
Lemon, knife and plate, oil on linen panel, 5 x 7 inch (13 x 18 cm), 06/28/2010

Lemon, knife and plate, oil on linen panel, 5 x 7 inch (13 x 18 cm), 06/28/2010

Bananas, green apple, clementine and lemon, oil on paper, image 6.5 x 8.25 in, (16.5 x 21 cm), 02/17/2009
For this recent series of oil paintings, I’ve been preparing Arches 300 lb. cold press watercolor paper with two or three coats of acrylic matt medium. Reading notes from a workshop again, I discovered that the recommendation was for one coat of matt medium followed by two coats of acrylic gesso. Learn by doing – that’s what works.

Teapot and lemon with bananas, oil on paper, image 6.5 x 8.25 in, (16.5 x 21 cm), 02/07/2009
Still Life with Oysters and Lemon
by Mark Doty, Beacon Press, 2001
A personal narrative about art, love, life and loss that is equal parts poetry and philosophy.
In Still Life with Oysters and Lemon, a small 17th century Dutch painting by Jan Davidsz de Heem is the catalyst for Mark Doty’s illuminating meditation on intimacy. His layered contemplation of the still life’s ordinary subject — food and utensils — yields an astonishing complexity of emotion and meaning. Doty is imbued like a euphoric lover with the painting’s warm light after leaving its presence. His senses are heightened. He sees the world anew through its amber lens. He asks, “Why should we have been born knowing how to love the world? We require, again and again, these demonstrations.” Both the painting and the book provide that lesson. He shows how the artist’s act of description is an act of love for the material world, available for the viewer to reciprocate. Doty responds. He explores the painting’s surface, textures, materials and colors with lush specificity. He indulges the reader through his words in the sensual pleasure of gazing upon the artist’s object. Doty reveals the painting to be a repository of the artist’s feeling, experience, memory and time, as is his own work of writing. By describing with patient nuance a sequence of objects in his life, he draws out the intimate relationships bound to them in this moving memoir of his partner’s death.

Teapot with lemon and knife, oil on linen panel, 5 x 7 in. (12.7 x 17.78 cm), 8/19/2008
Today marks the completion of several intersecting projects that I have worked on in the last three months. My website is updated with work from this year and has a new structure, changed from being grouped by medium to being grouped by year or by genre. Two paintings for two shows are framed and donated, both to fund raisers: one for a non-profit gallery, the other for social needs. And the blog continues to be published approximately once a week with images and periodic written pieces. If you would like to be on the mailing list for a paper and ink postcard with information about these events, please send your postal address to me.
Lemon, knife and plate
Lemon, knife and plate, oil on linen panel, 5 x 7 inch (13 x 18 cm), 06/29/2010