
Monday, December 31, 2007
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Dulin's Barn (oil on canvas) 2007
Winter Trees (oil on canvas) 2007
Fresh Snow Cover (oil on canvas) 2007

McGuire's House (underpainting) 2007

McGuire's House (oil on canvas) 2007
Sunday, December 2, 2007
Dulin's Barn (pastel) 2007
Monday, October 15, 2007
Sunday, October 14, 2007
Elizabeth Dulin's Barn (oil on canvas, 2007)
Study for McGuire's House (oil on canvas, 2007)
Friday, October 12, 2007
Siamese Twins (oil on canvas, 2007)
Hay is for Horses, July (oil on canvas, 2007)

Actually, this hay is for cows. My neighbor cut the hay behind my house for the cows on his dairy farm. I made this painting right after they finished baling the hay – they came and took the bales away the next morning. I was forced to work quickly as I could only paint while my son took his nap, which was about an hour and a half.
Hay Bales at Sunset (oil on canvas, 2007)
Monday, September 17, 2007
Monday, September 3, 2007
Friday, August 31, 2007
Red House Over Yonder (oil on canvas, 2007)

I saw a retrospective of Edward Hopper's work at the MFA in Boston the week after I finished this painting and it made me realize how much of an influence he had on me. This is an empty house right on the border of Canada. It looks as though it might have been some kind of border patrol station at one time, but the road is currently blocked off right where the road crosses the border. One of the Border Patrol agents came out to see what I was up to one evening while I was doing a drawing here. I showed him my sketch pad and waved and he waved back and drove away. A friend later told me that he overheard the agents talking on his police scanner about me and said they referred to me as a "hippy" artist. Yikes!
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Impending Darkness (oil on canvas, 2007)

Thirty Below Sunrise (oil on canvas, 2007)

I went out for a run one morning in January and it was so cold (30 below zero with the wind chill) that the fluid in my eyes (the only part of my body that was exposed) froze before I got half a mile from my house. This was unbelievably painful. I had to walk back with my hands over my eyes. So, I capitulated and went out drawing instead and did a colored pencil drawing which became the impetus for this painting.
Skies Clearing Over the Ridge (oil on canvas, 2006)

Late in the afternoon after a long period of rain in the Spring 2006, the skies started to clear and I saw these fantastic clouds moving quickly across the sky. I grabbed my pastel supplies and rushed to out find a view to draw from before the phenomenon was over. I ended up on Front Ridge Road in Littleton, ME, the most elevated ridge in the area from which you can see great distances on a clear day. I got out of the car and did a quick pastel, which later yielded another pastel, several drawings and finally this painting. In this particular work, more than any other, I can see my love of John Constable's painting.
Summer's End (pastel, 2006)

I was out running one day on Ross Ridge Road near my house when I saw a unique barn that had two opened doors at right angles to each other so that one could see right through the corner of the barn to a corn field beyond, which was ablaze in the early September sun (see above). I returned the following day to make a pastel of the barn and corn field. I parked across the street and I was unloading my gear from the back of the car I looked to my right and saw this solitary tree, with New Brunswick off in the distance. Needless to say, I drew the tree instead and went back another day to draw the barn and corn field.
Monticello Potato Shippers (pastel, 2006)

Leland Hill Road (oil on canvas, 2006)

The intersection of Leland Hill and Pierce Roads in Sutton, MA has been very fruitful for me. The painting "Pierce Road" (see below) is view looking at this location from the opposite side (note the triangular Yield sign in both paintings. The red barn from the painting of the same name (see further below) is just to left, outside this picture frame (note same stone wall in both pictures).
The Red Maple (pastel, 2006)

I went out early one Friday morning in June, just after sunrise, and despite it being the height of black fly season, I managed to get a couple of nice pastels done (see "Early Hours" below). I returned home around 9:00 feeling quite happy with the morning's work. When I showed my wife my proud accomplishments, her only response was "When are you going to draw that red maple tree in back of the house?" Feeling especially confident, I went back outside to face the black flies once more and did this pastel, on black Stonehenge paper. My wife was under the mistaken impression that I had done it for her and is still mad at me for selling it.....
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
Early Hours (pastel, 2006)

Birch Trees at Woods Edge (pastel, 2006)
Fresh Snow Cover (oil on canvas, 2006)
Monday, June 18, 2007
Pierce Road (watercolor, 2006)

Bend In The Road (pastel, 2006)

I was driving out on the Framingham Road on my way to another location to do some studies for a painting that I was working on when I looked up and saw the sky filled with these unusual zeppelin-shaped clouds. I stopped the car and got out on the hood and drew this using Polychromos hard pastels on a cream colored laid paper. I have since done two paintings from this composition.
Littleton, Maine Sunset (oil on canvas, 2006)

Sunset Near the Border (oil on canvas, 2006)

This is a view from the end of the Foxcroft Road. Just around the bend to the right, the road ends at the border of New Brunswick, Canada. Northern Maine is known for having very cold winters and massive amounts of snow. Snow mobiling is big business up here. The winter of 2006 was unusual in that after a big storm the day after Christmas 2005, we hardly had any snow at all and the landscape, mostly potato fields, looked essentially like this. It was still cold, though. This was done from a pastel that I drew on location.
Snowstorm Approaching (pastel, 2006)

This pastel was done in early February 2006 near the end of the Campbell Road looking up a hill across a snow covered potato field as a large dark cloud bank moved in just before sunset. Sorry about the glare on the photo. This piece uses a technique where I sketch in the basic forms and them paint over the pastel with an acrylic medium which gives the pastel a painterly look and provides a nice textured surface for subsequent layers of pastel to cling to.
Sheep Farm In Snow (pastel, 2006)
