garance foncée, bleu de cobalt, vert émeraude et c’est tout" 

As I suspected his translation is: "lead white,
cadmium yellow, vermilion, deep madder lake, cobalt blue and viridian". But he adds that this list may not have been accurate.

Monet's paint supplier recalled a different set of colors: "lead white, cobalt violet light, viridian, fine quality French (synthetic) ultramarine, vermilion (rarely), a trio of shades of cadmium yellow (light, dark and lemon-yellow) and another yellow pigment (outremer jaune citron), probably zinc yellow or a similar material"

An art dealer looked at his palette and reported "cobalt, du bleu d’outremer, du violet, du vermillon, de l’ocre, de l’orange, du vert foncé, un autre vert pas très clair, du jaune d’ocre, et enfin du jaune d’outremer. Au milieu, des montagnes de blanc des sommets neigeux."

In any case, Monet appears to have been annoyed at these questions about his palette, probably thinking an artist could create with whatever colors he had. But I thought I would investigate because I wondered how to best constitute a limited palette of high quality paint given the huge selection of colors available today.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Vive la France!






Today is Bastille Day (14th of July) and I've just returned from visiting the French city of Metz, so I thought it fitting to post my sketches from the trip! (Further details on my Flickr account.)

Monday, May 24, 2010

Le Jardin Botanique à Metz, France



"Le Jardin Botanique"
Colored Pencil in sketchbook

Saturday, September 15, 1990

Paintings from Trouville, France

Souvenirs from Normandy (location paintings in oil):



"La poissonnerie et le quai" (August 1986)
13 x 16 inch, oil on canvas
Private collection, USA





Les Vaches Noires (the cliffs in the distance),
painted in Villers sur Mer early one morning in August 1986 

"Les Vaches Noires" 
22x27cm, oil on canvas





This canvas has a lot of sand in the paint! 

"La Plage de Trouville"
24 x 30 cm, oil on canvas


Another sandy canvas of the beach in Trouville, where you can see a bit of the Hotel des Roches Noires on the right.

"La Plage avec l'Hotel des Roches Noires"
18x24cm, oil on canvas

Here's a link to Monet's painting of the hotel (which I know well because I copied it twice!): Monet


VIEWS FROM MY WINDOWS:


"Rooftops before the storm"
19x24cm, oil on canvas panel



"Rooftops with church"
50x40 cm, oil on canvas












"Rooftops in the sun"
22.5 x 27.5 cm, oil on masonite




From another window:

"Villas on the hill"
30 x 24 cm, oil on canvas




"Near Deauville"
6x8 inch, oil on canvas panel





"Sunset in Trouville"
24x19cm, oil on canvas











Monday, June 19, 1989

"En passant par la Lorraine"



"Le Jardin botanique à Montigny les Metz" 
16.5 x 12 cm, oil on canvas paper



"La Cathédrale de Metz" (1989)
22x16cm, oil on canvas panel
(private collection, France)




"Le Palais de Justice à Metz" (1990)
19x27cm, oil on canvas panel



"Le Hameau de Colming avec une botte de foin" (August 2003)
24x30cm, oil on canvas



"View of the road from Colming to Bettange" (August 2003)
24x30cm, oil on canvas
(private collection, USA)




"Bettange seen from Colming" (August 2003)
24x30cm, oil on canvas
(private collection, USA)



"Le Hameau de Colming avec l'arbre" (August 2003)
18x24cm, oil on canvas
(private collection, Metz)


Church in Montigny les Metz (painted from the Botanical gardens in 1990) 
15.5 x 21cm, oil on canvas paper


Views from the back balcony of our apartment in Montigny-les-Metz in 1989.



"Metz rooftops with red tree"
19x24 cm, oil on canvas paper

"View from back balcony" 
24x18cm, oil on canvas panel

Thursday, March 30, 1989

Paintings from Metz, France



"St Pierre aux Nonnains à Metz" (1990)
18x24cm, canvas panel




"Promenade à Metz" (1990)
30x40cm, oil on canvas
(private collection, Brussels)




"Vue de Metz" (1990)
18 x 24 cm, oil on canvas




"La Moselle à Metz" (March 1990)
40x60cm, oil on canvas

Sunday, January 31, 1988

Abbesses





An early attempt at painting from a photograph. 

"Abbesses"
oil on canvas
(private collection, Dilbeek)