Saturday, December 26, 2009
2009 2-person exhibition at the Southern VT Art Center
June 2009 - 2 person exhibition at Southern VT Art Center
The Arts - 36"x30" oil on linen by Karen Winslow
A Glimpse of the Sound - 16"x24" oil on linen by Karen Winslow
Exhibitions in 2009
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Jamie
When we built our new studio, we made sure that it was handicap accessible. Jamie is an amazing young woman. Because she has very limited movement, she is unable to paint alla prima (one shot). So, I have her painting with a monochromatic underpainting, which she later glazes with color. She is patient beyond words and carefully analyzes her values and works her masses until she is pleased with the way everything looks. When the underpainting is dry, she applies the glazes. She is an inspiration.
Weekly still life classes - Thursdays 6pm-9pm
Thursday Evening Still Life Class
2009 - recap
It has been a while since I've posted anything, so I thought that I would share some photos of classes and workshops, as well as paintings and shows from this past year. I now offer a still life class every Thursday night from 6pm-9pm. I set up several still life arrangements, so that students have a choice. All of the students use a value scale, mixing a series of grays using black and white.
Sunday, May 03, 2009
"Open" Figure/Portrait Painting Group
"Open" Figure/Portrait Painting Group
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Head Studies

I have started an "Open Studio" portrait/figure painting group that meets on Saturdays from 1pm-4pm at the studio. Painting in a group of artists is a great way to support younger artists and learn from more experienced ones. Sharing ideas and encouraging one another helps to improve your skills in observation, as well as technique.
Monday, February 23, 2009
FREE OIL PAINTING DEMONSTRATIONS


Karen Winslow will be offering oil painting demonstrations from life at the studio in Cambridge. These demonstrations will be held on one Saturday per month, and they will cover still life and portrait painting. The demonstrations are free and open to the public, but the space is limited, so please call for more information and to reserve your spot. Thanks.
Mommy Paints very fast
I took a picture of my palette before I started the painting. It is basically a cadmium palette with grayscale. I mixed some "flesh" tones as well. The palette is a 12"x16" piece of glass that is painted with a mid-tone gray on the bottom.
After about 2.5 hours of work, Phineus woke up, Ryann had to return to her kids, and the painting session was over. Given a longer amount of time, I am sure I would have developed the painting differently. But, not knowing whether or when I could get the model again, dictates my methods. Learning to work with time constraints gives me an incentive to work quickly, deciding what is essential and what is not. Painting is a journey. I have discovered, along the way, that I must stay true to my own temperament, and painting fast is how I paint.
Mommy Paints fast
In these 2 photos, you can see the model, my painting and palette, Priscilla drawing and some random still life set-ups. I teach on Fridays, so I always have still life set-ups at various stations around the studio. My class is very low-key and friendly, and I paint as well, demonstrating and explaining principles. Students are free to watch me paint, and I am available to answer questions and help them with their paintings.
Mommy Paints
Mommy Paints
Facebook is an interesting way to stay connected with other artists. It is also how I stay connected to my kids who are living out west. With many "art groups" to choose from on FB, I joined one called, "Mommy Paints". The creator of the group proposed a 3 month project where all participants would show what they are working on, with the goal to have something at the end of 3 months. Yesterday, Priscilla (part of the group and mom of 3) and I painted. Here is the start of an 18"x24" head study of Ryann (who happens to b a mom of 2).
Thursday, February 19, 2009
Progress on the Big Landscape
Jack continues to work on the big landscape. He has been painting on it since October. His palette has premixed scales of gray and green, along with his line of cadmiums. After each painting session, he covers his palette and stores it in the garage, which, at this time of the year, is equivalent to storing it in the freezer.
Monday, February 02, 2009
Mother & Child
Phineus was born in November, and I attempted a Mother and Child painting in late December. Priscilla was actually doing a drawing, and Phin was sitting in his little seat. Every time she picked him up, I tried to paint him. I liked the start, which was painted in one shot, but I couldn't get back to it. A few days later, I tried to work on it again, but over did it. I'll think about this one for a while, and I'll try to tone it down and finish it. For me, if I can have a solid chunk of time to paint it in one shot, or alla prima, I am usually happier with the results.
Slow Going
In June, Jack and I are having a 2 person show at the Southern Vermont Art Center in Manchester, VT. I decided to do a few larger than usual still life paintings. Here is one that I am currently working on. Working on a larger painting means not working alla prima, my normal approach, but working in layers. This is slow going, with a lot of re-working, and trying to keep the painting unified is the biggest challenge. This painting is 30"x40" and it is an oil on linen.
Saturday, December 13, 2008
Drawing for information
To get enough information to do a large studio landscape, Jack does several very careful, tight drawings. He uses a mechanical pencil and toned paper. He is drawing for information, not for a broad general effect or gesture, but for specifics. This is one of the drawings that he is using to create the big painting, and it is clipped to the easel to the right of the large painting, so that he can refer to it often.
Working on the BIG painting
Jack's BIG landscape painting
Doing a large studio landscape from plein air studies takes a lot of work. This summer Jack did several plein air, or on the spot, paintings at the swimming hole in Jeffersonville. He does these outdoor studies over a number of days, rather than in one shot. Then, he goes back and does several drawings of particular detail that he will need when he composes his larger painting in the studio. The completed painting shown here is the plein air study, and on the easel is the start to the larger painting (4'x6') that he is painting from the study. His drawings and paintings are on the skinny easel to the right of the big painting.
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Massing
This quote is by Frank Vincent Dumond, who taught painting at the Art Students League in New York for nearly 60 years, and it should be the motto of every realist painter who paints from life. He taught my teacher, Frank Mason, how to mass, and Frank Mason taught me. I now teach it to my students. Massing is the underlying structure that every good painting should have to make it read as an illusion of light, form, and depth. Massing is learning to simplify and let go of the outline, and instead, think in terms of bulk, weight and advancing or receding in space.
I have this quote taped to the top of my easel as a reminder. Every painting is problem solving, and learning to solve your masses is key.
Friday, October 10, 2008
Priming Linen
We paint on various surfaces: canvas, panel and paper. Here are a couple of shots of Jack priming the linen. He usually does this in the summer and in the driveway. The linen is tacked to a large board. Later, when this is dry, he stores it to let it cure. Then, he can cut it (or keep it large for a big painting) for various size canvases.
Priscilla
Although most of the students in my workshop were working in oils, Priscilla chose to work with pastel pencils. The principles are the same. Mass your shadows, mass your lights relative to your shadows, and you will create an illusion of light every time. Pastel pencils are a great medium. They are forgiving and can be erased. They are easy to store, and the clean up is a snap. It is a great alternative for moms with little kids and limited time for painting.
Thursday, October 09, 2008
Model
My first weekend workshop was an intensive that touched on: still life, landscape (plein air) and portrait. All of the disciplines are connected. They all feature problem solving with light, form, depth and movement, and one discipline helps the other. The portrait segment was on the last day, and we had a spectacular model. In this photo, she is taking a break, but you can see the skull and the "planes" head that I always use to help students analyze the form and structure on the model. Future workshops, as well as weekly classes and "Open" sessions (no instruction) will focus on portrait/figure painting.
First Workshop
This past weekend, I taught my first workshop in the studio. I limit my classes to 8 students, and I had 7 in this class. We all fit in pretty well. Six still lifes were set up around the room, so the students are facing in various directions. Squinting is a big part of learning to simplify and mass. The student on the left is squinting and using her brush to measure. A workshop format is very intense, and we are using comparative relationships to gage space and value. All painting is from life and done in alla prima, or one shot. So, we are drawing and painting simultaneously.
Using Both Tables at Once
Studio Interior
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