I’m glad to return to the garage studio. For any of you following my blog, I haven’t posted since the passing of Zeb Cash-Lane, simply because I haven’t painted since then. I needed a little time after his passing to sort some things out. Then my school district dropped its bomb. I have been in training for over a year to begin teaching in the International Baccalaureate Diploma program. You may have noted my watercolor blog posts from Lake Tahoe and Los Angeles while I was studying and attending classes in IB. Last week the district canceled the program. Texas public schools face a funding crisis, which has been the general law since 2005 (earlier than that, actually). The decision left me in a state of rage, that I’ve had trouble laying aside.
Finally, I decided to pick up the brush again, and push the public school finance and politics behind me. The more I painted yesterday and today, the further school receded from my thoughts. The way I figure it, I only need another day or two to paint like nothing else happened.
This composition has burned in my retina since I spent a week in Eureka Springs, Arkansas last June. I sincerely hope to return again this year. The Victorian town is absolutely breathtaking in the summer sun, and I took dozens of photos similar to this. I have a real compulsion now to work on some downtown scenes, particularly ones I can find with turn-of-the-century commercial buildings and their fading ghost signs towering above, muted against brightly-colored umbrella tables and modern signage below. I still struggle with my rendering of people in watercolor, but I’ll never “get it” until I do it more. So . . . there will be people in this one. Right now I’m working on a ceramic chef standing outside the restaurant. Hopefully I can get him to look right. Then I’ll turn to the patrons at the bottom of the composition.
It’s good to be back in the garage studio. The weather yesterday and today was heavenly, with bright sunshine and cool breezes blowing. I was in the mood to push this painting for another hour or two, but heavy cloud cover has turned my outside world dark and gray. I really hate to work with studio lights indoors, but I just may have to this evening.
Thanks for reading. I’ll see if I can make enough progress to blog further tomorrow. I’m getting excited about the possibilities of this painting, possibly the largest I’ve attempted so far–about 30 x 22″.