Girdle
04 July 2026
Acrylic on wood
20 x 14 in (50.8 x 35.6 cm)
This was the third painting to join Hideout and Snipe for a call for art (mentioned in Snipe). There are entry fees for most exhibitions which generates revenue for the museum and I tend to look at it as paid advertising. Sales would just be butter. I receive plenty of rejections so that's paid non-advertising. Some calls - like this one - will allow up to X number of paintings for a set fee. Typically, you can submit more for a higher price. This call the fee didn't change until four paintings so to take advantage of the fee, I wanted to submit three. This is somewhat of a belted kingfisher so I called him Girdle. Belt felt a little too generic.
A gif showing some of the stages. I liked all the backgrounds but in the end, I thought the gray gave the best contrast to the cattails, the bird and the foliage. The last foliage change was pretty significant. I liked it because it was getting too busy. About two days passed in this gif. The longest part is assembling the surface. Girdle is painted on the remainders of frames. The frames - such as the one holding Snipe - require a rabbet to be cut. If you make two cuts (verses one really wide one) you get little boards which are nice wood (typically radiata or Monterey pine) but a difficult size to use. I simply splice them together and then trim to size - this is about 34 of those 'little boards'.
The frame currently holding Girdle. It's a fabricated woodgrain with a
reddish cherry/walnut appearance. I think the color works well.
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