22 September 2024

The original in this palette

The portrait of Emma was a preview of the palette for this piece; and the "similar subject" is a vase of flowers. I'm still having inspiration from still life, and this time it occurred to me to include a piece from my beloved pottery collection, which is mostly Roseville, with a few pieces from McCoy and other early 20th century American pottery houses. This one is Roseville in the "Baneda" pattern, and a particular favorite of mine, both for the colors and design and for the shape. (If you are interested to see the many patterns produced by the Roseville pottery house over the decades between 1900-1950, Just Art Pottery has done a nice summary here.)

I clumped out to the backyard flower bed a couple of days ago and cut a handful of zinnias and one cluster of three little white roses, adding some lemon verbena from my herb garden for greenery/interest, and made an arrangement I thought it would be fun to paint.

 

I decided to continue creating a substrate made up of a few swooshed-on colors as a base layer, following up by using various stencils to create a leafy floral pattern. I chose shades that complemented the colors of the zinnias, which created a strong pattern, so after it was all dry, I knocked it back with a glaze of Titan Mars Pale, which is a light pink with a fleshy tint to it that I frequently use for skin tone on caucasian people.

The rendering of the vase is a lot more realistic than is the bouquet of flowers, so I'm not sure they go as well together as did the sunflowers and swashy shiny vase in my last painting. I tried putting a dividing line on this one, for table surface vs. background like I did in that painting, but it just didn't look right, so I wiped it off before it could dry and then just did a graduated fade of a pale, celery green over the surface of the bottom half of the painting, letting it merge organically with the original pink above the flowers. I also purposely left the stenciling a bit more visible on this one, because I liked how it went with and sort of extended the shapes from the branches of lemon verbena.

I needed to ground the vase somehow so it wasn't floating in the space, so I put in the cast shadow in Chromium Oxide Green, also glazed. (I'm not sure it's enough, but...I can't think what else to do.) I found it interesting that glazing over the two light colors with just the slightest shade of darker green made the underlying stenciling pop back out! Unexpected stuff happens.

I kind of wish I had sanded the board a bit after painting the first layer, because it would have made the rendering of the foliage more realistic (the roughness of the board makes that difficult to accomplish), but hey, there's always something.




This is "Baneda Vase with Zinnias," pencil and acrylics (and stenciling) on thin birch board, 12x16 inches. (The scanner cut off a bit on each side, the leaves aren't that close to the border.)

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