Thursday, May 03, 2007

Pelicans

Here is the basic blocking in of the gulping pelican:












Later he gets
refined to this:


Birds Arrive

Now it is time to begin adding some of the wild life to this mural.




























Here you can see how I have blocked in the animals for this section in chalk first, to see how they should fit in overall.





Remember, you can make the pictures on this blog bigger to look at by clicking on them.

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Elevator Lobby Mural

Time for another visit to the Beach, via mural!
Later, these two areas will have flying pelicans, some beach side vegetation, a turtle, maybe some dolphins in the water, that sort of thing.
If I am allowed to, I really want to paint out/disguise some of the elevator paraphenalia: the buttons, the emergency access panel, and the light switch!




Elevators are interesting to work with. They lend themselves to a dramatic depiction of "Entering". Perhaps it's because they open for you; they don't seem as static as regular doors. Another technicality with painting elevators is the different edges have to match up, and the inside of the door has to be thought of. IE the parts, edges mainly, you see as you step OUT of the elevator. The ''Rude Mechanicals''. Almost literally.

This elevator lobby also has a side door.
The door will have the edge of a dock along the bottom, and a pelican sitting on a post stretching or looking up, or something. It will disguise the door handle.
Check back soon to see how this beach mural evolves!

Silver Mirror

I painted this mirror frame last week, but didn't get very good photos of it during the process, so let's just cut to the chase, and show the final touch: applying the silver leaf.
The background on the frame is painted in shades of metallic silver, and the leaves and flowers , being non metallic, stand out sharply. It is a nice effect.














Silver leaf in very, very thin sheets is applied to a sticky surface, sometimes I use the traditional terracotta ground, which seems to add to the depth and brilliance of the leaf.
After it has set a while, the excess leaf is gently brushed away, with a soft brush. Too much brushing or too harsh a brush can scratch the silver, even right through.














I used many coats of solvent based varnish to give all the silver
an amber tint, and it makes the whole piece look aged and mysterious.
Delightful.

Cloud Treatment


Here is a good example of "Cloud Treatment" meaning that the clouds are a subtle effect, delicate and applied as a background, rather than a mural. They are less specific than one usually finds in my murals.
This technique provides for a soft airy accent wall, less demanding
than a full mural. Art can be hung on such a wall.

This wall makes you feel airborne.


Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Chinese Cloud Border

This dining room border is in the same home as the previous post's kitchen border.
The Chinese motif is in keeping with the oriental furnishings and decor .The ceiling light , with its alabaster shades, is on a dimmer switch, so when the lights are dimmed, the clouds look very mysterious and luminous. The whole thing is painted with metallic paints. A beautiful and exotic effect.






Tray Ceiling in Kitchen

Here is quite a change of pace!









After several projects based on realistic depiction of the natural world, here I have a purely geometric design project, with lots of beautiful metallic paints to work with.

These metallic surfaces are always so hard to photograph!
But the pictures here show quite well how gorgeous the ceiling and border turned out.


Monday, March 19, 2007

Mural Completed

Look! The Lagoon Mural is now completed!



Here are some pictures of the entire thing, showing the context.













One real significant change I made to the mural in the final days was to alter the formation of the sand bar, making the beach wider, and more sloping, and adding a cut, or Pass, out to the main water from the lagoon...It made a big difference in the composition and effectiveness of the sand bar as a point of interest in the middle of so much blue water.













Some how it made the scene look less claustrophobic.



There Is A Way Out!


And a Way In!

















The electrical plug box is well camouflaged by the Chinese Hat bush.
































More Critters....

This mural is almost finished.
The final touches include a few more animals, so that the place looks really inhabited!



Here is a serious looking Gopher Tortoise, lounging in the grasses just as the path starts up the slope....




I added some drama to the water birds' activities in the mural by adding this white heron just as he is nabbing some lunch. At least I hope he got some lunch. Sometimes ''lunch'' gets away...














Here is the close up of this spoon bill,
also possibly having a successful snack....















The scale of some of these details is tiny; these birds are only an inch or so wide.....to give an idea, notice the texture of the concrete....The detail you see here, in these close up photos, is almost not discernable with the naked eye, it's more like what you would be able to see with a magnifying glass.
(I don't paint with one by the way. Not yet!)













I am always pleasantly surprised when I look at these close ups, from my camera, to see the detail in the faces I was able to produce; its a mysterious process. I daub and feather around with the brush, never too sure if the eyes or the beak are really even legible to this degree.
It wouldnt really matter to the success of the mural. No one can see this!....However, here, and in other close ups on the blog, I can see that the tiny details were quite effective.. whether they can be seen or not!







Remember, if you click on the photos they get EVEN BIGGER!

more flowers!