Painting horse sculptures using oils… and other news

This past year I have been experimenting with oil painting. I finished my first painting in 2010, and I have started two others. I really like the quiet application of paint with brushes. Most of my painting life—all involved with finishing my horse sculptures in either resin or ceramic—has been using the airbrush. It is fast and beautiful, I have always thought, but noisy and mechanical tool-intensive. I’ve wanted to branch out a bit from horses in art and working on “flat” landscape paintings with oils was a good way to do that plus learn something new. Paul and I have traveled a lot in the past 10 years and got on a huge art-museum jag where we saw a lot of the most significant old masters paintings on the planet. So naturally I was itching to try oils myself after all that quality art exposure!

Enjoyment of painting naturally led me to thinking about finishing my sculptures in oils. Especially since I have a sculpture in resin edition at the moment, and some unpainted white ones staring at me in the studio every day. I just finished my first Roundabout resin in oils, and here he is. Since this horse is a British Cob, I named this one “Marlow”, after a delightful town in England near where we lived during our year there…

I am so pleased with my first attempt with oils, that I’ve started another one which will be dappled palomino:

The palomino will be for sale… if I am satisfied with the results. Next, I will be interested to figure out how to paint a dappled grey in oils. I’ve spent 30 years perfecting dappled greys with the airbrush for both acrylic paint and ceramic glaze (because it is my favorite horse color) so that will be a challenge!

By the way, you can buy an unpainted Roundabout in resin at my Etsy Store. They are in stock and ready to ship.

What else am I up to? I’ve started another sculpture (about 4″ tall) that I’m not near ready to talk more about yet. Plus I will be getting back into the china glazing too I hope… Roundabout in ceramic IS coming this spring! I am thinking about glazing a small edition in an OF color, probably 10 pieces all the same color. But that won’t come until much later in the year, after I get the molds and get the hang of casting and cleaning them.

All work has been slow recently because I’ve been struggling with sciatica in both legs since September which makes it painful to sit for very long. After flailing around with chiropractic and physical therapy, I’ve been escalated to a spine specialist which I see tomorrow. I sure hope they will be able to help me because not being able to sit really inhibits my work time!!

Lastly, here is the first china horse I completed in 2012. An earthenware Boreas I cast myself. Isn’t he amazing looking in chestnut sabino color? A great color idea from the person who now owns it!

Email Karen

Live from the Pod

I bought an Apple iPod Touch about a month ago and keep learning about new apps for it. I was thrilled to find that WordPress has one, which is where this blog is hosted. This means I can now write new blog entries “on the go”!!! My work life has changed a lot since I retired from graphic design and I need my laptop less and less. And I am already in love with doing everything from my so-portable iPod!!

I can take photos and send them to this blog along with my news. Maybe I will write more blog entries now too…

Ski season starts for us next week and I start my volunteer job at Beaver Creek ski area on Thanksgiving. We are looking forward to meeting other “locals” through the program and building a new social life.

On the art front: I’m all over the place with different projects but not working too hard on any one thing. I have 2 custom glazed china commissions promised this month. I’ve been working on a new oil painting of a scene I shot in Cornwall. I’m experimenting with painting a Roundabout resin in oils. I have been fooling around with some clay hand-building of some sculptures. (Not of horses!) I am hoping for word of the Roundie china molds soon. I feel like I don’t want to glaze anything much at the moment so I think perhaps I am waiting for Roundie.

Well, thanks for reading my test of my first via-iPod entry!

Here is a test photo. It is from our vacation to the Florida Keys last week (and the only photo on my pod at the moment).

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Work at full stop until mid-October

After 20 years in Boulder, Paul and I are moving to our dream retirement lifestyle in a new house near the skiing in Vail, Colorado. That’s about 2 1/2 hours west of Boulder, on the other side of the Colorado Rockies.

Here is the hot tub on the lower level patio, just steps away from where my new studio will be. How nice for when I am in need of some creativity rejuvenation.

And here is the big view from that hot tub…

Mr. Frugal Paul is already grumbling about the electricity bills for keeping that thing going, but I’m not letting him turn it off!!

We close on our new house the week of Sept 22nd. From now I am officially unable to do any work on china glazing or other horse-art related stuff, because my studio is completely packed up. I will be online through the week of the move but might be spotty once until we get the cable modem set up in the new house.

I won’t be up and working until I set up the new studio space and get the garage wired for Fido The Kiln. Could be mid-October before I unpack all the boxes.

I’d sure like to have a house warming party before the snow flies though!

Well, here’s to changing up one’s life in a big way!
(Like, us dropping everything and spending a year living in England in 2009-10 wasn’t enough excitement for awhile..?? I guess not!)

Cheers,
Karen

Black tobiano “Caprice” for sale

Here’s that bone china “Caprice” custom glazed to black tobiano that I mentioned the other day. This is a piece that has been floating around the studio awhile, partially finished as another color I didn’t like. The body is perfectly good and there aren’t going to be any more Caprices in bone china made, so I finished it as a solid black tobiano the way you see here.

There are only 7 Caprices finished in custom glaze colors to date. That’s not very many. In fact for various reasons the Caprice china edition total is the smallest of all the sculptures I’ve released in ceramic. It was also my first!

I’d like to get $550.00 usa postage paid for this guy. He is cmg Caprice #7. I do ship overseas and ‘d just split the postage cost. I can extend short time payments, like take 60 days to pay in full. But I will give preference to someone who can pay in full.

By the way, I did sell the chestnut Caprice offered the other day!

Email Karen