Oil on panel, 2.5 x 3.5 inches
I like the reflection of this pepper on polished wood; and the colors harmonize well.
Sold.
Question: How many artists does it take to change a lightbulb? Answer: Two. One to change the bulb, and one to say "I could do that!" When I learned about the original daily painting blogger, Duane Keiser, I thought, "I could do that!" My thanks to Duane and the other leaders in the Painting-A-Day movement.
White Cup, by Bruce Hedges
Oil on canvas 16 x 20 inches
Not a daily painting. I'd better paint faster, because I'm about to run out of larger paintings. This was my first still life (not my first painting), painted in 2001. The white cup is the focal point, of course, because it's the lightest spot in a dark painting. Someone once commented that it's the wrong kind of glass for wine. True. In a still life, at least my still lifes, the shapes and colors are more important than the practical relationships of the elements. (Lemons and leafy twigs don't go with wine either.) I enjoyed painting this piece very much.
Ondo Dancer (red), by Bruce Hedges
Oil on panel 12 1/2 by 6 1/2 inches
Here is the third piece in "Ondo Taiko Ondo". You can see the color relationships in the three paintings, in the overall color feeling. They are designed to hang together, and form a unit. I really enjoyed painting them, and plan to start a website, an online gallery, showing these and other larger paintings, in the future.
While these paintings are not large, they are larger and more time consuming than the small paintings I've shown so far. I hope you enjoy them.
Thanks to all who have made encouraging comments.