Friday, December 21, 2007

Good Fortune Bouquet, Happy New Year!

SOLD Good Fortune Bouquet, 8x10, oil on linen panel



I titled this the Good Fortune Bouquet because I want it to represent good fortune to all the kind, sensitive and wonderful collectors I've come to know since I started painting in February 2005. It also represents the good fortune I have had in having a little post-retirement hobby develop into something meaningful that has transcended anything I ever could have imagined! This will be my last painting of the year as family and friends will be with me over the next few weeks and I'll not have time to paint. However, being someone who hates to waste paint, and knowing that my palette will be dried up by the time I open it up again in January, I managed to utilize the globs of paint that were left to create another one of these abstract florals that people seem to like so much.




Thanks again to all the new friends I've made in such a short time, both collectors and fellow artists as well. I wish everyone a joyous holiday season and a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year!


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Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Abstract floral and belated studio photo

SOLD



"Crescendo", 8x10, oil on canvas panel, Buy it now for $100.00 by using the Paypal button below. Shipping is free!

The combination of blue statice, baby's breath and orange cape daisies attracted my attention in the market today. So I bought the bouquet and took the flowers home and painted them. It's been a while since I painted- the holidays have consumed all my time, so I had a good time with these! I've been so busy that I forgot that yesterday was the day that the Daily Painters Gallery artists were supposed to post a photo of their working studio. As I've said before, I paint in my kitchen, so better late than never, here's a shot of a painting in progress. No dinner tonight, I'm afraid! Too much mess!








Buy this painting on PayPal
Price: $100.00 which includes free s/h
Or, send me an email




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Saturday, December 15, 2007

In the Butterfly Garden,11x14

SOLD In the Butterfly Garden, oil on gallery-wrapped linen, 11x14


I painted this scene from a photo that I took one day at Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, in Sarasota Florida. The little girl in the garden turned her head away just as I snapped the photo, but I used the photo as a reference anyway because I liked the way that her hair was swinging around her little head. The hollyhocks were blooming in the butterfly garden at the time, and they looked HUGE next to the little girl, which was perfect set-up as it reminded me of the painting that Monet had done of his children next to the giant sunflowers, in the painting titled, "The Artist's Garden at Vétheuil" .

This painting is an exhibition piece and has been in a few shows since I painted it last spring. Please click here
if you wish to bid on this painting.




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Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Red Poppies, 12x24

SOLD Poppy Love, 12x24, oil on masonite


I remember when I lived in Pa. we used to receive the J.Peterman catalogs in the mail. I used to love looking through the catalogue and reading the descriptions of the items. Often the description of a sweater or pair of socks read like a paragraph from a romance novel. Julia Louis Dreyfuss of the Seinfeld series, played the role of a writer for the Peterman company, and I often thought it would have been a job I’d have loved to have had myself.

That being said, if anyone notices some far out descriptions on some of my paintings, it’s just because I’m trying to remain creative since I can’t paint. I’ll be back to painting after the holidays , but in the meantime, I’ll just have to settle for pretending I’ve landed my dream job.

This painting was painted to create the illusion of a field of poppies stretching past a European "wedding -cake" village to the mountains beyond. The scene could be in Tuscany or the south of France, wherever your imagination wishes to take it. If you look carefully at the scene, you'll notice heart-shaped patterns throughout, creating the illusion of a sweetheart field. The painting is lush with pure jewel-like colors and layers of thick impasto, and would make a lovely holiday gift. Please click here
if you wish to bid on this painting.


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Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Plein Air, Alla Prima, Casperson Beach


SOLD


Casperson Beach, 12x16, oil on gallery-wrapped canvas



I painted this a while back, on a beautiful fall afternoon at the canoe launch of Casperson Beach. I was pleased with the way it came out because the light was so beautiful that day.

Although I don't have time to paint right now, I thought it would be nice to offer some of my favorite older paintings for sale, especially ones that I had hesitated selling before now. This is one of them.
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Monday, December 10, 2007

Last light on Lake Como, 18x24

SOLD



Last Light, Lake Como, 18x24, oil on linen panel (Please click the photo if you wish to see more detail.)


I finished this today, and although I'm happy with it right now, I may take it out again in a month or so and change it around a bit. For now, it's finished, and it may very well be the last painting I'll be posting here for awhile due to holiday obligations that will be taking me away from my painting.

This painting is available for purchase for $395.00, which includes free shipping. Please email me if you are interested.


I've posted a couple of paintings on ebay recently, to make room for the art of the New Year. Although I really am not fond of ebay as a selling venue for many reasons, if you'd like to check out my paintings, (many of which are priced below value), just click here.

Otherwise, have a merry, merry holiday season, and don't forget that art is for lovers, extremely intelligent people, sensitive souls, and people who will eventually go to heaven! (I just made that up.)

Happy holidays!



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Friday, December 07, 2007

Nutcracker Snow Queen, Oil on Linen




The Snow Queen, oil on stretched archival linen, 8x10


The Nutcracker's Snow Queen is graceful and elegant, poised on her toes as she pirouettes through the snowflakes. When my former ballet company, the West Chester Ballet Theatre staged the Nutcracker every season, the Snow Queen was the heroine of the ballet. The Sugar Plum took a role of lessor importance in the version that I choreographed, and the audience often said that West Chester Ballet Theatre's Nutcracker was the very best Nutcracker that they'd ever seen. To see photos of my Nutcracker rehearsals and read more about my days as as a ballet company director, you can go here.

I painted "The Snow Queen" last Christmas during a week of nostalgia. It is available for purchase for $250.00, which includes free shipping. This would make a lovely gift for the ballerina in your life. If you would like to purchase the painting framed as shown (see picture below) and ready to hang, please email me at maryannejacobsen@aol.com.



Buy this painting on PayPal
Price: $250.00 which includes free s/h
Or, send me an email




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Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Remembering Louis Tedesco-1947-2007

Sold



Mixed Fruit in a Blue Bowl, oil on linen




The very first time that I saw Louis Tedesco I was surprised. He didn’t look at all like what I’d expected he’d look like. I suppose I expected a dignified, orderly-looking man in long creased trousers and a white button-down shirt because Tedesco’s still life paintings were so orderly and majestically dignified. They were also incredibly beautiful, with a mysterious luminous quality to them that is very difficult to describe, unless you have seen them for yourself. It was one of Louis’s still life paintings displayed at Art Center Sarasota that caught my eye one day, and filled me with a fervent desire to learn to paint just like that!-although I’d never painted a still life in my entire life before that moment. So I signed up for a 3 day workshop with Louis last spring, and the small, soft-spoken man that I was introduced to as I walked into the class was not at all as I’d imagined he’d be. His arms were covered with the most intrinsically patterned tattoos I’d ever seen, a little chaotic in my mind’s eye but nevertheless orderly in artistic design. His smile saddened me a little, for it was obvious that he certainly needed some costly dental work, but it was his beautiful deep, dark luminous eyes that matched that same mesmerizing quality I’d noticed in his paintings, and captured the viewer’s attention almost immediately.

Louis Tedesco died just a few months after that workshop, and although I only had the honor of learning from him for 3 short days, I still see his influence in many of my still life paintings today. Louis is a classic example of everything that is sad about talent that goes unrewarded financially during the artist’s life time. I called the art center in late August to schedule myself for Louis’s fall workshop, and it was then that I was told that he had just died unexpectedly. I was also told that when he finally went for medical attention, he was told that the hospital could really not help him because he was not covered with the health insurance required. He died soon afterwards, and an artistic community is left saddened by that sudden loss, and wondering if anything could have changed the outcome. I’ll never forget that during my workshop with Louis, someone in class mentioned that they were stopping at Whole Foods on the way home to pick up some groceries. Louis only smiled and remarked that he’d need to mortgage his house (if he had one) in order to shop there.

When I think about Louis and his beautiful still life paintings, I can only wonder why the term "Starving Artist" should immediately come to mind and be associated with someone of such talent.In my opinion, although this gentle, talented man painted his dramatic chiaroscuro still lifes as competently and majestically as his teachers David Leffel and Sherri McGraw, he died practically penniless, unable to afford any medical treatments that might have prolonged his life, and never receiving the financial reward for a talent that was richly deserving. So goes the starving artist syndrome, and alas it is unfortunate that in America people will pay enormous amounts of money tickets to sporting events, big screen TVs and electronic equipment, the amount of money that most people are willing to shell out for original art is usually a tragedy.

One of the piece’s I did in Louis workshop is on exhibit at Sarasota’s City Hall, another has sold, but the piece above that I did recently is a good example of the unique way in which Louis has influenced my own painting. I’ll never forget some of his words to me spoken with a twinkle in his eye as he watched me paint, “You didn’t really just put pink on that table cloth did you? This is North Light! You don’t need to slavishly copy every detail, but you must approach every single brushstroke with reverence and make it meaningful!” Then as he watched me struggling to mix the color of one of his favorite still life bottles he said to me, “What in the world are you doing?” When I explained that I was trying to mix the color of that bottle he just smiled, went over to his own paint box, and handed me a tube of Rembrandt phthalo turquoise blue. “My dear,” he said, “there are some colors that you simply cannot mix! Help yourself!”

Although I’ll never truly be a competent realism painter in the style of Louis Tedesco, I definitely know that I need to make every single brushstroke a work of art in and of itself.

If only for Louis.

If you ever knew or studied with Louis, there will be a posthumous exhibit at Imperial Fine Art, in Sarasota Florida during the month of December. The exhibit opens this Friday and if you would like more information about this exhibit, please contact Imperial Fine Art here.

In addition to the piece by Louis below, if you would like to see more examples of Louis Tedesco’s work and read more about him, please go here.



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Sunday, December 02, 2007

Midnight Confession Bouquet-

SOLD" Midnight Confession Bouquet", 8x10, oil on canvas

The painting above was created late last night as I cried my eyes out and attacked the canvas with a palette knife and a vengence. The darned thing actually bounced off the easel and hit the floor seconds after I signed my name, but I made a couple minor adjustments to it and decided to post it anyway.


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