Hello there! I must say, your artwork is truly captivating and incredibly skillful. I'm genuinely impressed by the way you've brought your creative vision to life. I'm very interested in purchasing some of your pieces. Could you please provide more information about availability?
Message me 📥
Leopoldgallery.com would be a good avenue for purchase. Not interested in NFTs.
This is a commission through Leopold Gallery, due near the end of August. That means I need to touch it virtually every day between now and then, if I want to meet that deadline. I’m probably about one-third done.
“Middle-Earth”, 20in x 28in, ink and watercolor on elephant hide paper.
I’m currently in the process of reading “Lord Of The Rings” to my grandchildren on a (mostly) weekly basis. My copy of the book is beautifully illustrated by Alan Lee, but it does NOT have a fold out map that the kids can examine as the story evolves.
So I made one.
It’s all hand lettered and I deliberately “stressed” it a bit with coffee and sandpaper to make it feel ancient and “real”.
I have a deep new respect for Christopher Tolkien’s mapping abilities. He did his original for his father’s book in one sitting over 24 hours (meeting the publisher’s deadline). My copy took about three weeks, and ~80 hours. His was so iconic that I emulated all I could and still add color.
The kids liked it.
They also found four areas where I missed adding color. Those stinkers have the eyes of eagles.
“The Portal Of Dutiful Children”, 24in x 24in, oil on panel.
I finished this one on February 2, but was waiting until I got time to retouch varnish it, so I could evaluate the final color of the thing.
I’m feeling “meh” about this series.
I have struggled with getting the color to visually fade into each other as they progress to the center. It’s not “smooth”enough to match my inner vision, and I think it’s because of my handling of the hatchwork and because the color is different when wet.
I add paint, thinking I have it “smooth” enough to satisfy me, only to find a different shade when I begin the next session’s work. Swatches of each color have not helped. They are far from perfect, but I’m willing to accept “close”.
In frustration, I’ve destroyed six of them, as they weren’t even remotely “close”. Six survive (so far). Sometimes you have to kill your darlings.
I may turn away from the crosshatching in the future. I love the look, but it’s compromising my vision.
“The Portal Of Sanctimonious Error”, 24in x 24in, oil on panel.
I am so close. Need a little more transition between the center and the outside. It will be a relief. I’m in the “dogged perseverance, but hate working on it” phase. That’s fairly normal for me.
I have been working, but the changes each day are subtle enough to be boring, so I neglect posting until I feel there is a visible difference.
“Legends Fall”, 7in x 7in, watercolor on Rives paper.
I sold a couple of big paintings over the holidays, so I indulged in purchasing two watercolor sets that I have coveted for years. One of them is the Kuretake Gambai set. Very smooth and creamy, and a bit opaque. Terrific with the way I crosshatch. And I adore the way the japanese package stuff. No one does it better.
Is it weird that I love making charts of all the colors? It’s my favorite bit about getting new paint.
“Eleven”, “Twelve”, “Thirteen”, and “Fourteen”, 12in x 12in, oil on canvas or panel.
Stacey wanted me to do a small painting for each of the adult kids for Christmas, so I spent the month of December painting these. How did I know what each kid wanted? I sent them a bunch of sketches and told them I was working on a commission, and asked them to rate their favorites.