Monday, July 26, 2010
wild wood
When I painted plein air recently at Kubota Garden, I applied a loose watercolor foundation on a 14.5 inch square of Wallis then worked in pastel on top of the watercolor when it was dry. After a week on the easel in my studio, I couldn't think of anything it needed and decided it was best left in it's lively, wild state. For me, a plein air painting becomes less alive if I begin work on it again in my studio, away from the scene of inspiration.
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This IS breathtakingly Beautiful!!
ReplyDeleteMarvelous - all of these works!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! I am glad that you left it alone!
ReplyDelete