Imagine my surprise, therefore, when during the past two weeks I actually had more than a truncated impulse to paint something else. I started doing a substrate thinking it would be for a portrait, but found my inner vision picturing something else on the board, so I went looking for reference photos and made that happen.
The substrate evolved from lessons with Emma Petitt and Michael Carson—spreading around a group of somehow related colors and then stenciling over them. In this case, I chose colors that worked with my subject matter, then stenciled on top with contrasting colors, and then, after painting the picture itself, chose to almost obscure all the original background work with washes or glazes. Some of the shapes and images are still faintly there, and the mix of colors supports the primary colors of the picture, but without fighting for attention.
I was inspired to paint sunflowers by Russell, a new friend on Facebook who apparently grows a wide variety of them and posts daily pictures. So I went looking for a reference photo that would work with my already created background, and tried to keep the whole thing spontaneous and soft-looking like a Carson portrait.
This is "Vase of Sun," acrylics and stenciling on thin birch board, 12x16 inches. I don't know if it will be merely a break from painting portraits, or if I'm on a new tangent. We'll see!