2025-11-20

Pistachio : 2025-11

Pistachio
20 November 2025
Acrylic on hardboard
19.5 x 15.5 inches (49.5 x 39.4 cm)


This was the third entry for "Just Desserts" (a call-for-art) along with Drupe Monde and Cake Crest. The latter two were representative so I wanted this to be less representative and a bit more abstract. I was planning on more of a cubist look, but let the painting talk to me instead. It can be difficult to know when to stop with an abstract painting, but I was pretty happy with this stopping point. I like the stage shot I took below, but I think the finished version better highlights the pistachio.

One stage shot. I was painting against a timeline so the stage shots take a second fiddle.

Pistachio is framed in a brown wood frame which compliments it pretty well.
I will add a picture when able.

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Cake Crest : 2025-11

Cake Crest
20 November 2025
Acrylic on poly-cotton canvas
20 x 16 inches (50.8 x 40.6 cm)


I painted this as another entry (along with Drupe Monde and Pistachio) for the "Just Desserts" call-for-art at a local gallery. I wanted to paint something light and fun and a tad bit surreal. I was going to pack more cakes in there, but I didn't want it to get too busy (and was kind of running out of cake ideas). I thought the clouds were nice, too. More 'desserty' than a stormy sky. I also kept the price low if someone wanted it as a present. I painted over a piece of wall art - what I call 'Flattery' - as you can see below.

I didn't make a gif. I was approaching a timeline so I didn't take many stage shots.
In fact, the pic on the right was before a trip. I finished it the night after I returned.

The original piece came with a 1.5" boarder and was technically a gallery wrap.
I didn't continue with the image and gave it a sky blue museum wrap.
I wanted to tack some wood around it but ran out of time.

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2025-11-19

Hotel Art : 2025-11

 I've been in quite a few hotels and some of them have some fantastic art. I thought I would start a collection of some of the better pieces I've seen. If the actual title isn't known, I will self title. If the date of the work isn't known, the date will be when I took the picture. Since the known title and date are not common, I will annotate if that is the case. I.e., if not annotated, it's my title and the date of my picture. 

Solar Plexus and Racetrack, 22 November 2025, The Exchange, Sacramento CA
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Driscoll, Sketchy Ridge and Emerald City, 19 January 2025, Graduate Hotel, Eugene OR

Aurora SledHighrise and Foggy Morn 19 January 2025, Graduate Hotel, Eugene OR
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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2025-11-18

Liberty : 2025-11

I was in Philly in March 25, and came back in November of the same year. This time I was able to walk to Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell Center. There is also a US Mint nearby but I wasn't aware of it or that you could do a self tour - maybe next time. The primary target was seeing the Bell and that was open and free for all.

Here's the Bell! I realize this is a picture that should've been taken from the other side,
but it was very nice to see it!

A picture of Independence Hall and a shot of one of the senate rooms. Very interesting green.

Walking back, I snapped a shot of the Philadelphia City Hall - cool building. I also stopped in the Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul. I saw it last time I was there, but this time it was open. A couple shots of the inside. Also an impressive building. As I walked around this city and visited these sites, I realize how much we take for granted. The amount of time and work that went into these buildings, for example. Hundreds of people walk by them everyday and give no notice. I'm grateful that something makes me pause to try appreciate what those before us have done.

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2025-11-16

Remnants : 2025-11

Remnants
2025
Acrylic on paper towel

I use two glass trivets for palettes. I took the little rubber feet off.
They're very easy to clean - I razor blade off the colors.
The paper towel above shows the paint after I remove it from the razor blade.

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2025-11-15

Drupe Monde : 2025-11

Drupe Monde
15 November 2025
Acrylic on canvas
20 x 16 inches (50.8 x 40.6 cm)


As you can see below, this was a repurposed canvas. It was someone sprinkling some croissants with a sign reading "Cafe Du Monde". That can be taken two ways...a cafe of the world a cafe for all. Now we have Cherry World or Cherries for All. Either works for me. Personally, I think maraschino cherries are the best way to ruin a cherries. They're typically used in cherry cordials of which I received all the time as a paperboy as Christmas approached. Originally, I was (and did) paint a large backhoe because I saw it regularly when driving to the airport. As you can see in the gif, I began to think no one (or almost no one) would want to hang a painting of a backhoe in their home. I want to sell art, but that's not why I paint. I paint to strike something in peoples' hearts and minds. That was the first impetus to take a 180. The other was a pending call-for-art entitled Just Desserts. I hope this is accepted. This was submitted with Cake Crest and Pistachio.

The original, "Cafe du Monde" on the left and a gif covering 74 days, six days of work

I thought the frame holding the original painting worked well. Simple and natural.

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2025-11-11

Veterans Day Escort : 2025-11

The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handywork. PS 19:1.




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2025-11-05

Indiana War Memorial and Museum : 2025-11

I had a trip take me to Indianapolis and fortunately, the hotel was just a short walk from the Indiana War Memorial and Museum (the website is a little confusing as it lists several memorials). The staff is very friendly and the museum is free! During my visit the Shrine Room (the main, large tower) was closed and work was being done on some of the floors. It didn't really get in the way of the exhibits and since it's free, I can go back another time.

On the way, I passed the Soldiers and Sailors Monument (above, left) which is a pretty imposing structure and recognized as one of the world’s outstanding monuments. It's 284.5 feet tall, and when it was made, the cost was equivalent to $500 million dollars. The water was turned off, but that'll be good to see on another visit. It's also centered in a brick traffic circle. Above center is the front entrance to the museum. On the ground floor, right by the entrance, is the auditorium. It was a very cool room and the center of the room (looking up) is above, right.

A mockup of the F-16 cockpit. Great picture when asked if there was much room in there.
A Cobra in the Vietnam room and one of many impressive war posters.

Live mask of Abraham Lincoln and his hands from 1860 - before before the stress he would carry and before he started wearing a beard. This was made in Chicago by Leonard Wells Volk when Lincoln was there in the role of a lawyer. That was some insight by Volk. The hands were made on a different visit.

This is a great shot and quote.

A couple more great posters. On the left is a pretty famous one by Howard Chandler ChristyThey had exhibits for many people but I thought one for Ernie Pyle (from Indiana) was unique. They also had a tribute to Sammy L Davis, aka The Real Forrest Gump. They used the footage of Davis getting his Medal of Honor when Gump received his.

You have to appreciate a tutorial on how to take out a tank - or Crack that Tank.
A flag tied to the penning of the Star Spangled Banner by Francis Scott Key.

If you're in Indianapolis - I would certainly visit this museum!
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2025-10-29

Portland Art Museum : 2025-10

I had a trip take me to Portland. It had been a while since I'd been there and this time I was able to visit the Portland Art Museum. I have to say, the first floor was a bit underwhelming and I was surprised for a larger city's art museum. However, I changed my mind once I visited the second floor. And they gave me a discount which was nice since I didn't have that much time. Above is the entrance and the floor map. On the floor map is a woodblock print by Chizuko Yoshida, Tanima no chō (Valley of Butterflies), 1979. She was one of the current exhibitions with over 100 works. I'll say it now...I have no idea why the museum labeled everything "Yoshida Chizuko" (and other members of the family in the same manner - which can be read about below). The family name is Yoshida, and her name is Chizuko. Even her works were signed "Chizuko Yoshida". I should have asked a staff member. Below are some works that caught my eye.

L: Leonard Drew, Number 232, 2020, wood, paint and sand.
R: Milton Avery, Bathers, Coney Island, 1934, oil on canvas.
Notes: I liked the disregard for detail and reality in Avery's Bathers.

L: Leonardo Drew, Number 432, 2024, wood, paint and plaster.
C: Keith Haring, Totem, 1989, woodcut.
R: Hiroshi Yoshida, El Capitan, 1925, color woodblock on paper.
Notes: I thought Drew's work had some great lines and motion. I snapped the Haring because I learned of him while walking through the Keith Haring Fitness Court in Green Mountain Falls, CO. I recognized the style and patterns immediately but hadn't known anything about the artist. I thought El Capitan was beautifully made.

L: George Luks, Mike the Bite, 1928, oil on canvas.
C: Chaïm Soutine, The Little Pastry Cook, ca 1921, oil on canvas.
R: Alfred Henry Maurer, George Washington, 1932, oil on composition board.
Notes: I really liked how Luks captured the moment and emotions without overworking details. Soutine's work is very expressive and it's that emotion that draws you into his images. You might recognize his Le Garçon d'étage which is in the Musée de l'Orangerie. That museum has the famous oval room with The Water Lilies by Claude Monet. I took a picture of the Cubist style George Washington because it was very striking. It was painted on the 200th anniversary of Washington's birth and the 100th anniversary of Maurer's father's birth. I also took the picture because works like this beg the question of relativity. If I'd typed this was a Picasso, would you have accepted that as true? Are Picasso works 'better' because they've been forced upon us? That's what's nice about art - if it captures you, it captures you - regardless of the notoriety of the artist. The fact that I reference Picasso in relation to Cubism is indeed the notoriety he deserves. Finally, this was the last thing Maurer would paint. He killed himself the same year.

L: Milton Avery, Portrait of Louis Kaufman, 1927, oil on canvas mounted on Masonite.
Notes: Another Avery - with more detail but still the 'blockiness' I liked from Bathers. Good to see a sculpture from Picasso, and the lines were great. Probably not one of his most famous paintings, but it's a Renoir and it certainly shows his style. This is one of ten landscapes he made while working side-by-side with Claude Monet.

L: Paul Gaugin, Garden View, Rouen, 1884, oil on canvas.
C: Edgar Degas, Madame de Nittis, ca 1872, oil on canvas.
R: Claude Monet, River at Lavacourt, 1879, oil on canvas.
Notes: Three legends. Degas' painting reminds me of the power of contrast.

L: Jeanne Selmersheim-Desgrange, View of Seine, ca 1910, oil on canvas.
R: Claude Monet, Waterlilies, 1914-15, oil on canvas.
Notes: Desgrange used pointillism and was one of few women working in that style. The individual rectangles of color are really impressive to see in person. Another less-famous piece, but it's a Cézanne. Waterlilies by Monet...how can you pass up taking a picture. Even if you don't like it, he's known for these and Impressionism. Just like Picasso is known as the co-founder of Cubism, artists who start a movement / style deserve to be famous.

L: Vincent van Gogh, Charrette de boeuf (The Ox Cart), July 1884, oil on canvas.
C: Théodore Rousseau, In the Pyrenees, 1844, oil on paper laid on canvas.
R: Charles C. McKim, Cascade Head, ca 1910, oil on canvas.
Notes: The van Gogh caught my eye before realizing it was a van Gogh - once again boldness and contrast caught my eye. I think this is a fantastic van Gogh and many people might not know it's his. The lighting in In the Pyrenees was well executed and it's a Rousseau. I liked the McKim painting for the simplicity, contrast and colors. Interestingly, he trained with Winslow Homer whom I think has some incredible work. The plaque accompanying Cascade Head said McKim became one of the Pacific Northwest's most evocative landscape painters. I was quite surprised how little I could find about McKim on the Web.

C: John Singer Sargent, Franciscan Monk in the Garden of Gethsemane, 1905/6, oil on canvas
L: George Inness, Sr., Apezzo Pass, Titian's House, 1876, oil on artist's board
Notes: It's a Sargent and I'm a fan. Followed by another Sargent. Sargent was the leading American portraitist of the Gilded Age, and I can only aspire to paint fabric and flesh like he did in a 'sketch'. When writing this post, I stubbled across a Sargent I'd never seen before and think it's brilliant. It's titled Gassed and depicts the aftermath of a mustard gas attack in WWI. As a stickler for titles of work, I couldn't've titled it better myself. The Inness painting had wonderful colors and trees, and the depth created by the mountains in the background is perfect - something I definitely have to work on.

L: Ayomi Yoshida, Misty Rain, 2021, color woodblock print on paper.
C: Thomas Moran, The Grand Canal, Venice, 1899, oil on canvas.
R: A Family Affair - this plaque discusses five members of the Yoshida family.
Notes: Misty Rain had wonderful colors and just the right amount of detail (or lack thereof). Also, it was done by another member of the Yoshida family. The Moran painting has incredible lighting. It also highlighted an artist I was not aware of/tracking. Moran has some amazing work and I think would make an excellent artist to study. The Family Affair is there because it's a nice summary of the Yoshida family members.
If you get to Portland and have time, I would highly recommend a visit. Also, if you visit after 20 November 2025, you will get to experience the museum's transformation of expansion and renovation.

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