Artists
Related: About this forumTwo recent landscape paintings
It's been a long time since I posted any of my paintings. But I retired in the spring, so I've had time to go out oil painting more days than not. It's been heaven! I can't express how happy it makes me feel--a mix of peacefulness and elation that stays with me for the rest of the day.
Here are a couple of recent ones, both painted at nearby state parks. I went back three or four times to each site to finish them.
Ocelot II
(122,466 posts)Very well done!
femmedem
(8,469 posts)I love your work, too!
SheltieLover
(61,380 posts)TY for sharing them with us!
femmedem
(8,469 posts)It's my pleasure to share them. I've been meaning to be active in this forum again. The folks here are so supportive.
SheltieLover
(61,380 posts)TY again!
MLAA
(18,824 posts)They feel gentle and soft. Fantastic and I look forward to many more. Didnt you post a self portrait a while back? If was perfect, and also had a softness.
femmedem
(8,469 posts)The softness is probably due to my bad eyesight! Especially when I'm landscape painting, I don't wear glasses when I paint because I want to be able to see distance more than I want to see the canvas. I have to admit, sometimes I'm unhappily surprised when I finally put my glasses on and look at what I've done.
MLAA
(18,824 posts)Im about to finish a little dog portrait (my comfort zone) and stretch myself by tackling a portrait of a friends baby. Ive done so many cats and dogs Ill probably put whiskers on the baby!
But seriously, good luck with the portrait. It will mean the world to your friend.
ZZenith
(4,338 posts)I really appreciate your composition and sense of light. Vibrant AND subdued. Beautiful.
femmedem
(8,469 posts)You sure put a smile on my face!
Karadeniz
(23,677 posts)femmedem
(8,469 posts)It took a lot of painting and repainting because it was changing so fast. But you know, there are a lot of worse ways to spend a morning than standing on a footbridge overlooking a marsh, painting and repainting water.
Clouds Passing
(3,441 posts)femmedem
(8,469 posts)And I love your username. Talk about imparting a sense of serenity!
Clouds Passing
(3,441 posts)sinkingfeeling
(53,670 posts)femmedem
(8,469 posts)That top one is the more recent of the two. It's probably still wet. I had gone decades without painting, then started again very part time about five years ago--I think I only painted one painting in 2023. Now I'm learning and learning and learning.
Diamond_Dog
(35,651 posts)The softness, the colors, the light
oh my you did a great job! Love them!
femmedem
(8,469 posts)It means a lot to me to see you and the other people responding so warmly.
marlboroman369
(5 posts)Well done.
femmedem
(8,469 posts)And welcome to Democratic Underground!
Auggie
(32,003 posts)Design, technique, depth, color ... quite beautiful. Looking forward to more of your posts.
femmedem
(8,469 posts)I appreciate it--and I hope I come up with more paintings worth sharing!
AltairIV
(714 posts)Those are both very good! Hope you have many fruitful and relaxing days of painting ahead of you.
femmedem
(8,469 posts)I hope so, too. These days, when Mr. Femmedem and I are both retired and healthy, are precious.
AllaN01Bear
(23,780 posts)femmedem
(8,469 posts)AllaN01Bear
(23,780 posts)ailsagirl
(23,984 posts)femmedem
(8,469 posts)ailsagirl
(23,984 posts)Renoir?
Degas?
femmedem
(8,469 posts)sparked my interest in painting. And I love the early American Impressionists, like Childe Hassam and William Merritt Chase--I live about a half hour from the Florence Griswold Museum, which was the site of an early American Impressionist art colony and which now features their work. But I love a lot of contemporary painters, too: Edmond Praybe, Zoey Frank, and Amaya Gurpide who is co-director of the Lyme Academy of Fine Art, just down the street from the Florence Griswold museum. Look at this beautiful drawing of hers: https://amayagurpide.com/new-gallery/pnitentia
Do you draw or paint?
ailsagirl
(23,984 posts)But I love to go to art galleries and lose myself at home going through my Janson art books.
My mom had bought a few diffrent Janson art books and, as I child, I found myself looking through them again and again.
Some of my favorites:
Degas, Renoir, Munch, Van Gogh, Monet, Klimt, and many others.
You truly have a gift!
femmedem
(8,469 posts)Your mom gave you a great gift by exposing you to such beautiful art. It sounds like it has brought you much joy.
ailsagirl
(23,984 posts)Today, I am quite the reader (both my parents were). Books add so much to one's life!! What a gift from them!!
LoisB
(9,253 posts)dgauss
(1,205 posts)(On edit, meant to reply to OP...)
femmedem
(8,469 posts)I appreciate that!
femmedem
(8,469 posts)They're small. The top one is 8" x 10" and I think the bottom one is 9" x 12".
BobTheSubgenius
(11,844 posts)My wife also gets a lot of joy from painting. She went to a tiny highschool in a tiny town in WNY. Somehow, an exhibit of the art from graduating seniors was seen by someone from an art college in P'burgh, and the college offered her a scholarship. She was flattered, but declined.
She said "I love art, and one day, I won't want to draw an apple, and that day will be when it becomes something I have to do, instead of want to." She was equally drawn to social work and spent her career with the Boys and Girls Club, which she LOVED. Went from unpaid intern while still in college, to retiring as a regional director.
She still paints. I'm glad you do, too.
femmedem
(8,469 posts)Art school kind of did kill my love of painting for decades, and I spent the last phase of my career in the nonprofit world.
Edited to add: and I'm from rural New York, too! There were about 2000 people in my hometown, spread out over a goodly number of square miles.
BobTheSubgenius
(11,844 posts)Early on, I really wanted to introduce her to my life-long friend Jeannie (we met in a split Grade 2 and 3 class) and it went pretty well, I'd say. Dave and I went to the store for something, and when we came back, the two of them were drinking juice and working on a jigsaw. When my now-wife left the room, J whirled around, pointing at me and saying "Don't you DARE let this one get away."
I'd say the chances that the two of you would get on are good.
wolfie001
(3,975 posts)Very serene and the brushstroke is flawless! I'm duly impressed!
femmedem
(8,469 posts)Someone asked me who my favorite painters are, and I would have listed them if I knew their individual names rather than just "those Russian landscape painters."
wolfie001
(3,975 posts)He's my fave! You can feel the strain on the boat haulers faces in that epic painting! Poor serfs probably got paid with some watered-down borsch and some stale bread. Cheers and keep hitting that canvas!
femmedem
(8,469 posts)wolfie001
(3,975 posts)The Barge (that's the term they use) Haulers and it's in unbelievable high-def graphics. Enjoy!
femmedem
(8,469 posts)in art or in person. You can feel that they're ready to drop.
I also love his portraits, especially of the artists and writers he knew, like his portrait of Vsevolod Mikhailovich Garshin. Thank you so much for introducing his work to me.
wolfie001
(3,975 posts)So glad to hear!!! Cheers
EarnestPutz
(2,733 posts).....by someone of considerable talent. Thank you for posting.
femmedem
(8,469 posts)Some of whom do work I'm in awe of, and others of whom are learning, and whose journeys I enjoy watching.
I would hate for your comment to discourage anyone, as much as I appreciate your praise of my work.
irisblue
(34,585 posts)femmedem
(8,469 posts)I only say that because sometimes people don't develop their artistic side because they think people who've been drawing or painting for years were born knowing how to paint. I was like that with music: my dad was a wonderful jazz pianist with perfect pitch, and as a little girl I didn't understand that he started by playing Twinkle Twinkle Little Star and scales.
Mr.Bill
(24,906 posts)I could never put it into words, but then about ten years ago, it hit me. The softness and colors remind me of my dreams. It's just out of focus enough to make me remember it. Your examples reinforce my views very much. Thanks for posting them.
femmedem
(8,469 posts)I thought their work was pure magic. Then I went to art school and back then, Impressionism wasn't in vogue. But my love for Impressionism never left, and now I Iive near the birthplace of American Impressionism. There's an American Impressionist Museum about twenty minutes away, next to an art association which carries on the tradition. I visit both of them at least every month. It still inspires and teaches me.
nuxvomica
(13,105 posts)Last edited Fri Aug 30, 2024, 08:17 PM - Edit history (1)
But the first one is especially delightful when you scroll down and suddenly the reflection of the sky appears. Art should entertain the eye, compelling it to linger like a lovesick fan at the stage door, and these paintings certainly do that.
femmedem
(8,469 posts)That's a wonderful metaphor! You're quite a writer.
LiberalLoner
(10,313 posts)So far I always fail. But I keep hoping maybe someday!
Beautiful work!
femmedem
(8,469 posts)I wanted you to see how I combined brushwork with palette knife work.
LiberalLoner
(10,313 posts)femmedem
(8,469 posts)And sometimes I use it to layer one color over another almost like a scumble, with the lower color coming through. If the first color is more of a shadow and the palette-knifed color layered on top is warmer and lighter, it can look like foliage coming up through shadow and catching the light.
And sometimes I use the palette knife not to add paint but to soften edges if they're jumping out and drawing the eye to an area that I don't want to be a focal point.
Rizen
(822 posts)I like your tree!
femmedem
(8,469 posts)pokes through. I used to think you painted the sky, then all the branches, but it works out better if you paint large, simple tree and foliage shapes, then define the branches by painting the sky in between them.
judesedit
(4,526 posts)femmedem
(8,469 posts)until you're happy with it.
judesedit
(4,526 posts)I agree that there is nothing more impressive than a great oil portrait or landscape, though. Beautiful job. Thanks so much for sharing.
femmedem
(8,469 posts)Working outside, they dried almost too fast for my taste--I like working wet into wet--but drying extender helped. I still have some acrylics, and I could see myself using them again, especially for quick plein air sketches. But when I switched to oils, I just found them so rich and delicious. It might just be that I'm more familiar with them, because waaaaaaay back in college, that's all we ever used.
Frances
(8,579 posts)Id love to know
femmedem
(8,469 posts)and the second one is at Harkness Memorial Park in Waterford, Connecticut, just a few miles from our home in New London. I'm lucky to live close to quite a state and municipal parks along Long Island Sound.
Frances
(8,579 posts)I love your paintings
Bristlecone
(10,569 posts)The reflection(s) of the tree line and the sky in the water look really good.
The light and color on the top large tree are fantastic.
Great work.
femmedem
(8,469 posts)I appreciate your taking the time to look and comment.
bif
(24,501 posts)femmedem
(8,469 posts)I'm enjoying your work as well. I'm sure I've told you this before, but I'm inspired by your ability to notice the beauty in everyday objects. (Those glasses and their reflection!)
flying rabbit
(4,802 posts)femmedem
(8,469 posts)Much appreciated!
GPV
(73,135 posts)I feel so lucky to live in an area full of beautiful, inspiring scenery.