Tuesday, December 22, 2015

12 in 15

Queen's  24 x 30 - SOLD
I paint and sketch fairly prolifically and like to look back over what has been produced during the year and pick twelve of my favourites.  I'd love to know which are your favourites and why.  Colour, composition, subject...it helps me plan what to paint in the future.

The paintings are not in order of preference.

Red Boat - SOLD

Tethered  16 x 20 - SOLD


Sea Harvesters  - SOLD

Evening Tide  SOLD

Iced In   SOLD 


Benoit's Cove  SOLD


Deep Bight - 24 x 24

 Flatrock Harbour  15 x 30 - Sold

 
Shore Leave 11 x 14 

Summer Ducks

Saturday Night Girls   SOLD






Monday, December 21, 2015

Night Anchor

 Night Anchor - SOLD
12" x 16"  oil on canvas

This is the latest painting off the easel.  Its a smaller piece 12" x 16" which is a good size that doesn't take too long to paint or cause too much stress in process - usually.

Its funny as whatever size I paint, invariably someone wants the opposite in size.  If I paint large, they want small, if I paint small they need large.  So I continue to create a mix of sizes that meet a variety of likes.  Painting a variety of sizes keeps the process interesting for me, allowing different compositions and less intense painting time.

I liked the time of day for this painting.  Twilight is truly the magic hour for artists where colours start to fade and the sun creates warmth on subjects that it hits as its sets.   I still have a need to create some night paintings, hopefully next year.

Sunday, December 20, 2015

Save on small paintings




Christmas is the time for giving back and giving thanks for the support of others over the past year.  The last two Christmas seasons have been difficult with illness one year and the death of my mother the next.  Its as if the season was skipped entirely during these years or just a cursory glance given to it.  This year is more festive and is a celebration of the past year's successes.



During Christmas Week, I am offering 25% off everything in my Etsy store.  This shop is where I make small painting available, that range from 5" x 7" up to 9" x 12". Larger paintings are available through Peter Lewis Gallery or direct from me on my website www.jeanettejobson.com.

By offering a discount, I hope I provide an incentive for you to obtain some original art to start or add to your collection or the collection of someone else.  Think upcoming birthdays, anniversaries, graduation gifts, or perhaps just an indulgence of the season for yourself.

The discount is available from December 20 - 27th.   Simply enter FESTIVE25 at checkout and you'll automatically receive the 25% discount on the original price.

Don't forget to comment on my blog post if you want your name to be entered into the draw for the original painting "The Spice Girls" on December 31st. 

Sunday, December 13, 2015

Colouring for adults


I'm sure most people have seen the colouring books geared towards adults lately.  Colouring is the new relaxant, though I'm sure there are differing opinions and differing outcomes for every illustration, depending on expectation.  But for filling a spare 30 minutes or destressing after a busy day at work, its worth losing yourself in an activity that doesn't demand a lot of concentration.

I've created eight illustrations of fish and boats that you can download, print and colour.  Best of all, they're free!  Try them yourself, send them to your friends, give them to the children or Granny to keep them occupied while you're preparing the Christmas feast.  Use coloured pencils or pens and create your own masterpiece.

I'd love to see what you create.  If you'd like to share, do so in the comment section.  Enjoy!

Download the colouring sheets

Tuesday, December 08, 2015

Learning to see

 Dance Partners
6" x 8" oil on panel

In classes, I get asked over and over and over how I see shapes or colours and how I decide on what to put on the painting.  I thought I'd create a short series of information pieces on seeing that will be available in the new year.  It is a challenge for many beginning artists to understand just what they're supposed to look for.  They often use a photo reference slavishly and don't make independent decisions around value or colour for fear of it "not looking right".   In this information series, I will illustrate and explain what I look for, how I see shapes and how I create colour decisions.

Here's an example of how I make colour decisions, based on this painting "Dance Partners".

When I paint, I try my best to stay within the colour wheel, using the most saturated, intense colours possible to ensure that I don't stray too far into desaturation, or mud.  

I mix colours to create secondary and tertiary hues and use complementary colours that really bounce off each other almost, giving harmony.   I introduce paler or brighter tints of those colours and introduce background colours into the subject and subject colours into the background to provide interest and an overall cohesiveness.

I often add tiny shots of pure colour that are part of the analogous section of the colour wheel that represent the hues of the subject or are a direct complement of the subject colour.   For instance in the green apple, I mixed pthalo blue and cad lemon yellow in varying amounts to create the greens.  For highlights, I add a pale yellow green mixed simply with a lot of CLYwith a tiny amount of PB and a shot of pure CLY out of the tube for the top.   Can you see that bit of pale blue in the green apple or the shot of blue in the red?  This is where I can indicate value but am not tied to the reference. 

For those starting the path in art, it can be challenging to make leaps of faith that allow growth as it moves them outside their comfort zone.  Experience and practice are key elements that train the ability to see more clearly and make decisions based on information instead of guesswork.  As well, a strong background in drawing and colour theory are essential for anyone seriously considering creating art.

Saturday, December 05, 2015

Eclectic Eight


The opening takes place tonight (December 5th) for a group exhibition I am taking part in.  Three boat paintings will make their debut at the gallery and I'll be in the company of seven other artists showing a wide range of subjects and styles.  The opening reception is at Peter Lewis Gallery from 7 - 9 pm Saturday December 5th and I'd love to see you there.

Tethered  16" x 20

The exhibition runs until December 19th and is a perfect lead up to the Christmas season. What better way to spend a winter's evening but with a glass of wine, art conversation and beautiful paintings? While many of my paintings can be seen online, there really is no comparison to seeing a piece in person under the wonderful gallery lighting.   The colours are more intense and the subtle value changes can be seen more clearly. 


Meanwhile I'm just about ready for the what is becoming "annual" Painting Christmas workshop which will take place tomorrow.  I've put up a tree (the earliest time ever in my life!) and its looking festive.  Even the weather added some snow yesterday to add to the seasonal feel. Lots of learning and painting will take place in addition to a delicious three course home cooked lunch with wine.  It may be difficult to get that afternoon painting in after that!




Tuesday, December 01, 2015

Painting Giveaway!


To celebrate the season, I am giving away an original painting.  This piece, "The Spice Girls" is 9" x 12" in oils on a gessoed masonite panel.  These peppers are bright and colourful, perfect for brightening a bleak mid winter day and painted using only a palette knife.  The painting is valued at $325.

Italian pepperoncini peppers grow easily in the greenhouse here in our short growing season and they make perfect painting subjects with their bright colours. The Spice Girls really aren't that spicy and are often pickled or used in making antipasto.

To enter, you simply need to comment on this post.  For an additional entry, sign up to my free mailing list (see the link on the popup or on the right side of this blog) and receive the monthly Studio news.

The deadline for entry is 9:00pm Newfoundland time on December 31st.  The winner will be drawn for before midnight on December 31st and contacted by email, but don't forget to check back here on New Year's Day to find out who is the winner.

Good luck!

Friday, November 27, 2015

Glass fishing floats

 
Norway was the first country to start production and use of glass fishing floats around 1840 where glass floats were on gill nets in the cod fishery and then adopted by Japan in the 1940s. Glass fishing floats aren't seen much anymore and ones available for sale range in price depending on the colour. I have friends in the antique business with a whole window full of them that are just beautiful when the light comes through.

I've done this small study in watercolour in a sketchbook to help me decide if I want to invest time (and patience) to create a full sized painting in oils.   There is a lot of detail and this is just a crop of the whole reference that I would use.

Studies really are the key to working out decisions on composition, colour and technique to avoid painting half way through a large piece and deciding nothing is working.

I'm looking carefully at the subtle changes in value and hue that painting glass presents and thinking how I can translate that into oils using just a palette knife.

I think another study is in order using oils and a knife before I make a final decision.

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Brigus South


 Brigus South - SOLD
24" x 30" on canvas

Fishing sheds, stages, twine lofts...every structure that loads fish, dries fish, is a set off point or a home port or a refuge to mend nets or meet with "the boys" for a few beers and a chat, have different names in Newfoundland.

Like many fishing related structures in the province many are not in use with the decline of the fishery, so they sit there, with nature adding and detracting from their character.


I found these fishing sheds/stages in Brigus South, a tiny community nestled on a small inlet harbour at the foot of tall rocky cliffs.  Weather and time is taking its toll on what must have been points of activity when the fishery was in its heyday.  Now they sit and await their fate.

Monday, November 09, 2015

Flanders Field


 Flanders Field - SOLD
oil on panel

The poppy is the recognized symbol of remembrance for war dead in Canada, the countries of the British Commonwealth, and the United States. November 11th known as Remembrance Day in Canada is a holiday, honouring the more than 100,000 Canadians who died in war.  On that day, and many other days, I think of those soldiers who have served, those who have sacrificed and those who have died so that we have the freedom we experience today.

For the last few years I haved painted a poppy to honour those who have gone before, including my great uncle, killed in World War I, the most brutal of wars. He died aged 22 and his body was never found.

  Gordon Clarence Bastow
1894 - 1916

This year, the poppy is called "Flanders Field".  The original poem was written by a Canadian military doctor Major John McCrae.  As the brigade doctor, John McCrae was asked to conduct the burial service for a killed comrade because the chaplain had been called away somewhere else on duty that evening. It is believed that later that evening, after the burial, John began the draft for his now famous poem “In Flanders Fields”.

In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.

Wednesday, November 04, 2015

Brigus South WIP



Detail from Brigus South
Work in Progress
Oil on stretched canvas, 24"x 30"

This small section above is a crop of a new painting that I am working on or some older fishing sheds and stages in Brigus South.  They look like they've seen better days, which makes them all the more appealing to me.  There's nothing duller than a bright, shiny paint finish to me.  I like the character that age brings to the table.

Its funny how paintings evolve from the initial concept through to finish.   I believe most artists have similar stages they pass through in completing a painting, even if the style or medium varies.  And like all paintings, there are sections that are more appealing than others to paint.

For me it buoys.  I love painting buoys.  I don't know if its the shape, the colours, the values, but its like having the cherry on the top of the dessert to get  to paint them.  Sometimes, I even make the buoy the subject as in this one.

Buoy - SOLD

Saturday, October 31, 2015

Show me the easy way

 Night Watch - SOLD
5" x 7" oil on panel

“Skills aren’t enough on their own. Emotion has to come through. But when you’ve got the various skills sewn up, that’s one thing you don’t have to worry about.” (Zoe Benbow) 

There is a belief from some people who want to set off on their own art journey is that there are shortcuts to success.  I hate to burst bubbles, but the only way to acheive success is through good old fashioned hard work.

The process of repetition provides familiarity with using tools, making marks, judging proportion, mixing colour and creating values.  We all start out as horrible artists.  I know I did.  My first efforts were worthy only of destruction, though some kind people kept some of them.  And well they did, as they become a marker to show beginnings and measure progress.

Where did the concept of "easy" come from?  Experienced artists make drawing and painting look effortless, but that thought must be tempered with understanding just how many hours and years of work it took to instill those "effortless" skills into producing art.

Is the concept of easy a by-product of the society we live in, where everything is rushed, where busyness becomes a badge of importance, and time is limited to 3 or 5 minute snippets of attention before your brain/eyes/hands are sidetracked?

To draw or paint well takes discipline and alone time.  Robert Genn put it well in an interview saying something to the effect of a learning artist should be sent to their room - for six months or a year.  After concentrating completely on art for that period of time, then results will start to be seen.   Five minutes a day will help, but making time to dedicate to learning and practicing techniques is really the only way to become proficient.

Skills that are worth learning and that take time to learn are hard won.  Drawing, colour theory, composition, values and abstraction take time and practice to understand and become fluent with. There is a lot of unskilled art being made in the world. That can have its own appeal and provide joy to some, no doubt.  But not knowing and not taking the time to know the specifics of different mediums and how to apply them only ensures that after awhile all that art starts to look the same.

Knowing the rules is important before you can break the rules.

Monday, October 26, 2015

Siren

Siren  16" x 20" 
  As I rearrange my studio for what is hoped the last time (though I know it won't be), I came across a watercolour on Arches board of a big pink flower.  I don't know what the reference was, its too long ago to remember. There was also the challenge of some masking fluid still on the upper left petal and was near impossible to remove after being there for so long.  So I removed as  much as I could and worked with the resulting texture that was left.

Original painting

Being inbetween paintings I thought I'd play around with colour and see if I could liven it up a bit.  I kept adding washes of colour and dropping other colours into the wet wash, letting them mingle. I hadn't used watercolour on a larger scale for a long time and enjoyed remembering how the medium worked its magic.

Colour wash progress

Looking back at it now I know I added too many layers, desaturating the colours too much and losing the freshness of the medium.  The colours are not as pure or fresh as I'd like, but overall it works. I think I'll stick with oils and keep the watercolours for my sketches! It may never be saleable, but it will brighten up a corner of the studio.

Friday, October 23, 2015

The Spice Girls

 The Spice Girls
9 x 12 oil on masonite

I've run a few palette knife workshops lately and then spent time catching up with myself in terms of creating my own paintings and dealing administrative work.  Admin seems to really take time if you let it slide, so I try to do a little every day so it doesn't become overwhelming.


One of the workshops I taught was an external one held at Anna Templeton Centre in the heart of St. John's.  The centre is housed in an old historic building that concentrates on providing creative opportunities from painting to jewelry making within the city.  I'll also be teaching there this winter from January to March. You can check out their full range of Winter Workshops.


These peperonchino peppers that were grown in our own greenhouse were my choice.  I'd painted them before in watercolour and wanted to see how they translated into oils.  The watercolour study was done without an under drawing, something I very rarely do.  But careful planning and study before putting down paint is the way to go if you don't have a guideline.  And patience.  Watercolourists must have the patience of saints and discipline not to mess with colour once its on the support otherwise the colours are muddied and results disappointing.  Its the same in palette knife painting, put down a stroke and leave it, don't go back and pat at it.  That is a recipe for mud too.



My second annual Painting Christmas palette knife workshop is filling up fast.  This is a fun way to start the season by creating a couple of small seasonal palette knife paintings and enjoy a delicious home cooked festive lunch. The fireplace will be going and the tree will be up. All that's needed is you on December 6th.   Registration is available online.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Fall sketches

 Pumpkin stack - watercolour


I sketch every day.  Its an ingrained habit now, like brushing my teeth or getting coffee in the morning.  It doesn't have to be an elaborate sketch and many sketches are the working tools for future paintings.

Fall apples - oil

I use all kinds of mediums in whatever sketchbook is to hand, whether the paper is made for wet or dry media.  I never consider a sketchbook to be precious and full of perfect drawings.  I consider it to be a  tool and the messier the better.  I try to draw from life when I can, but sometimes an image catches my eye and I'll go with that instead.

Fallen apples - pen & wash

Here's a glimpse into the sketchbook I'm currently working in.  It's an Earthbound recycled sketchbook that I "re-found" in the studio when looking for something else.  Yes, I do lose things in the studio.  You do too.  Go on, admit it...  This sketchbook is produced by Daler-Rowney, I'm not sure if they still do, but its quite pleasant to work on the tan paper.

 The last strawberry - watercolour

Wednesday, October 07, 2015

2016 Calendars

 2016 Wall and Desk Calendars

I know its too early to think about 2016 and I won't say the dreaded ******mas word, but you know we're in the last quarter of the year and, for me at least, time speeds up lately.

I was determined to get some calendars ready well in advance this year and sifted through boat paintings that I had created over the past year, picking out a dozen of my favourites.  I hope I picked some of your favourites too.  A painting of Flatrock harbour, in the town where I live, is the cover image for each calendar.

I have made the calendars available in wall size - $25 (11" x 8.5") and desk size - $12 (8.25" x 3.75"). Shipping is included in the pricing within North America. You can see all the boat images in the calendar on my website.   Which is your favourite painting?

Sunday, October 04, 2015

Benoit's Cove

 Benoit's Cove - SOLD
24" x 30"  oil on panel


Boats often have specific colours that attach them to communities or regions and this can been seen in Newfoundland as you travel across the island.  Shape, structure and colour play a part in defining the role of a vessel and its ties.

On the east coast you find mostly white boats, with dories being traditional "Dory Buff"  (yes, it is a colour!) but reserved for the Grandy Dory of the Burin Peninsula. When I say boats, I mean working boats, not recreational, although some boats flip from one to another depending on need. The standard yachts and sail boats tend to be white in most parts of the world.  I always wonder how people find them in a crowded marina.  But the working boats, small fishing craft, tend to be individualized or represent their region in colours.

The west coast of the province sees the introduction of oranges and blues to their boats and this past summer I wanted to add some orange boats to my painting arsenal.  When I was on the west coach, teaching in Gros Morne, I took some time to head down the coast from Corner Brook towards the Bay of Islands where I found lots of orange and green boats.  This one was sitting on a home made dock at Benoit's Cove.

There will be more orange boats in the future, as its difficult to resist that colour!

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Sweetie Pie


 Sweetie Pie - SOLD
5" x 7"


This time of year the markets start to ramp up towards the Canadian Thanksgiving (first weekend in October) with a variety of squashes and pumpkins for sale.  The little ones always catch my eye as they're so cute.  The variety Sweetie Pie is pie sized and a perfect miniature of its larger pumpkin cousin.


October in Canada is the federal election and back in July I was asked to participate in a national CBC series Voters of Canada.  The project consisted of interviews with Canadians from a variety of professions who would speak about issues they felt were important.  I was the artist in Newfoundland & Labrador and the resulting interview can be seen here.   The image below shows the producer in the studio filming the painting I was working on at the time - Red Boat.


Interview content when aired is always misleading as so much is condensed to so little. The interview took three hours by the ocean and in the studio and ended up as about 2 minutes of footage. There have been a lot of funding cuts for arts across the country and recognition for the work that the arts contribute to society both economically and culturally is very important. Strong arts policies and appropriate funding should be a crucial part of the support for the arts.

Saturday, September 12, 2015

Late Summer Fields

 Late Summer Fields - SOLD
6" x 6"  oil on panel

Late summer always brings rich colour that heralds change.  The colour zigzags across the landscape, pulling the eye with it and leading into the next, reminding me of those lines in old pinball games leading down and up to guide the ball.

This is a small painting done with leftover paint on my palette after a larger painting was complete.

"In the garden, Autumn is, indeed the crowning glory of the year, bringing us the fruition of months of thought and care and toil.
And at no season, safe perhaps in Daffodil time, do we get such superb color effects as from August to November."
-  Rose G. Kingsley, The Autumn Garden, 1905

Monday, September 07, 2015

Labour Day for artists

Home Port

 24" x 30" oil

For artists that work full time in the profession, Labour Day (or many other holidays, statutory or otherwise) tend not to exist.  Oh they exist in the day to day world with store closures and public building shutdowns and well deserved some of these holidays are for those in a 9 -5 job.  Artists, like many other workers outside the 9 - 5 realm, tend to work through holidays, unless prearranged plans prevail.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not knocking holidays, I'm all for having a break from work, its needed to refresh and unwind.  But if you're self employed, holidays are a bit iffy.  I always seem to find myself in the studio at some point in the day, no matter what day it is.  Yes, even Christmas.  Especially Christmas! Its a refuge from the madness. :)

Its part habit, part necessity.  Yes, an artist can take a day off, but usually feels guilty if they do and has that niggling feeling all day about the current project and what needs to be done with it.  Inevitably, its an "I'll just go to the studio for 10 minutes." Which turns into 2 hours or more.  There should be no guilt taken about when or if you take a day off.  It doesn't have to be on the day designated for the rest of the world.  In fact, taking a day mid week is wonderful, as everything's much quieter then.

But even then, I'll bet most artists will still find their way into their studio at some point unless they are physically distant from the location.

Whatever your job, whenever you take your break, enjoy it, indulge and if you work, make sure you enjoy what you do.


Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Using oils in a sketchbook


After being away from home for three weeks I needed to test my painting ability again.  When I don't have the opportunity to paint for an extended period, it both inspires and freezes me when I get back in the studio.  To break the spell, I needed to just jump in and paint.

This is a study of some tomatoes from the garden, basking in full sun in a lovely old blue bowl that is one of my favourites. I've used my palette knife and oil paint in a regular sketchbook.  Yes, you can use a sketchbook for oil paints.  For me a sketchbook is a working tool, not a showcase of pristine pieces. My sketchbook is messy and I like it that way.  Of course, with oils, I need to wait until the paint is dry before closing the page and I do take the precaution of adding a sheet of deli paper on the back while it dries in case any oil seeps through.  However, once dry, I have never had any problems.

Yes, I hear the purists say "What about the future?  The oil will degrade the paper!"  That may well be, but as my current working tool, my sketchbook is not designed to be museum quality and if in a hundred years, it is crumbled, I have absolutely no problem with that.

I'm researching options for painting these tomatoes from sketch to completion live online, enabling interaction and others to paint along with me if they wish.  I need to test some camera and equipment capabilities first, but it could be fun.  I'm not sure of the platform yet, perhaps a YouTube Live Stream or UStream.  Bear with me while I experiment!

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Studio Tour


I'm back from my travels, catching up on timezone changes and getting ready for a studio tour on August 29 & 30th. In my travels I had some time in the Canadian Rockies with a hike around Moraine Lake in Banff National Park.  The glacial lakes are amazing in colour and clarity, looking surreal.  Apparently its "rock flour" that gives the water that turquoise colour and even in August, the remnants of snow and glacier ice can be seen on the mountain peaks.  There's a few paintings waiting to happen there.

This year I will be taking part in the Pouch Cove Open Studio event.  This is a two day event where Pouch Cove area artists and artisans open their homes and studios to the public to showcase their work. This year I am one of the two artists from Flatrock who will be participating. On the tour you will find paintings, drawings, prints, sculptures, and photographs.

I'll be making my organic vine charcoal available only through the studio tour and will have a range of prints and original paintings to browse through.  If you're in the area, take time to visit all the artist studios, you never know what treasures you'll unearth. 




http://www.pouchcoveopenstudios.com/

Wednesday, August 05, 2015

A little break


I've just gotten back from time on the west coast of the province in beautiful Gros Morne National Park, where I taught gyotaku in Rocky Harbour and had some tourist time, as well as getting reference material for future paintings.

Bright and early tomorrow morning I'm off west again, but this time further afield to Saskatchewan and Alberta to visit family and explore and research more painting material as well as be a bit lazy.

Crossing the Line - SOLD

With travel and renovations at home, painting and drawing time have been limited.  But I am taking my sketchbook and pens with me and hope to fit in some work.

I'll be back in the saddle on August 19th and no doubt anxious to get to the studio and do some painting.