Showing posts with label pheasant painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pheasant painting. Show all posts

Monday, March 19, 2012

Painting A Pheasant: 3rd Session

Ken's Pheasant
oil on panel, 10x8"
3rd Session

This blog has become my painting journal. Each time I post a completed painting it brings me back to the time and place that inspired its creation. This colorful little pheasant will always remind me of my time in England, in the North Yorkshire countryside, when a kind gentleman named Ken, took time out of his busy schedule to show Robert and I his beautiful homeland.

Thank you, Ken!



Thursday, March 15, 2012

Painting A Pheasant: Second Session

Ken's Pheasant
oil on panel, 10x8"
2nd Session
Painting wet paint into wet, I laid the main shapes of the colors down and then added in the details. I'll work on the background next and then complete the pheasant with finishing touches.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Painting A Pheasant

Ken's Pheasant
 oil on canvas, 10x8"
1st Session


I would never have imagined that the first painting I would be working on after my return from England is of a pheasant.  But there is a story behind this bird, a story of kindness from a stranger and a new friendship formed.

Ken, our neighbor in North Yorkshire, England, knew that we were visitors to the area with a limited amount of time to spend enjoying the surrounding beauty of his native land. Without hesitation he offered to show us the sights and share the history of the area, sometimes by foot, other times by car.  He became out tour guide extraordinaire. We learned so much from Ken in such a relatively short time.  As the paths along the countryside are varied and sometimes vague, Ken showed us the way. By car he gave us an overview of  Nidderdale; all of it was fascinating.  

Back to the pheasant painting. Ken loves the colorful pheasant that grace the countryside. He even enjoys feeding those that come to his yard each morning. (Robert, on the other hand, had other thoughts about those pheasant. Like Ken, he got so excited when he saw them, but it wasn't because he wanted to feed them.)

Robert was leaving England before me but before he left we decided that an appropriate thank you gift for Ken would be a portrait of a pheasant which became the inspiration for this painting. Early one morning, with camera in hand, Robert paid a visit to Ken's yard. With those reference photos and others that I took while touring the area, our plan was set.