Showing posts with label olive trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label olive trees. Show all posts

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Up the hill


Oil on canvas size 30x30"
Trees...again. Love them, especially in Tuscany. Pathways and trees, I could paint them over and over again. Light and colors change according to the time of the day, the season, the color of the sky. I can never paint a landscape without trees. Pointy trees, squat trees, bare trees, trees in flower. Twisted trunks, gnarled roots, tender saplings. I am a painter of trees.
This painting can be seen at Buckland Southers Galleries, in West vancouver.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Early morning in the Olive grove

This is one of my favorite and recurrent images. A path through trees with long shadows that happen only in early mornings or late afternoons.
This painting is 30x30" one of the largest sizes I have ever painted. Most of it is painted using a #4 bristle flat brush, a small brush for such a large painting!
I worked on this piece in stages waiting for the paint to dry before applying other layers of color. Unusual for me an "alla prima" painter, an impatient and impulsive painter.
I think this painting is quite successful. I like the light in it and the variation in the large areas of color.I like the trees foliage and the impressionistic foreground. I am also happy with the shape on the main tree trunk. I think it gives the piece a certain tension and expressive quality.
This painting is on display at Buckland Southerst Gallery , West Vancouver.


Your comments and criticism are welcome!
Sold October 2007 at Buckland Southerst Gallery, West Vancouver.

Friday, September 21, 2007

Paesaggio con Cipresso ( Landscape with Cypress tree)

This painting stems from sketches and photos done in my last trip to Tuscany. A field of Poppies and a lone Cypress trees in the countryside near Siena.
I am going back soon and I will sketch again and take hundreds of photos of my beloved Tuscany.

Paesaggio con Cipresso is a large 24x30" oil on canvas. It can be viewed/purchased at Buckland Southerst Gallery, Vancouver, BC.

Just an update: this painting was just sold September 23rd, after only 5 days since I brought to the gallery. I am working on a 30x30" oil painting of trees now, it should be finished in couple of days. I will post it here of course!

Sunday, July 15, 2007

A painting of Olive Trees

I have been painting mostly small pieces, I guess they can be called studies. At the gallery request I am making an effort to paint larger. This piece is 24x30"...a huge expanse of canvas for someone used to paint 12x16" and smaller. A scary espanse of canvas to tell you the truth, very intimidating. How to fill this space without going too "detaily" and without making a mess of colors and shapes? First, use a large brush I told myself. Second take care of the composition, the negative spaces, the contrast. Start sketchy at first ( still talking to myself here) and don't worry, it's only paint. Then I decided that the most important thing was to paint a small version of it, a study. Of course this is nothing new. Most artists paint studies of their larger work, but for me , an "alla prima" painter, this was a novel experience. So I decided to paint trees. Because I love trees I have hundreds of reference images. Tuscan olive trees and cypresses, orange and lemon trees, Sicilian palms. I could choose from apple trees in bloom, giant oaks, towering hemlocks, chestnut trees...I decided for Tuscan Olive trees for the way they are pruned. Tall and open in the middle, with light showing through their branches so the sky color would be mix with the color of the foliage. Of course it also needed a pathway and the long shadows of a late summer day. So I have been working off and on at this painting for over a week and then it sat almost finished for another week. I kept looking at it not very convinced it was finished. I am a deadline addict ( the gallery was waiting for this painting) and it takes fire under my you know what for me to take decisive action. The painting was not done, it needed more work, more strokes, more contrast, more complexity. The day before my appointment with the gallery I took it off the wall and went at it furiously for hours. It worked. I was satisfied with it. It was finished. Here it is.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Olive trees and Cypresses

I finished this painting a few days ago. I return to this image fairly often and I painted it many times at different hours of the day. A pathway through olive trees, a sunny day in Summer. Those are Tuscan Olives taller than Sicilian ones, trimmed in the middle so the sun reaches all parts of the tree. I like their strange shape, almost human, reaching toward the sky , towering along the Cipresses. Being born I Tuscany and raised in Sicily I have a special love for Olive trees, common to both regions. Tuscan oil is refined and fruity, Sicilian oil is strong, green and earthy.
Tuscany is soft and graceful, Sicily is harsh and wild. I lived in both regions and love the both in different way and for different reasons.

Oil on canvas 20x24". This painting can be seen at Buckland Southerst Gallery , Vancouver toward the middle of May.