United States
United States
This is art that would brighten any room. Be the first to have it brighten yours.
What fascinated me most in painting this piece was the color possibilities with the stoplight and the pebbles in the trash bin. IN fact, I almost got obsessive-compulsive as I tried to paint each pebble a different color. Original ptg: 32” x 32” / acrylic on canvas private collection
Okay, I was mesmerized by the reflection of the street and buildings that abstracted the paintings in the art gallery window. This is one of 8 paintings for a commission I landed with a corporate client. Original ptg: 32” x 32” / acrylic on canvas private collection
This was the fourth in the series of paintings I created for this large commission. I wanted to put the entrance to the company office into the series and here’s what I ended up with in the effort. Original ptg: 32” x 32” / acrylic on canvas private collection
Have you ever had that project or painting that just wanted to frustrate your best efforts? This painting had me half-crazy. Something about painting fluourescent lights that just bugged my hand/eye coordination. I painted and repainted and painted and ran stark-raving mad out of the studio several times. Then, it finally acquiesced to my persistence. That’s why I titled it SGURD. . . which is DRUGS spelled backward. OK, there’s a drugstore in the background, too. Original ptg: 32” x 32” / acrylic on canvas private collection
This model is letting her tongue run amuck!
Here is a portrait that’s digitally massaged.
Beautiful model photographed off an alley in downtown historic Fredericksburg, Virginia
A beautiful woman stands in front of the bedroom mirror in her man’s shirt to see her sexuality and try to feel what her man see’s in her. In her visual examination, she see’s the sensual being that he sees.
This is March cover model for Bridal Magazine, Jennifer.
CKEMP.Mixed media on canvas. 6ft x 3ft
Jill Mill. Clayton, West Sussex at 7.15am 21/6/09 Jill is a post mill originally built in Dyke Road, Brighton, in 1821. She was known as Lashmar’s New Mill and was built to replace Lashmar’s Old Mill. In 1830, the Windshaft broke, bringing the sails crashing to the ground. A painting by Nash dated 1839 and an engraving in the Handbook to Brighton (1847) show her to have had a roof mounted Fantail, similar to the arrangement still found on Icklesham windmill. Lashmar’s New Mill was the most southerly of the three Dyke Road post mills. In 1852 she was moved to Clayton by a team of horses and oxen. The working life of the mills ended in 1906 and in 1908 Jill was damaged in a storm. She lost her fantail and sails over the years until in 1953 restoration was carried out by E Hole and Son, the Burgess Hill millwrights, funded by Cuckfield Rural District Council. In 1978, restoration of Jill to working order was commenced. Jill ground flour again in 1986. During the Great Storm of 1987, the mill’s sails were set in motion with the brake on, setting fire to the mill. Some members of the Windmill Society were able to get to the mill and save her. Today, Jill is in working order and open to the public most Sundays between May and September. She produces stoneground wholemeal flour on an occasional basis. The vast majority of her flour is sold to visitors. It is ground from organic wheat, grown locally in Sussex. On the occasions when the wind is blowing and Jill is in operation, a guide is available to explain the process of milling. Jill Windmill is owned by Mid Sussex District Council.
8/21/09 ~ Featured in Going Coastal ~ thank you very much!! Sunset over Calumet Island near Clayton New York. Calumet Island once had a castle on it. Today all that remains is the water tower, which has been converted to a light house. I was experimenting in Adobe Photoshop. I combined two sunset images from the Thousand Islands. I used the silhouette of Calumet Island and a sunset from two nights later to create this image. The sky is natural color. July 2009
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