Daily Painting, “Well Hello There”, Day 29

Well Hello There

“Well, Hello There” 6×6, oil on gessoboard, $75.00 [button link=”http://www.dailypaintworks.com/fineart/denise-hopkins/well-hello-there/228332″ type=”big”] Buy Now[/button] SOLD

Today was an interesting day in the studio.  Worked on a painting I’d started a week ago, abandoned it.  Started a new painting.  Smeared it away twice.

Then I remembered the trip we took last month to the Tampa area and all the (unintentionally) blurry, unfocused pictures of pelicans I took while we were there.  We means two toddlers and two adults on an eleven-hour road trip.

I met my friend Ann on a retreat for the “separated, widowed, divorced”/sad people.  We were pretty significantly the youngest in the bunch.  I hadn’t been living back in my hometown long, and she became my first friend in a place I’d never thought I’d make my home as an adult.

I am repeatedly amazed at the people who seem to enter my life at exactly the right moment.  She was one of them.

Which bring us to the epic adventure of two single moms and two toddlers in a car for a very long time and the chaos/fun/exhaustion that ensued.  Ezra’s face lit up when he sat in the surf for the first time, splashed by kicking his legs in imitation of  his “pretend big brother”.

IMG_0830

I took pictures of pelicans on the trip because I thought I’d use them in paintings when I got home, but, until today, I haven’t much thought about them.  The photos are painfully poor in quality but today (which is rainy, grey, peaceful) I pulled them out.  The photo I used as a reference doesn’t have two pelicans, just one perched on a string of lights running along the dock.  I thought about writing something silly about the metaphorical nature of the image, but, let’s be honest, I just wanted to paint a pelican, and it just so happened to lend itself to a little trip down memory lane.

This painting started as one pelican:

IMG_1415

I was so happy with the loose brushstrokes, the understated image, that I was nervous about adding the second one.  But compositionally (and perhaps metaphorically?) it needed another one.

Once again feeling grateful.  Feeling not so alone.

 

Picture of Denise Hopkins

Denise Hopkins

April 29, 2014

Share Post

blog

Related Blog Posts

Day 31. If you want to go far…

  “If You Want to go Far” 24×30 inches, oil on canvas I started this month with a bike, and...

View Post
Day 30. Reteach a thing its loveliness.

“The Bud Stands for All Things” 24×24 inches, oil on paper I discovered this poem last week by Galway Kinnell...

View Post
Day 29. Intuition

“Follow Your Intuition” 9×12 inches, oil on paper My art studio is a 300 square foot storage room underneath our...

View Post

Privacy Policy

This following document sets forth the Privacy Policy for this website. We are bound by the Privacy Act 1988 (Crh), which sets out a number of principles concerning the privacy of individuals using this website.

Collection of your personal information

We collect Non-Personally Identifiable Information from visitors to this Website. Non-Personally Identifiable Information is information that cannot by itself be used to identify a particular person or entity, and may include your IP host address, pages viewed, browser type, Internet browsing and usage habits, advertisements that you click on, Internet Service Provider, domain name, the time/date of your visit to this Website, the referring URL and your computer’s operating system.

Free offers & opt-ins

Participation in providing your email address in return for an offer from this site is completely voluntary and the user therefore has a choice whether or not to disclose your information. You may unsubscribe at any time so that you will not receive future emails.

Sharing of your personal information

Your personal information that we collect as a result of you purchasing our products & services, will NOT be shared with any third party, nor will it be used for unsolicited email marketing or spam. We may send you occasional marketing material in relation to our design services. What Information Do We Collect? If you choose to correspond with us through email, we may retain the content of your email messages together with your email address and our responses.