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1. Illustrator Saturday – Sheralyn Barnes

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Sheralyn’s first successful drawing was of a hot air balloon in the third grade. When her teacher returned it, there was a big check-plus scrawled on the back with a smiley face. It was at this moment that she knew art was going to be my lifelong companion. There was no going back.

Since art instruction was not a priority in the small town where she grew up, she did my best to learn to draw. She spent many hours in her room keeping company with her fish, becoming paler by the day. She challenged herself to draw anything she could find. Most note worthy were the eleven drawings she made of a photo of Han Solo in Teen Magazine until it looked like him. Sheralyn says, “Many thanks to George Lucas. I owe most of my drawing skills to him.”

Here is Sheralyn showing her process:

barnesOriginal Monsters SketchThis is the original pencil sketch from my sketchbook. I used this for the basic idea.

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I then composed the final composition in Photoshop, adding other characters that I had done as rough pencil sketches. I blew up my composition to fit 12″ x 16″  and then transferred it using graphite paper to a black Ampersand Scratchbord panel (black coated clayboard panel).

barnesMonsters in the Library

I then spent hours scratching out the image using both a fine point and a curved scratch nib as well as this great tool Ampersand has called a parallel line tool, which works great for fur. Here is the completed black and white scratchboard before adding color with ink. I like Ampersand Scratchbord because it is very forgiving and has a very deep base of clay, so if I made any mistakes or wanted to make adjustments in any way, I could use a black india ink marker to mark over the area and then scratch again. Also the panel is very sturdy and not brittle, which was a problem I encountered regularly with other scratchboards I had used in the past.

barnescolored monstersThis is the completed piece with color ink washes added to the original black and white version. Again, the panel is very forgiving and the black areas of the board repel the color pretty well so you don’t have to be too terribly careful, just dab up the excess color off the black surface while it absorbs nicely into the exposed clay surfaces on the board. I like to use Daler-Rowney FW Acrylic Artist Inks which is my ink of choice. Ampersand also offers inks for their boards and they work well. However, I like to have a larger palette to work with than what they offer and the FW’s work really well.

barnestea time #1This is the original very loose sketch idea.

barnestea time #2This is the refined sketch with pencil. I scan the sketch into the computer and tweak as necessary.

barnestea time #3Now I do all the work in Photoshop. Here I make a monochromatic “digital underpainting” to create my tones on which to layer the colors.

barnesTea time #4Here I create another layer and begin to lay in my basic colors. This is the point where all the basic colors are laid into the initial sketch. After I’ve laid in the initial colors, I separate all the components into separate layers so I can work on them individually as well.

barnesTea time #5A bit of a jump here, but I have essentially taken each component of the composition and created layers of color over and over again to create smoothness and saturation. It’s essentially the digital equivalent of using translucent layers to build up colors over the initial underpainting. I also use the smudge tool like I would use a blending brush for an oil painting to blend colors. When I have finished refining all the individual components and their layers, I merge them back into one single layer (although not deleting the individual layers) and refine the entire composition as needed. Photoshop enables a lot of flexibility in this way which is quite wonderful.

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Above and Below illustrations are from “Mrs. Mosley’s Christmas Tree” by Janie Devoe

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Where did you grow up? Do you still live in the area?

Demotte, Indiana (a small town in northwest Indiana).

No. I’ve lived many places since. I have lived in St. Paul, Minnesota most of my adult life, with a few years spent in Yellowstone National Park, Northwest Wisconsin , and Louisville, Kentucky.

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Did you ever take any art lessons?

Art was not considered all that valuable in my hometown, so there was minimal instruction and inspiration available. I was pretty much self taught until I went to Ball State University where I received a BFA in Drawing.

barnes candles

What was the first art related thing you got paid for?

I can remember painting an old time main street scene on our local IGA grocery store’s front window in high school. I think they paid me twenty dollars. Otherwise, I believe the first “published” art I did was for CD covers and T-shirts for local musicians when I first moved to Minnesota in my early twenties.

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When did you decide you wanted to be an illustrator?

For as long as I can remember, I always wanted to illustrate children’s books.

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Scratch board illustrations above and below.

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How long have you been illustrating?

I’ve freelanced as an illustrator on the side for the last twenty five years while making my living in additional ways (server, picture framer, landscape painter, gallery owner, musician). In 2010 I decided to become more serious about making children’s book illustration my main focus.

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What types of things did you do to help develop your work?

I’ve always studied favorite illustrators and artists. I took classes in oil painting technique and the business of illustrating. I became more involved with SCBWI in 2010 and attended several national conferences. Having portfolio critiques and attending workshops by so many amazing illustrators and art directors really opened my eyes to the story telling aspect of children’s illustration. Since all my formal training was in fine art and not illustration, I really had missed out on essential information about how good illustrations really move a story along.

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I see that you use oils for your fine art. What is your favorite illustrating material?

The computer has become my tool of choice for color work for illustration, but my first true love is and always will be the pencil. I love sketching and working up tones with a pencil. Love it. I really find painting with oils much more enjoyable, but realize that with the technique of oil painting that I use, it takes a very long time to complete a full book that way.

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Have you ever tried to write and illustrate a children’s book?

Yes. I’ve had one in the works that has evolved for a couple years now. It’s a counting book with a bit of a different take on the whole sheep and sleep thing. Most people can tell by looking at my body of work that I have a bit of obsession for drawing sheep.

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The above is from Sheralyn’s sheep bookdummy, “A Heap of Sheep.”

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Have you made a picture book dummy to show art directors, editors, and reps.?

Yes, I have a dummy for my sheep book that I mentioned earlier as well as another dummy I put together for a book based on the poem “A Piper” by the turn of the century Irish poet Seumas O’Sullivan. It’s a lovely poem about how a traveling musician comes to town and the music brightens up the day for the people of the town. I also have another dummy that another author is circulating. A few years back, an agent who saw my work at the New York SCBWI conference contacted me about illustrating one of her client’s stories. Even though I knew it was a bit unconventional for an author to submit with illustrations by another illustrator, I loved the story and thought it was a good opportunity to gain some experience in putting together a book, so I agreed. Over time, the literary agent moved more towards promoting YA books and less towards picture books. It was disappointing because in the end, she didn’t submit the dummy to many publishers. However it was a very valuable experience for me and I learned a lot. When the agent’s contract for the book was up, the author and I decided to continue our partnership in the book and she is currently submitting it to publishers. I did two full color illustrations to go with the dummy.

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I see that you are in a illustrator’s group that blogs. How did that evolve?

My friend Hazel Mitchell started the group (Pixel Shavings). I met Hazel at my first NY SCBWI conference and about four months later she asked me if I would be interested in being a part of the group. It’s a great group of very fun and talented people and I am very honored to be in it.

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Do want to concentrate on being a children’s picture book illustrator?

Yes. It really is my first love and what inspires me most. Not to mention it’s a great way to make the world a better place.

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What types of things do you do to get your work seen by publishing professionals?

I attend SCBWI conferences whenever possible as well as send out postcards. I’ve also found that our group blog (Pixel Shavings) has been helpful as well as are the wonders of facebook and other social online interactions. To be honest, my goal this year is to be more persistent with submitting my book dummies and artwork.

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Do you have an agent? If so, who and how long have the represented you?  If not, would you like one?

No, I do not. I haven’t pursued an agent yet because I have been making my living as both a musician and an artist up til now. I play mandolin in a duo and trio with my husband (who has always made his living in music). This year, I am changing my priorities to focus more on Illustration and less on music for income, so I intend to pursue an agent.

barnesmilk

Do you ever use two different materials in one illustration?

Other than digitally combining my pencil work with the computer, not generally. I have experimented with a bit of collage and painting in the past for some of my own book dummy ideas. I had a book idea years ago that portrayed the joys, trials, and tribulations of learning to play the violin. For sample illustrations, I gessoed sheet music on to the panels to create interesting backgrounds. It was fun and a nice effect.

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I see that you have some illustrations that are listed under scratchboard. Can you tell us a little bit about how you do them? Do you make y our own scratchboards?  Looking at the one in the library with the ghost; how did you do the color? It looks too exact to have been painted underneath.

I really like to use the Black Clayboard/Scratchboard by Ambersand. It’s very smooth,  consistent in texture, durable, and takes colored inks really well. I start with a pencil sketch that I transfer to the board using graphite transfer paper. Then I draw the black and white image by scratching away the black. I use pigmented inks for coloring. The entire Monsters in the Library piece is done by hand. I only used the computer to organize and expand the layout from an original sketch. The ghost was a fun challenge. I was able to get the translucence by putting down the color and then quickly absorbing it back up again with a paper towel. The nice thing about the clayboard is that after applying the color, there is still enough of a base to go back in and scratch a bit more, which also lent to the ghostly effect.

barneswakeup

Have you seen your style change since you first started illustrating?

Definitely. I am more detail oriented and I render more now than when I first started. I have to be careful with this on the computer though because it makes detailing limitless, and it’s easy to overwork pieces.

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What types of jobs have you gotten with your art?

Everything from CD covers and T-shirt designs to violin maker’s labels and storefront signs to books. Since playing music has always been a part of my life, there have always been musicians I know who need art. I’ve also illustrated two books for Reading A to Z, “Silly Sarah” and “Why the Bat Flies at Night”. They are a publisher of reading program books for kids. Currently I am working on illustrations for a book about the national parks being published by Sequoia Natural History Association. I spent five years of my young adult life working in Yellowstone Park, so that experience has really come in handy for this project. The images on my website of the little duck, mole, and pigs are from Silly Sarah.

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Have you gotten any work through networking?

Actually the Sequoia book came about through social online networking. My relationship with Reading A to Z happened because of my involvement with SCBWI and Pixel Shavings.

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Have you published any illustration in magazines or newspapers?

Early on I did illustrations for a conservation organization here in Minnesota called Pheasants Forever. They had a environmental awareness magazine for kids called the PF flyer. I also did illustrations for the magazine for the Minnesota Bluegrass Musician’s Association. I’ve had one spot drawing appear in the SCBWI Bulletin magazine.

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Do you do any art exhibits to help get noticed?

Yes. Since I’m also a landscape oil painter I have shown and sold my work in various exhibit and art fair situations and owned a gallery called “Blue Moment Fine Arts” for eight years. I sell my paintings at B. Deemer Gallery in Louisville, Kentucky as well as The Steeple Gallery in St. John, Indiana and have had shows at Seasons on St. Croix Gallery in Hudson Wisconsin. I have also had shows and sold prints and cards of my work in Ireland where a lot of my inspiration comes from. I still sell my Irish prints and cards at a specialty shop called Irish on Grand here in St. Paul.

barnessleeping

Are you open to doing illustrations for self-published picture book authors?

It depends on the book and the professional attitude of the author. If an author is a member of SCBWI or has really studied the business and seems to have taken the time to study and consider my work in relation to their project, then I would consider it. I received several inquiries last year from self-publishing authors whose books I felt were a bad fit for me as an illustrator. This left me with the impression that they had not really looked over my portfolio very well to see what I do best before contacting me.

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You have a section on your website titled, “Ireland.” Do you visit Ireland regularly?

Yes. I spent a fair amount of time there from college through my late twenties. In my thirties, I had a show of my paintings at the Clare Museum and sold cards and prints of my work there through the Russell Gallery in New Quay. In 2007 I led a sketching tour on the west coast. A lot of my inspiration to paint comes from the landscapes and music there. It’s where I go to recharge my soul.

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Do you ever use Photoshop?

Yes. Fortunately, it is a great way to get the look of oil painting with pixels.

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Do you own a graphic tablet? If so, how do you use it?

I use a Wacom Intuous tablet and couldn’t live without it for a lot of my current work. I use it just like a brush or pencil, building up layers and layers of pixel paint just like I would with real paint on a canvas.

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How much time do you spend illustrating?

Since my husband and I both make our living in the arts, we tend to be working most of the time. For me, if I’m not playing the mandolin for practice or profit, I’m painting or working on illustration. I try to illustrate on my hired jobs Monday through Friday, usually about 8 hours a day, and do music at night and on weekends. Of course, this changes all the time since our music schedule and project deadlines are always in flux. We don’t own a TV and weekends don’t really exist in our world, so I spend most of my time creating for my living or for fun.

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Do you have a studio set up in your house?

Yes. It’s a bit small but works quite well presently, and I have to admit it’s nice to not pay extra rent for a space. I’m thinking of looking for a larger studio in the next year though. I used to have a roomy studio in downtown St. Paul, which was nice and it got me out and about a bit more. I feel a bit of a recluse working at home these days. I’m a homebody by nature, so it’s always good to have a reason to leave the house to go to work.

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Is there anything in your studio, other than paint and brushes that you couldn’t live without?

My mandolin, music, Irish tea, and my cheering section of toys and stuffed animals.

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Any exciting projects on the horizon?

My husband and I are working on a couple of projects that combine our love of children’s literature, my illustration skills, his writing skills, and our music. One project is a nonfiction picture book and the other involves a character who likes to share his enthusiasm for travel and history through music. Fortunately for me, my husband began to pursue writing mid-grade nonfiction about two years ago. His background is in performance and cultural music history, he teaches music to both kids and adults, and he has the unending curiosity of an eight year old, so it’s a good fit. We also work really well together, which is a major plus.

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What are your career goals?

I would love to spend the rest of my life illustrating books that utilize both my color work and pencil work. I would also like to see my illustrated sheep get out in the world in the form of books, cards, etc., so I want to learn more about licensing. Somewhere in the midst of that, I want to keep making music as well and with some luck, maybe my two passions will converge.

barnespirate

What are you working on now?

I’m in the middle of a book of forty illustrations for Sequoia Natural History Association as well as working on some characters and illustrations of my own that I’m really excited about. I’m setting up online sales for my paintings and prints. And the phone just rang for a gig with lots of Italian mandolin music….so I’ll be working on that as well!

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The above illustration is from Sheralyn’s book dummy, “A Piper” based on the poem “A Piper” by the turn of the century Irish poet Seumas O’Sullivan. Sheralyn illustrated this with colored pencil.

barneslandscapecropped

The rest of the pictures are ones done in oil during Sheralyn’s visit to Ireland.

barnesirelandoil09

I work in oil paint. I use only the highest quality, pigmented paints ( Old Holland, Schmincke Mussini, Winsor and Newton) and work on museum quality panels by Ampersand. My style works well with the smooth surface that the panels provide, and they offer a rigid ground to ensure longevity and non-cracking of the paints over time (oil paints become more brittle as they age, so the more rigid the better). You will notice that some of my paintings are listed as “oil with wax”. For these paintings, I combine a very small portion of wax medium to increase my ability to create an atmospheric effect. This medium also adds extra stability to the paints themselves.

barnessnowfield

I am an illustrator by nature. Many of the scenes I create with my paintings illustrate moments – ordinary moments that for some reason or another mark themselves as extraordinary. Moments that have embraced my senses with the smells, sounds, and feelings of being aware; the smell of rain, the sound of my footsteps, the touch of wet leaves. As I look back on my life, I realize that some of my most resonant memories have not necessarily been exotic experiences, but these seemingly unimportant moments that ring of true presence. These are the experiences that I wish to communicate.

barnessnowscapeHave the materials you use changed over the years?

The pencil was really the only thing I had available to me when I was a kid. I spent many hours in my room teaching myself to draw. When I graduated from college, most of my color work was done in prismacolor pencil. I liked working with prismacolors because you could get fine detail, but they had limitations in that the wax of the pencils could only be layered so far. So later on, I studied oil painting with a painter who specialized in traditional methods of underpainting and transparent layering of color. Learning this technique for my landscape painting also lent to new possibilities for my illustration and gave my work a fresher and more vibrant quality. Now I’ve transferred that same technique of layering color on to the computer.

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Are there any painting tips (materials, paper, etc.) you can share that work well for you? Technique tips?

I love Cachet sketchbooks and Ampersand panels, both for their ease of use, quality, and durability. For paints, I adore Old Holland brand. I have an artillery of Alvin mechanical pencils I always carry with me, each loaded with different leads, so I can have the gamut of 4B to 4H lead at my disposal when the need strikes. I’m the type of person who just loves to just sit around building tones with pencil. It’s a bit like playing scales on a musical instrument. To me it’s very zen and relaxing, not to mention good practice.

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Any words of wisdom you can share with the illustrators who are trying to develop their career?

My words of wisdom come from others who have embraced life. This is one of my favorites from animator Chuck Jones:

“The rules are simple. Take your work, but never yourself, seriously. Pour in the love and whatever skill you have, and it will come out.”

In addition, I guess I would say to join SCBWI and go to their regional and national conferences if you can. Get to know other illustrators and find support and comradery. Being a creative freelancer is a roller coaster ride of a life and has it’s ups and downs. So when frustration hits, be driven by your joy and desire to make the world a more colorful place. Don’t be afraid to put yourself out there and ask questions. Be bold and smile a lot. I’m still working on the bold part myself, but I think I’ve got the smiling part down and it really makes a difference.

Thank you Sheralyn for sharing your work and process with us. I enjoyed spending time with your illustrations and finding out more about you. Please keep in touch and let us know when you have a new success. We’ll be watching.

I am sure Sheralyn would love if you left her and comment with this post, so if you have a minute, please drop us a line. Thanks! You can visit Sheralyn at: www.sheralynbarnes.com

Talk tomorrow,

Kathy


Filed under: authors and illustrators, Illustrator's Saturday, inspiration, Interview, Process Tagged: Ball State University, Digital Art, Oil Paintings, Scratch board illustrations, Sheralyn Barnes

16 Comments on Illustrator Saturday – Sheralyn Barnes, last added: 4/18/2013
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2. BICYCLE

Portland Delivery, oil & pencil on linen, 9 x 12, 2009
Bicycle is the theme today at Illustration Friday. I have only once painted a bicycle, and here it is! It's very uncharacteristic in style as well as in execution. I was so worried about depicting the bicycle accurately that I traced it carefully in pencil onto the primed canvas before "coloring it in", not at all my usual slap-happy style!

I had been showing at a gallery in Portland Maine (Susan Maasch Fine Art) and was dropping off some work one late afternoon when I saw this bicycle delivery guy sailing slowly past on his red bike. There was something about the light and the balanced motion of the scene that caught at my heart. I happened to have my camera in hand and click: almost unbelieveably I managed to catch the moment. I don't usually work from photos, depict action, work from tracing or even do any drawing at all before painting, but I did this time and was somewhat pleased with the result. Something to revisit in future perhaps.

I felt later, looking at the scene that it had a faint whiff of Christen Købke about it, which must have unconsciously caused the initial attraction. I have had a postcard of this painting on my studio wall for years.

4 Comments on BICYCLE, last added: 4/26/2011
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3. Last Autumn, Bottled

Green and Yellow, oil on gessoed ragboard, 8 x 10 inches, 2011
Bottled is this week's prompt at Illustration Friday. I love this little brown bottle which once held a nutritional supplement we were giving my son with autism when he was younger,  and I use it over and over again in my work. I think it signifies a simpler time, when we were full of hope and energy. Still have lots of hope, but less energy! ;-)  The coreopsis blossom and nasturtium leaves were from my late autumn garden. They lasted a long time in my chilly studio. The apple on the left only went into the compost bin a month or two ago...very long-lasting! This recently completed piece is on the invitation card for my upcoming show:

Nancy Bea Miller: recent work
May 4-29, 2011
Artists' House Galley
57 North 2nd Street
Philadelphia, PA

Receptions:
First Friday:
May 6, 5 - 8:30pm
Sunday,
May 8, 1 - 4pm

8 Comments on Last Autumn, Bottled, last added: 4/14/2011
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4. Duet

Joined, oil on linen, 12 x 9 inches, 2011

DUET is this week's prompt at Illustration Friday. This is a painting I completed about a month ago and I think it fits the bill. I am in the Philly area and we sure do love our soft pretzels here! I am originally from NYC and we loved our pretzels there too, but the NYC pretzels are an entirely different configuration. In any shape, soft pretzels are best bought from a street vendor on a cold day,  eaten warm with a zigzag of mustard. If you get a blob of mustard on your cheek and someone kisses it off...all the better!

11 Comments on Duet, last added: 4/5/2011
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5. Surrender

Oliver on the Floor, oil on canvas, 20 x 42 inches, 1992-3
Surrender is the theme this week at Illustration Friday! Battling to meet several important deadlines and to endure a bunch of winter storms I had surrendered the idea of participating. But this morning, imminent deadlines met, storms having done their worst, I took a deep breath and decided I wanted to play after all. Better late than never!

The model for this painting was a young man I was friendly with at art school. He was immensely talented, but unfocused. I knew he needed money and so I was happy to pay him to pose now and then. He had long thick blonde hair and a Jesus beard, till one day he showed up completely shaven! We were in the middle of a painting too. Resigned, I put that one away and started this one, which seemed to better suit both our moods. Unfortunately, the shaving seemed to be indicative of some "casting off" process, and after only a couple of sessions he disappeared. Later I heard he'd headed to California.

The painting never got finished, but there is something about it I like, despite its rough, unfinished, state.



8 Comments on Surrender, last added: 2/4/2011
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6. Chicken

Free Range, oil on canvas, 8 x 10 inches, 2009

This week the theme over at Illustration Friday is Chicken. At the risk of being a literalist, this painting from about a year ago sprang to mind. I painted this at the 2009 Plein Air at Beaver Farm event. It's a beautiful biodynamic working farm but it's a real farm too, nothing boutique about it. Nature red in tooth and claw and all that.  I was surprised when several people who first saw it said "Awww, sweet!" and "Isn't that cute?" While painting I had been thinking about these chickens, happily roaming the range and killing bugs and even small animals (apparently they love to eat field mice, baby snakes and voles!) as fast as their greedy beaks would allow, and how they would eventually be food themselves. Just cycle of life thoughts, nothing tragic, but certainly far removed from sweet or cute. I was thrilled when the person who bought it actually shivered and said "Ooh, this one is a bit creepy! Makes you think, doesn't it?" YES! Makes me think it certainly found the right home, this painting. ;-)

15 Comments on Chicken, last added: 1/18/2011
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7. Déjà Vu

Pears and a Pot, 11 x 14, oil on linen, 2008

Not really sure what to put in for Illustration Friday this week. The theme is Déjà Vu, the feeling that you have already experienced a moment which is currently happening. Who hasn't felt this, but it seems a tough concept to handle visually.  This comes close, I think, to expressing that feeling that creeps up on you... a concealed memory projected onto the present moment. A little unnerving!

16 Comments on Déjà Vu, last added: 1/12/2011
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8. Oldie but Goodie



Looking through some old files and saw this little cutie...a birthday party cupcake homemade by me for one of the little boy's birthdays. Cupcakes are so in these days, but they tend to be much larger, with a lavish crown of icing. I don't think anybody uses sprinkles anymore either...a blast from the past! And, in truth, this was probably only five or six years ago...how times change! Still sweet though. ;-)

0 Comments on Oldie but Goodie as of 1/1/1900
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9. Glazed



Glazed, oil on linen on wood, 8 x 6 inches, 2010
This was one session: it's difficult to achieve that glazed look without actually glazing! ;-)

2 Comments on Glazed, last added: 3/11/2010
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10. Onion Skin



Onion Skin, oil on linen on wood, 8 x 10 inches, 2010

This is alla prima, all done in one session, but not exactly speed painting as it took me about an hour and 45 minutes. I might go back and do a little touch-up and glazing: then again I might not.

4 Comments on Onion Skin, last added: 3/11/2010
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11. The Blue Mint



The Blue Mint
oil on gessoed ragboard, 2.5 x 3.5 inches, 2010

My grandfather used to keep a stash of these in his pockets.

4 Comments on The Blue Mint, last added: 3/4/2010
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12. Overturned Mushroom



Overturned Mushroom
oil on gessoed cardboard, 4 x 6 inches, 2010

1 Comments on Overturned Mushroom, last added: 2/28/2010
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13. Snowy Afternoon



Rooftops in the Snow, oil on linen on panel, 10 x 8 inches, 2010

I did this out the smaller studio window this afternoon. Snowed again all day today. It has not amounted to much as yet, just a lot of cold wetness melting in the streets and sticking to the old piles of snow. And scaring the populace, with our fresh memories of the recent blizzard and power outages. It's certainly pretty though!

10 Comments on Snowy Afternoon, last added: 2/27/2010
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14. Thyme in a Bottle



Thyme in a Bottle
oil on linen on wood, 6 x 4 inches, 2010

I might go back and touch up the label a bit more tomorrow or the next day. The paint is too thick and wet for me to get further detail in. BTW, I truly did not even think of the song title till after I'd posted the image! Now I've got it in my head....

3 Comments on Thyme in a Bottle, last added: 2/25/2010
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15. Ripe Berry



Ripe Berry
oil on gessoed cardboard, 3 x 3 inches, 2010

This may have been my fastest one yet. And I can't even see what it really looks like, because it was dusk when I started painting and after only about 15 minutes I dropped my brush and raced out the door to pick up youngest son from his after school activity. When I got home, night had fallen. I've never managed to set up good artificial lighting in my studio, and rely entirely on daylight. I may be in for a huge surprise in the morning! Well, never a dull moment when you are a painter.

6 Comments on Ripe Berry, last added: 2/24/2010
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16. Quick Eggs



EGG TRIO
oil on gessoed cardboard, 5 x 7 inches, 2010

14 Comments on Quick Eggs, last added: 2/24/2010
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17. Star Fish



Starfish from Eric, oil on canvas, 3 x 3 inches, 2010

1 Comments on Star Fish, last added: 2/22/2010
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18. Snow Man



Snow Man
oil on gilt cardboard, 8 x 6 inches, 2010

Maybe I will start a new blog category: speed painting. The way I am using this term, it is a subset of alla prima painting and consists of getting the image onto the canvas in the fewest strokes possible. We are talking half an hour or less! Speed painting was necessitated in this case by the pain of painting while looking into the white glare of snow...excruciating. I wore a hat to cut the glare but even so...ouch.



My youngest son took this picture of me as I was crouched on the landing painting (I think he was very pleased that I was painting his snowman!) Very circular..taking a photograph of someone painting a sculpture created by the person taking the picture. Am I dizzy!

2 Comments on Snow Man, last added: 2/21/2010
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19. Tangerine with Leaf



Tangerine with Leaf
, oil on canvas on wood, 5 x 7 inches, 2010

3 Comments on Tangerine with Leaf, last added: 2/19/2010
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20. Little Jar




Little Jar of White, oil on canvas on wood, 3.5 x 5 inches, 2010

I'm enjoying these little tossed-off pieces, these painting "scales". The problem is having time and sufficient light to take a good photograph! I seem to finish in the late afternoon, when darkness has already started creeping into my studio.

2 Comments on Little Jar, last added: 2/18/2010
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21. Tulip Head



Tulip Head, oil on canvas on wood, 5 x 3.5 inches, 2010, N.B.Miller

This is from a bouquet my husband gave me yesterday on Valentine's Day. I love tulips!

I am trying to do A Painting A Day, but even at 3.5 x 5 inches, I am not a one day painter, it seems. I always want to go back and adjust even just a little teeny bit. I am "letting go" after the second pass, though and moving one. These are like practice scales, and my goal is to simply keep on doing them, not fuss each one to death.

5 Comments on Tulip Head, last added: 2/17/2010
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22. One Persimmon



Vincent's Persimmon, oil on canvas on board, 5 x 7, 2010

My cousins Mary and Keith were visiting a few months ago and brought me some persimmons grown by their friend Vince. The others rotted quickly but this one lasted through my painting of it...my studio is a bit like an icebox that way. Anyway, I just finished its portrait yesterday (the leaf is still intact although the fruit is no longer glossy!)

1 Comments on One Persimmon, last added: 2/9/2010
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23. Neighbor's House



Neighbor's House, oil on linen, 6 x 8, 2010

I'd call this a plein air piece except that I did it out of my studio window yesterday afternoon. We got 22 inches of snow over the weekend! I hadn't painted snow in a long time...fun! Wish I had a bigger view from my studio window but you make what you can out of what you get, right? ;-)

2 Comments on Neighbor's House, last added: 2/9/2010
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24. Undone





Undone is this week's theme over at Illustration Friday. Yes, I am a little late...I definitely feel a day late and a dollar short pretty much continually these days as we careen towards Christmas...or as I think of it, Stressmas! ;-) Cake definitely helps if you can get some.

Last Slice, oil on canvas, Nancy Bea Miller

17 Comments on Undone, last added: 12/24/2009
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25. Welcome



Welcome
is this week's theme over at Illustration Friday. This fairly recent painting seems to fit the bill.

I started painting this in a white-hot fit of inspiration, then suddenly...stopped. Six months later it is still unfinished, and I can't seem to muster up the aesthetic energy needed to bring it to conclusion. Yet, I feel it kind of has something good going, and I am not quite ready to abandon it. Maybe some help is needed? Any constructive criticism would be very welcome!

In the Doorway, oil on canvas, 24 x 30 inches, 2009, Nancy Bea Miller

14 Comments on Welcome, last added: 9/14/2009
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