Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Worked on the middle and foreground of Landscape 6. The trees and bushes need a lot of work but this painting will be finished soon. Again, the clouds in the three colorful landscapes are not meant to be realistic. They are dramatic and slightly abstract.

Tuesday, January 9, 2024

Worked on the sky in these two landscapes and the linen in these two still-life paintings. The clouds are not finished. For two or three weeks I’ll let the still-life paintings dry before applying glazes. Next, the middle and foregrounds will be worked on in these two landscape paintings.

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

Reworked all of Landscape 2 the last couple of days. I’ll rework it one more time and then finish off the details. This should be finished in a couple of weeks because of the drying time between painting sessions, a week between each session.

I think I will finish five or six paintings in January.

These two will be the next two paintings I will begin maybe by the end of the month. One will be 16 x 20 and one will be 20 x 16.

A hyper realistic painting of a closeup of crystal clear rocky stream using the rule of thirds –ar 16:20 –v 5.2 Job ID: 624f1908-cb66-4a53-bf8d-20d7a6b0c1c0
A realistic painting of a closeup of crystal clear rocky stream using the rule of thirds –ar 20:16 –v 5.2 Job ID: 989fa7a7-2dd6-436e-a8db-0b4434fc21c6

The captions of the two paintings are the command I gave the MidJourney AI program. It took a couple of weeks to narrow the images down to these two images and a handful of others. You give it a command with whatever parameters and it produces four images. Then you can vary any or all of the four images in a few different ways and you get four different images for each one. I did this many, many times. The command in the captions was the original command. I’ve wanted to do oil paintings of closeups of clear, rocky streams for a while. It won’t be easy. I’ll paint the bottom of the stream entirely with grays. After the grays dry I’ll paint over the grays with different colors transparent glazes. That’s old-school oil painting.