Black bog, blue hills

I’ve been working on some small paintings this week ( 5″ x 7″ ) – I really enjoy painting on this scale as I can get results quickly. It’s not just the speed factor though ( impatient as I am ) it’s the ability to make a better response to the landscape. At the moment I find this more difficult with larger work – covering the canvas takes longer so the response is less immediate. I believe that smaller works and drawings often have an energy about them that is lost in larger work. I would love to scale up in the future and get better at making bigger paintings – a bigger space, bigger brushes, more paint – it’s good to think about the possibilities. For now small is good for me.

The composition here is based on a favourite spot of mine near Oughterard. When I drive past, I want to stop the car and get out and just take it all in. Sometimes I do but it’s not always possible and it is a very fast stretch of road.

This is how this piece started out below. I’ve used large brushes and lots of colour, a little charcoal too.

 

First stage of painting

 

 

 

 

Here’s the next stage. I’ve played with different consistencies of paint – thick and thin layers over each other. I’ve used a sepia ink to describe the bog which is almost black at the moment. I allowed the paint to dry before continuing.

 

Second stage of painting

 

 

 

 

Once this first layer was dry, I used smaller brushes to add spots of colour – some green in the foreground and more red and blue on the hills behind – a little more definition overall.

 

Oughterard Bog

 

 

 

Happy with this one now and eager to do some more..

Easter Holiday

Cover Image taken from Eahkee Original Outsider Art at etsy.com

 

I’m taking a break for Easter. This is unplanned and due to the length of the school holidays ( two whole weeks! ) and the hectic nature of my days since the kids finished up.

Have a happy Easter – I’ll be back in April 🙂

Still Painting

Still painting yes, but still using a roller and a very large bucket of matt white emulsion. I’d love to be one of those people who can manage more than one major project ( ie: painting the house and some other stuff as well – like the other kind of painting ) but sadly I am not and frankly it’s a wonder that the family haven’t starved and/or run out of clothes as this task has been truly all consuming. On the positive side though, the house has never looked better. Unseen corners that haven’t been noticed for years are emerging and EVERYTHING looks brighter – there’s a lot to be said for ‘Brilliant white’! I have had the occasional splurge of colour like this green wall (below) in my kitchen which I love. We have prints and paintings here that we have bought/collected and swapped over the past fiveteen fifteen years or so. The toaster sketch is by our friend Joyce Tansey and the Coffee Pot is by Blaise Smith. The print under the Toaster is by Kathe Kollwitz and the landscapes are by good friend and talented painter Mary Donnelly. The Little Trees drawing is by canadian artist Luke Ramsey. I love them all.

 

 

 

 

and just look at those shiny white skirting boards and that sparkly architrave – I do feel proud!

Here’s a bit of red in the front room below.

 

Red wall in my sitting room

 

 

 

I love red and also have some in my kitchen. The fabric in the blind came from Ikea – out of date now. I still treasure it even though it’s a bit faded. There’s ‘Jellybean’ our ginger cat outside on the window sill..

 

Ikea fabric blind in my kitchen

 

 

 

I’m almost there, just another coat of gloss in the hall and that’s the downstairs done. Upstairs can wait till after Christmas..

Soon back to painting on canvas then – I’ve a couple of hen paintings that need to be finished which I’ll post about in a little while.

 

Time Out

I booked a holiday earlier this year when the Autumn seemed like a very long time away. It’s been a long and full Summer and now that the month of October is almost here, I’m ready for a break and a change of scene! I won’t be posting while I’m away so you’ll hear from me again, revived and refreshed on Monday October 8th.

I’ll leave you with a song from The Dubliners who played here last week for the Clifden Arts festival. This one’s a favourite of mine and I think the perfect blend of writing and melody, with words by Patrick Kavanagh and music from the traditional song ‘The Dawning of the Day‘. As the story goes, the song was born when Luke Kelly of the Dubliners met Kavanagh in a pub in Dublin and it was agreed that Raglan Road should be sung as a ballad.

 

 

 

On Raglan Road

 

On Raglan  Road on an Autumn day I met her first and knew

That her dark hair would weave a snare that I might one day rue;

I saw the danger, yet I walked along the enchanted way,

And I said, let grief be a fallen leaf at the dawning of the day.

 

On Grafton Street in November we tripped lightly along the ledge

Of the deep ravine where can be seen the worth of passion’s

pledge,

The Queen of Hearts still making tarts and I not making hay –

O I loved too much and by such, by such, is happiness thrown

away.

 

I gave her gifts of the mind, I gave her the secret sign that’s known

To the artists who have known the true gods of sound and stone

And words and tint. I did not stint for I gave her poems to say

With her own name there and her own dark hair like clouds over

fields of May.

 

On a quiet street where old ghosts meet I see her walking now

Away from me so hurriedly my reason must allow

That I had wooed not as I should a creature made of clay –

When the angel woos the clay he’d lose his wings at the dawn of

day.

 

Patrick Kavanagh  (1904-1967)

 

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=19qdV2vgM-o

 

 

Cover image taken from a thrifty mrs.

Summer Break

I love this Mary Wilson Little quote;

 

“There is no pleasure in having nothing to do; the fun is having lots to do and not doing it”

 

I’m taking this to heart for the next little while to spend some quality unwind time with my family..

Don’t go away!  I’ll be back in the second week in August..

 

Deborah

 

(Image taken from violetdart on etsy.com)

Welcome!

Welcome to the new face of my blog!  I’ve had lots of fun setting it up with the help of friends and experts Noel and Fiachra from Connemara Publications

I decided that my blog needed a facelift and I wanted to be able to display the imagery in a more professional way. I think that this website/blog combination does exactly that and I hope that you like it too.

You should be able to find the areas that you are interested in more easily as I’ve divided the posts and images in to different categories.

I have moved over your comments with your permission and that’s why there are two dates attached to each thus far.

Thank you all for your support!

 

Deborah

 

( Photo of bunting from Blue Moon Studios  )