Lake Como painting progression

I am working on putting together a video post, but I have to get my 9 year old to help me with some of the technical side first.😅 So today I am relying on the good old fashioned blog post, sharing a step-by-step painting in progress.

I had such a good time with my last Lake Como Painting that thought I’d “laissez les bons temps roule,” (as the Cajun in me likes to say.) I chose a scene in Varenna from my photo archives, one of my favorite memories that now feels like both yesterday and a long time ago. I chose one of my favorite canvas sizes, a 24x30”, and a color scheme of jewel tones that always cheers me up.

My starting approach for the last year or so is to just very casually sketch out my composition lightly in sienna oil pastel. The Sennlier oil pastel is so soft and lovely that it erases my change of mind with a very low stain, and yet allows me to indicate some shading at the same time.

varennasketch_jenniferyoung

Once I am more or less satisfied with my composition, I begin laying in some of the shadow areas of my painting, to get a feeling for the overall value pattern of my painting.

varenna_WIP_Jenniferyoung

I am generally trying to keep things very broad as I lay down the initial color. While not all of the water is “in shadow”, I decided to lay in the general color because I felt it would help me make a decision about the composition ( as you will see in the next photo.)

Varenna_Painting_Demo_JenniferYoung

My initial idea was to include the foreground shoreline with a couple of rowboats, but at the same time I wanted to keep the distant horizon below the middle point, which pushed the shoreline down. After laying in the water I decided the shoreline wasn’t really doing much for me or the composition.

Varenna_Painting_Demo_JenniferYoung

This is better, I think. Even working from photos in the studio, there is still a lot of decision making that goes into the process. You don’t have to be a slave to a photo and paint something in, just because it’s there in the reference. This is my painting, after all, and sometimes the best thing I can do for my work is to simplify. There may be a future painting with the shoreline boats as the feature, you never know, but sometimes it’s better to say one thing with clarity than several things with confusion.

At this point it was time to step away and make dinner, but I felt like I was at a good stopping point so this is where I left off last evening. I will still need to address the rest of that white canvas and make additional adjustments to the water and boats , but now I have a pretty solid idea of where I’m going next.

Life post-Covid19 shutdown +Lake Como painting of the gardens at Villa Balbianello

Hi friends,

It is kind of strange to be posting this blog at this point in time. I had imagined I would restart my blogging with happy news—posting from the road perhaps during my plein air festivals, updating you all on social media with paintings from trips to the beach, the marshes, and the mountains. But that isn’t the way things have worked out for me this spring, or, I suspect, for a whole lot of other people who have found themselves in home confinement during this COVID19 pandemic.

This spring I’ve been mostly occupying myself with helping my daughter with her home study, adjusting to school closures and time without her friends. I’m also busy trying to secure groceries (and toilet paper!) and doing a whole lot more cooking and working in the garden. I’ve been trying to get myself and my family grounded as I feel the earth shift under all of our feet. In an effort to find some equilibrium, I’ve been organizing and updating my art files and reference photos, giving my website a tune-up, and generally trying to quell the sense of overwhelm I feel rising up from time to time.

Quite frankly I have been doing a little mourning too, not because we have experienced loss or illness at this point (thank God) but just because of the suffering I’m observing in the communities in the country and around the world. On a purely selfish level, loss of the simple things I took for granted pre-pandemic is also present.

Just before the shut down I upgraded my exhibition space at Crossroads Art Center here in Richmond, from a “wall” to a studio.

My Studio Space at Crossroads Art Center, located in building 2

My Studio Space at Crossroads Art Center, located in building 2

The March opening that was scheduled was to be my inaugural event in my new space. That opening went online, and the entire Art Center closed for a time to public entry, except for by-appointment showings. My plan for my new space was to set up and do a little painting there on a weekly basis, to meet customers and answer any questions, in hopes that I could be more accessible beyond the scheduled art openings. That plan is on hold for now. My studio is still maintained though, and Crossroads has gradually reopened with reduced hours and a 10-person-limit at a time, with masks required of all staff and visitors at the present time.

Like every other small business I am watching and waiting and hoping for signs of improvement. For now I am working in my home studio. It has, out of necessity, taken a back seat too this spring. But slowly I am adjusting and finding a little time to get back in there.

As I mentioned, I have lately been going through a lot of my files and photos, trying to get them organized. In the process I lingered over my past travel photos and I really enjoyed revisiting them—especially now when I can use any uplift. This is my first oil painting since before the schools closed in March.

“Giornata in Paradiso, Villa Balbianello,” Oil on linen, 20x24” ©Jennifer E. Young

“Giornata in Paradiso, Villa Balbianello,” Oil on linen, 20x24” ©Jennifer E. Young

It felt really great to be back in front of my easel and to completely lose myself for a time in this happy memory of my visits to Italy and Lake Como and the wonderful gracious people (very much in my thoughts lately) that my husband and I encountered along the way. This view was from the stunning terraced gardens of Villa Balbianello. I painted a smaller version of this piece a number of years ago, but I was interested to tackle it again, re-imagined. Click through on the image if you would like to read more about the painting and the place that inspired it.

Varenna painting complete

Just a quick post to share the final version of the Lake Como painting I wrote about in my last post:

"La Passarella, Varenna" Oil on Linen, 24"x 20" (SOLD) ©Jennifer Young

"La Passarella, Varenna" Oil on Linen, 24"x 20" (SOLD) ©Jennifer Young

This view shows small fishing and leisure boats in front of the arched foot path called "La Passarella"  that winds its way around Varenna.Known  as "the pearl of the lake", Varenna is one of the most beautiful towns on Lake Como. A great place to leisurely wander and get lost!

I also really enjoyed this version of the limited palette I wrote about in my last post. I can see myself using this one again (as soon as I buy more Cad. Red Medium!) 

On the easel -Varenna (Lake Como) W.I.P

Just a quick post to share what's been on my easel of late. It's been so blazing hot this week that I have not found an opportunity to get back outside and have pretty much retreated to the studio to work. I'm still keeping things relatively small for the time being, though 20x24" isn't, for me, exactly tiny:

Lake Como, Italy landscape painting by Jennifer Young

Yet again I thought I'd experiment with another limited palette, using the "big three" primaries of red, yellow blue. In this case the red is Cadmium red medium, the yellow, cad. yellow pale, and my ol' friend ultramarine. The main difference for me is using cad. red medium. I almost never use this red but found some in my bins and thought, why not? At first I felt like I was shooting myself in the foot with this palette on this subject, as it is a bit more muted than when I use my usual gem-like transparent red of alizarin crimson. But having gotten used to it, I am quite liking it. I think I should be finished with this piece in another session or two, which will hopefully be this week, providing I have the studio time.

Little things

My painting (and posting) has been so sporadic lately that there are times when I am tempted to just announce a summer hiatus once and for all. At least this way, (I say to myself) I can engage myself fully in mothering an already active baby (who is soon to be an even more active toddler) and I won't have this anxious, "torn between two worlds" feeling when I can't make it to the easel (or produce anything noteworthy when I do). But the hubby doesn't think this is a good idea, and doubts I'd be happy with not painting at all, if even for a couple of months. He's probably right, but that still leaves me with trying to figure out how to enjoy the time I have in these two seemingly opposing life roles, without the anxiety I sometimes have that I am not doing well enough at either one. So I was taking my baby out for a stroller ride not long ago, and ran into a neighbor, who is also a mother, and happens to be a very fine artist. We have exchanged pleasantries a few times, but this was our first actual introduction and chat. We spent a good deal of time talking about the ups and downs of being both a working artist and a mother . We talked about finding the time and the peace of mind to be fully engaged in both roles, and perhaps most importantly, to enjoy the process along the way. I asked her if she felt that her work had changed as a result of having had a child.

"Oh yes!" she replied, "For quite a while I had to paint a lot smaller. "

This may sound like a punchline, but in fact, it makes a lot of sense. Before the baby, I had become accustomed to painting small in the field and using my studio work to develop my ideas and studies into larger scale works. As a landscape painter, my feeling was, why paint small landscapes inside if I can paint the same small scale from life?

But at present, plein air opportunities have been few and far between, so often it is studio work or no work at all.  While I never really paint HUGE, I have struggled with my studio sessions, as they are both shorter in length and spread farther apart. Often enough I have found myself spending a good deal of a studio session just trying to get the painting opened up enough to start working on it again...just in time to clean up!

So, it makes sense, for the next little while, to try and work on a few small things. They may not all be landscapes, (and who knows? They may not all be oil paintings) but at least I will still be doing something.

So that is my commitment to you, dear reader. I will do something instead of nothing. And furthermore, I will post it here often enough so that you know I am still alive. How's that for an inspirational statement of purpose? Sorry, but this is the best I can do right now. ;-)

Even if it's just a little thing, it will hopefully keep the creative juices flowing, and perhaps make it easier to develop some skills that need brushing up, or to experiment with various designs, compositional choices and different color palettes. In the very least, I will get the satisfaction of having finished something!

"Evening Light, Tuscany" Oil on linen, 6x12" ©Jennifer Young

"Evening Light, Tuscany" Oil on linen, 6x12" ©Jennifer Young