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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2025-10-24

Cadence : 2025-10

Cadence
24 October 2025
Acrylic on hardboard
14 x 11 inches (35.6 x 27.9 cm)


This painting is in the essence of Blue Dance and Pulse, but with more structure and deliberateness. There is also inspiration from a painting I saw about nine years prior - Voices of Silence by Jimmy Ernst. It's in my post, Montgomery : 2016-02, but I didn't realize until making this post that it was only part of the full painting. I love the brighter colors and semi-defined shapes. I also had fun with the background which gives a nice stone feel. This work comes with a bit of a dilemma. It was painted with the intent of using a mat to accent the colors. The dilemma is how to display it.

This is the dilemma in picture form. The mat does exactly what I wanted it to do, but the
painting is the painting. It is currently arranged as shown in the center and I added glass.

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2025-10-23

Fifty Pound : 2025-10

Fifty Pound
23 October 2025
Acrylic on canvas
46 x 32 inches (116.8 x 81.3 cm)


There were a few things contributing to this piece. I picked up a very fancy, and very heavy frame which had been sitting around since July-August. I also bought a painting which I called Blue Blob with the intention of repurposing the canvas. Thirdly, a friend of mine sent pics of a painting they'd recently purchased which had a fantastic sunset. Finally, I was approaching a deadline for a gallery's call-for-art which I wanted to use this as an entry. This project gave me more practice at re-framing and re-stretching canvas, but I also used it as an exercise in fighting the urge to over-control an over-fret details. I'm pretty happy with the result. My biggest complaint is the weight of the frame...I expect I'll end up making another frame. I went with "Fifty Pound" because of the frame's mass but also because the sky has some good boldness to it.

The original painting is above left. The canvas sat disassembled and rolled up for about a month and a half. I was working on other things and didn't have a vision yet. Once I had the plan, resized t he frame, trimmed out a hole, and re-stretched the canvas, I painted on and off for three days.

This is the frame. I sell frames as optional, but I was pleasantly surprised with the match.

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Acro Incentive

Belle resting between hops.
I flew the daughters of a friend - three of them for loops, rolls, spins, etc.
While they had zero issues, I think I was starting to feel it towards the end.

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2025-10-16

Sid Richardson : 2025-10

I had a visit to Fort Worth with enough time to walk around. It was a beautiful day and very near to the hotel was the Sid Richardson Museum. It's a small museum but it's well done, the staff is very friendly and they don't charge you to visit. The current exhibit was THE CINEMATIC WEST: The Art That Made the Movies. The museum features permanent and special exhibitions of paintings by Frederic Remington and Charles M. Russell, as well as other late 19th and early 20th-century artists who worked in the American West. Sid Richardson amassed one of the largest collections of the artists mentioned above.

L: The pamphlet they gave me upon entry - even that was well done. Full color, good quality.
R: Fredric Remington, A Figure of the Night [The Sentinel], 1908, oil on canvas.

The moonlight on the snow really grabs your attention and was done so well. There were some other night scenes and there is something cool about the contrast with moonlight. Very inspiring - something I want to try myself. Another one is below.

L: Fredric Remington, The Luckless Hunter, 1909, oil on canvas.
R: Charles M. Russell, In the Wake of the Buffalo Runners, 1911, oil on canvas.

Another great moonlit scene by Remington. I took a picture of In the Wake of the Buffalo Runners, mainly because I wanted to capture a Russell work. Apparently, Remington was much more of my style. I chose this particular Russell because of the lighting. I still work on light and contrast in my work. The better the contrast, the better the work (almost always).

L: Fredric Remington, The Cow Puncher, 1901, oil on canvas.
R: Fredric Remington, A Taint on the Wind, 1906, oil on canvas.

A couple of fantastic works. The Cow Puncher was quite impressive in that it's black and white and the anatomy of the horse was fantastic. Another great moonlight scene in A Taint on the Wind and the action felt like you were viewing it real time.

Fredric Remington, A Misdeal, ca 1897, oil on canvas.

I thought this painting really captured the individuals in so well. Another black and white masterpiece and it inspires me to try the same. This painting has quite the story as you can see below. It was in movies and was the opening scene to a movie, Hell Bent. The movie starts with the painting and fades into real people in similar poses. Not bad for 1918. If you're in the area, I'd certainly recommend a visit and you don't need a lot of time.


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2025-10-15

King Davin : 2025-10

King Davin
15 October 2025
Acrylic on hardboard
24 x 20 inches (60.9 x 50.8 cm)


This was also painted for "SOFA KING ABSTRACT" (read more at Cushions) and was easily the most abstract of the three - the other two being Cushions and Auntiluna. I thought of this arrangement as I fell asleep the night before the deadline. I painted it the next morning and delivered the three for the competition. As I wrote this, I didn't know the outcome of the competition. Similar to the other two, this focuses more on the color arrangement of the fabric. What spoke to me most was that the works were to be paired with the sofa. That was more important than rendering an abstract couch and I could see any of them hanging about the sofa. I've been painting quite a bit on hardboard and sometimes I like its raw color - a rather unique medium to dark brown. I thought it worked well for King Davin.

I didn't make a frame because I was short on time, so I used this one.
I'm sure a less elaborate frame would work, but seeing them together was quite pleasing.

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2025-10-14

Cushions : 2025-10

Cushions
14 October 2025
Acrylic on canvas
18 x 24 in (45.7 x 60.9 cm)


This is an abstract piece painted for a call-for-art, titled "SOFA KING ABSTRACT". The exhibition focused on abstract art using the exact pictured sofa (below) as the muse. Works needed to pair only the sofa. I didn't give myself a lot of time for this work - I was a bit caught off guard with the deadline. There are aspects of this piece I like and aspects I would probably change. I focused more on the fabric colors than the sofa itself. I entered this with Auntiluna and King DavinAuntiluna was an afterthought because I thought it matched the colors but was least abstract of the three. Kind Davin was intentionally for this competition and is certainly more abstract. 

The picture of the sofa and its fabric provided by the gallery.

I borrowed BINDII's frame for the competition. It is a simple wood frame with black inside trim.

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