"Bellissima World", 12x16, oil on linen panelThis painting was done with palette knife and brushes and has nice impasto throughout.
"Jungle Music- God Bless the Rains", 11x14, oil on canvas panela Painting a day, Daily painters, original art , affordable original art, abstract landscape knife paintings, colorist art,contemporary impressionism, art blogs, palette knife landscape paintings, Western art, dramatic knife paintings, palette knife oil paintings,
"Nantucket Morning", 12x16, oil on wrapped canvas
"Nadia", 14x18, oil on linen
"Effortless", 8x10, oil on gallery-wrapped linen (Masterpiece) canvas.
Organic Vegetables, 12x16, oil on gallery-wrapped canvas
"Colle Verde Vineyard-Summer"-24x36, oil on canvas
"A Fisherman's Sunset", 12x16, oil on canvas panelThanks for listening. Now you know how some paintings come about....
a Painting a day, Daily painting, original art , affordable original art, abstract seascape knife paintings, sailboat art art,paintings of sunsets and sunrises, Maryanne Jacobsen art, palette knife seascape paintings, wild and crazy art, dramatic knife paintings, paintings with thick impasto,

"All the Way Home", 24x36, oil on canvas
"Pacific Blues", 12x16, oil on canvas panelAccording to Wikipedia, Nepenthe is a drug of forgetfulness mentioned in Greek mythology, depicted as originating in Egypt.
The word "Nepenthe" first appears in the fourth book (vv. 220-221) of the Odyssey of Homer. Literally, it means "the one that chases away sorrow" (ne = not, penthos = grief, sorrow). In the Odyssey, "Nepenthes pharmakon" (i.e. a drug that chases away sorrow) is a magical potion given to Helen by an Egyptian queen. It quells all sorrows with forgetfulness.
So what does this have to do with my painting? Not much, other than when I first saw the beautiful Pacific Coast at Big Sur, I can honestly say that I forgot all my troubles. We did stop at the Nepenthe restaurant for lunch, where a large Phoenix rising from the ashes is carved from a wooden tree stump and greets the many visitors that have passed through this restaurant over the years.
Here's the view you get to see over lunch or dinner:
"Cocky", 8x10, oil on canvas, (Note: Click on the photo to see a close up of the texture.)
Here's the painting "Colle Verde Vineyard" displayed with ribbon. I normally don't buy black frames, but in this case, it complimented the piece beautifully!