2025-09-01

Pounce : 2025-09

Pounce
01 September 2025
Acrylic on hardboard
20 x 24 inches (50.8 x 60.9 cm)


This was the third creation for the same show as Mousetrap and Crouch. I saw some good art in Montana with some great trees. I had the idea of the cat jumping into some scattering birds and since I needed a setting, I tried trees similar to those I'd seen. I had the cat in a different position - facing directly at the viewer. I like this one much better as it seems to be reaching for whatever it can get.

I didn't take a lot of stage pics, but this covers two days.

The frame holding Pounce, wooden with black and a hint of gold.

Back to Miscellany Art | Home | Musket Art
- mm -

2025-08-31

Crouch : 2025-08

Crouch
31 August 2025
Acrylic on hardboard
15.5 x 19.5 inches (39.4 x 49.5 cm)


I painted this as another competitor in the same show as Pounce and Mousetrap. I like unusual perspectives I this came to mind. I also like crows. We don't really know how this crouch is going to work out...or for which animal it will work. I sketched the entire thing with black ink and then did some fill in with other pigment. I wish I would have taken some step pictures. The grass required me to push some limits and I was happy with it and the final highlights and the cat's eyes.

The frame holding Crouch - a custom built wooden frame dressed in black.

Back to Miscellany Art | Home | Musket Art
- mm -

2025-08-27

Sunfire : 2025-08

Sunfire
27 August 2025
Acrylic on repurposed firepit cover
16 x 20 inches (40.6 x 50.8 cm)


I tried my hand at making frame stretchers and repurposing an old firepit cover. It worked pretty well for Firepit, but was a bit more stubborn on this one. There are a couple wrinkles in fabric and the stables attaching the material to the stretcher aren't as professional as I'd like. Since the material has been sunbaked, you can't pull it as tight as you'd like. You run the risk of ripping it. The project spurred me to get another staple gun. It was that aggravating. I don't remember exactly how this painting started, but I eventually wanted to make an attempt at some sunrays. I liked how the painting turned out, but I'm still a little put out on the canvas itself. I have one more piece of the cover left, and I think I'm going to let it go.

This is the frame holding Sunfire.

Back to Miscellany Art | Home | Musket Art
- mm -

2025-08-26

Mousetrap : 2025-08

Mousetrap
26 August 2025
Acrylic on poly-cotton canvas
16 x 24 inches (40.6 x 60.9 cm)


This was painted with the idea of entering it for a call for art titled, "PERICULO FELIS: Cats with threatening auras". I will accompany Pounce and Crouch. I painted this guy to be more of a threat to mice and his weak effort to blend in with the prey. Funny enough, I painted it on a piece of Disney wall art. It might have been subliminal, but I don't think so. I was already well into the painting when I realized the connection. I was mostly concerned with the poor quality of the wall art. I cut the edges off and pulled the canvas over to the back. I kind of wish I'd kept the sides because it would have fit well in the frame. It worked out and I like the final result.
This gif doesn't show many steps. Of more interest was the repurposed canvas.
Also, I forgot I had it so it sat for 192 days for one day of painting. How time flies.

Mousetrap is in this custom built frame with no paint -made with a repurposed antique bed frame.
It's behind glass and those make below average pictures.

Back to Miscellany Art | Home | Musket Art
- mm -

2025-08-25

Ekster Dance : 2025-08

Ekster Dance
25 August 2025
Acrylic on hardboard
10.25 x 16.25 inches (26.0 x 41.3 cm)


I'd removed Burden from it's frame as they didn't seem to be a good match. I cut this hardboard to fit. For the subject... I visited the Chazen Museum of Art in Madison and took a picture of Three Costumed Figures because I thought they'd be interesting to paint. And here's one of them standing near what seems to be a beach with some eerie foliage. I named it Ekster Dance after Aleksandra Ekster, who made the original models from paper and wire - about 98 years ago.

This is the current frame holding Ekster Dance.

Back to Miscellany Art | Home | Musket Art
- mm -

2025-08-24

Tonkawa : 2025-08

Tonkawa
24 August 2025
Acrylic on poly-cotton canvas
16 x 20 inches (40.6 x 50.8)


I bought a piece of wall art (I call it Garage) and it was a bit larger than 16x20, but the frame had some damage. It's annoying when you don't notice those things when you make the purchase. However, it was a chance to make my own stretcher and re-stretch the canvas to fit. It worked out pretty well. The painting started with a vague idea of a submarine with a stormy sky. As mentioned in the painting title, this is (I assume) a poly-cotton canvas. I thought it was vinyl but I think the poly-cotton mix is more accurate. It's a pretty cool surface to paint on because it doesn't grab/absorb paint as much as full cotton canvas. That is very nice for blending. I was having fun with that blending and created the sky, but dropped the submarine idea. I struggled with the terrain a bit, but I liked how it turned out, too. To give it some life, I added the cowboy with his horse. KC thought it looked like an Oklahoma storm sky. I thought that was apropos so I called it Tonkawa, which I would say is much better than Garage

A gif showing some of the steps. Sat for 25 days, painted on it for two.

This is the frame holding Tonkawa.

Back to Miscellany Art | Home | Musket Art
- mm -

2025-08-20

Blue Bane : 2025-08

Blue Bane
20 August 2025
Acrylic on canvas panel
16 x 20 inches (40.6 x 50.8)


This was something I saw departing Denver for Raleigh-Durham. It was late in the day and pretty epic. I was most impressed with the subtle shadows on the earth and in the clouds themselves. I also wanted to practice the earth from above. I was quite please with how the sections of fields turned out and the overcasting blue - with and without the shadow. To top things off, the guy I was flying with is just a great person and pilot.

I only took three stage pics so showing them is easier than making a gif. The original canvas, which I called "Snow Path", is above, far left. I liked the far right stage. I might make a painting similar.

This frame was holding a print, but originals get priority.

Back to Miscellany Art | Home | Musket Art
- mm -

2025-08-15

Baltimore : 2025-08

I'd been to Baltimore before, but this time I walked further from my hotel and visited the American Visionary Art Museum, or AVAM. I again passed the USCGC Taney WHEC-37, the LS-116 Chesapeake, and the USS Torsk, but went further around the Baltimore Inner Harbor. It was about a 30ish minute walk but I found the AVAM. You never know what you're going to find in museums or galleries or collections, but it when the price is $10, it's worth the gamble. I did not visit the National Aquarium because they want $50. I skipped it last time, too. It's not the price - it was that I didn't have the time to make it worthwhile. Here are some shots of things that caught my attention...

This was the line that started the trip.

A bird on a bird - had to take the picture. The Brown Trout is in a tank in the entry of the aquarium (before you buy tickets). The tank is aerated by a waterfall...great place to step in when it's hot.

Left: SERMET ASLAN, Straight Jacket, 2003, acrylic on canvas
Right: WILLIAM KURELEKWhere Am I? Who Am I? Why Am I?, c. 1953–54, watercolor
I thought the motion was well shown/captured in Straight Jacket. Kurelek had metal problems including schizophrenia and this painting reflects what he must have felt at times. He fully recovered, go married and had four children. When he died of cancer at age 50, he was hailed as Canada's greatest painter.


Left: WAYNE KUSY, Lusitania, 1994, wooden toothpicks (his website)
Right: FRED CARTER, The Final Battle, unknown date
I took a picture of Lusitania mainly because I can appreciate the amount of time KUSY put into the project. The ship was torpedoed and sunk in 1915 and I appreciate the cut in the model. The face of The Final Battle caught my interest. The link above shows more of the other side, but this side seemed like it could be a good face/body if I ever need to paint something dark.

This is a diorama of the Christmas Truce of 1914. This one depicts a soccer game.

I thought this was a nice door and stained glass. The poster on the right was next to the door. I'm not sure I made the connection, but it had some good words by Raphael Lemkin. He coined the term genocide. On the bottom of the poster..."If you act in the name of conscious you are stronger than any government in the world".

Left: IGNO SWANN, Millennium Triptych, 1984, Oil on canvas
Right: A nice collection of fish by J. H. Gordon, circa 1969 (guessing artist's name)
I took a picture of SWANN's work because he claimed clairvoyance, was a Scientologist and created the term "remote viewing". Legend and artist,

The  museum had a second building. One wall held many things like the items above.
Left: PETER MARKEY, Natural Wave Machine with Birds, 1997
Center: PAUL SPOONER, Flogging a Dead Horse, 1994
Right: KEITH NEWSTAND, Brass Dragon, 1996
The moving objects had a button which would activate the piece. The birds were quite complex, and even though Flogging a Dead Horse was simple, I liked it. Shows the repetition of beating a dead horse. The Brass Dragon gave me more ideas for potential projects like THEAMISH. I think Keith Newstand might be Keith Newstead.

Left: WILLIAM OKTAVEC, Woodland Marsh and River with Swans, c. 1950
Right: DAVID BEST, Baltimore Blues Car, 2002
Always looking for new ideas, the screen door (or Oktavec) certainly caught my eye. I should try it since it would probably force good use of contrast. Interestingly enough, Oktavec is credited with inventing screen painting. It's always cool to see something from its pioneer. On the right is one of Best's ArtCars. For his "DCs" or decorated cars, he enlists and directs hundreds of people to make monumental community artcars.

JAMES CHANDLER, Symphony in Wood, 1977-1999, Arkansas sugar pine
The accompanying note read, "Conducted by Arthur Fielder, with Teddy Roosevelt on violin, Bill Clinton on saxophone, and John Williams as guest pianist."

Left to right: Mars, Saturn, SisStar, Robodog, Sun, Venus, Jupiter

Some miscellany items...there were sculptures by Nek Chand who was known for his life work, Rock Garden of Chandigarh. The pieces at this museum were made with recycled ceramic - as is the Rock Garden. The location of the Rock Garde, Chandigarh, was one of the earliest planned cities in post-independence India and nicknamed "The City of Beauty". I was unaware of The Circus Trees by Axel Erlandson. Finally, there was a shout out to Leonard Knight who made Salvation Mountain.

- mm -

2025-08-03

Boise - Spokane : 2025-08

After Boise, the trip which took me to Reno and Spokane - they seem to be nice towns.
Reno's Vegas sign. I liked it. We got to stay in the Davenport Grand in Spokane. It was very nice.

The hotel was just across the street from the Riverfront Park. It's nice as you're right next to the Spokane River and take a bridge over the Spokane Falls. Above, left to right are the Great Northern Clocktower, the Upper Falls Power Plant, and the Falls themselves.

- mm -