Tuesday, June 25, 2019
Diorama Doings
Work continues on the diorama I'm making for the Hi Desert Nature Museum in Yucca Valley, CA. Unfortunately, the process of trying to sell our house and buy a mobile home has greatly slowed me down, which is quite frustrating. But I work as best I can. It's hard, too when I'm airbrushing some vegetation -- I have to do it in the garage, and it's been around 100°F / 39C lately. That's when I find out how much I can sweat!!
The diorama isn't quite finished yet, but here's how it looks so far. The glass front is in place -- sorry about the reflections!
Saturday, May 25, 2019
Plodding Along
Plodding along...that's been what I've been up to lately. Not in the same spirit as the tortoise and the hare, but I've felt an awful lot like a tortoise lately.
The Tortoise and the Hare |
The Wiffee and I are getting ready to sell our house and move into a mobile home. It's simply gotten too expensive here in the state of California to stay in our house any longer. Taxes, insurance premiums, fees as well as living expenses keep going up, and the income isn't increasing at the same rate.
So we've been working on packing, staging our house, stuff like that.
Meanwhile, I've still got a habitat diorama to finish for the local nature museum. It figures that I have to deal with both of these issues at the same time!!
Here's how the background painting for the diorama finished out:
Admittedly, the painting appears much more detailed when seen in person than it does in this small photo!
And as for paintings -- well, that's fallen by the wayside for now. Too busy, too tired, all that stuff -- I just can't seem to continue on a painting I began a month or so ago. Someday!
Hopefully, I'll finish the diorama next week and I'll post pictures of it here! Until then...
Mark Junge
www.SouthwestSpaces.com
www.MarkJunge.com
www.FineArtAmerica.com (for prints)
Labels:
Art,
Joshua Tree,
Joshua Tree National Park,
Landscape,
Painting,
Rabbit
Thursday, April 25, 2019
One Night in the Redwoods
One Night in the Redwoods is the title of my latest painting. I've never been in a redwood forest at night, but I imagine it to look like a daytime scene except darker! ☺
One Night in the Redwoods |
The size is 16" x 20" / 41cm x 51cm. I wanted the piece to have a dreamy, moody look; hence, I made blurry most of the items in the painting. The gal is obviously a nymph (if redwood forests don't have nymphs, they otta!) The "model" was a statue I have and have seen elsewhere online with different titles -- Shyness, Shame and others. (My favorite title is Abbandonata (Forsaken), sculptor unknown). But in this case, I removed what little clothing she had on, and she is on her knees instead of standing.
One Night in the Redwoods is somewhat of an autobiographical image and very much reflects my own thoughts about life. If this comes through, I've done my job!!
The next painting -- one I've already started -- will have lots of color and flowers. An opposite of this piece.
Mark Junge
www.MarkJunge.com
www.SouthwestSpaces.com
www.FineArtAmerica.com (for prints)
Labels:
Art,
Ferns,
Figurative,
girls,
Painting,
Paintings,
Redwoods,
Traditional/Classical Art,
Women
Dioramas in Progress
Besides working on my fine art paintings, I've also been busy with a commission from the local Hi Desert Nature Museum in Yucca Valley, CA. I'm making two habitat dioramas showing some of the wildlife and overall look of our Mojave desert!
So far, I'm still painting the background image which I hope to finish within a few days. I have to say, this is the largest painting I've ever done (86" wide x 67" high / 2.2m W x 1.7m H). And I'm working on the painting on site -- not in the studio, where I would use an easel and all my paraphernalia laid out where I'm used to having it. Oh, well.
Here's how it looks so far -- a slightly modified scene from Joshua Tree National Park:
Daytime Diorama |
Then, if I'm not too tired, I work in my studio on my paintings, too!
It'll be nice to have both dioramas finished and see what the response is. I hope they will add much to the museum and that the public will love 'em!
Mark Junge
www.MarkJunge.com
www.SouthwestSpaces.com
www.FineArtAmerica.com (for prints)
Monday, April 1, 2019
MORE Zillions of Flowers!!
The California "superbloom" has been goin' on for awhile. Here are a few photos of the area outside of Walker Canyon, just north of Lake Elsinore, CA. (We didn't go into Walker Canyon itself -- too many people, too many cars parked there, and too many people leaving the trails so they can take pictures of loved ones IN the flowers -- with all the trampling one would expect!)
Poppies |
California Wildflowers |
Horses and Wildflowers |
Superblooms are a relatively rare event in southern California; hence, people go a little nutzo when it happens. I understand -- I just wish those people would have a little more respect for the land and the flowers.
OK -- soapbox time is over! Have a beautiful spring day, wherever you are!
Mark Junge
www.MarkJunge.com
www.SouthwestSpaces.com
www.FineArtAmerica (prints)
Sunday, March 17, 2019
Zillions of Desert Flowers!
By now, it's common knowledge the southwestern deserts, including the California deserts, are experiencing a superbloom thanks to the many rain storms we've had over the past months. More flowers than usual appear like magic and transform the typical desert browns to carpets of unbelievably zonking color that appears almost fluorescent!
The color doesn't always show very well in photos, but of course, in paintings (such as the ones I plan to do), the color will jump off the canvas or panels!
The color doesn't always show very well in photos, but of course, in paintings (such as the ones I plan to do), the color will jump off the canvas or panels!
Yellow and lavender flowers light up the desert floor. |
Yellow desert dandelions are in full bloom as the stick-like ocotillo prepares for a show in a few weeks. |
A barrel cactus blossoms in front of a chuparosa. |
A stick-like ocotillo, a palo verde tree and yellow-flowered brittlebush set off Indian Head Mountain. |
A red-flowered chuparosa nestles in a clump of lavender-colored phalecia. |
The gently-scented pinkish blooms of
sand verbena color the waves of dunes.
These images, along with many others I made (and may continue to take) will certainly lead me to create paintings that highlight the desert at its blazing best!
Mark Junge
www.MarkJunge.com
www.FineArtAmerica.com (for prints)
|
Monday, March 4, 2019
Clouds
Clouds 8 x 10 / 20cm x 25cm |
The size is 8" x 10" ( 20cm x 25cm ) on panel -- a size I've been using lately to make a lot of paintings. Easy to pack up and ship, and for many people, small and miniature art is a desirable size to collect those images of memories of happy times in the desert. Or wherever.
This scene shows my favorite view -- in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument in southern Arizona, looking south toward the distant Sonoita (or Sonoyta) Mountains of Mexico and featuring those vast, wide-open vistas that one can see from this spot.
I was actually there when the clouds created alternating patterns of sun spots and cloud shadows on the landscape as I depicted in the painting. However, I have heard from friends that the organ pipe cactus on the right has died since I was last there.
A place of beauty, peace and serenity -- as long as one has water, food, A/C in the summer and heat in the winter! Otherwise, the desert is a harsh environment! But I prefer to show it at its most glorious.
Mark Junge
www.MarkJunge.com
www.SouthwestSpaces.com
www.FineArt America.com (prints)
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