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Chasing Geese
Chasing Geese
Oil on canvas with copper leaf
16 x 20 inches / 16 x 50 cm
Original for sale £1400 (GBP)

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How do my paintings evolve?

Many people ask me why I paint as I do and how do I get the ideas. I usually have some kind of idea about the painting I work on but it is rare that I end with my original thoughts.

This is a good example. I wanted to paint a few trees together and see what happened. I always paint the first coat of the blue sky and green landscape in acrylic which gives a base for the oil paint. I paint thinly so if the canvas is white that tends to show through, the undercoat sorts that out.

When the first layer was thoroughly dry, I worked out where the trees will be and traced them onto the canvas. I painted an layer of red in oil and waited for it to dry before applying copper leaf. - I added the copper very roughly to give it texture but this meant some parts are not covered, I do this on purpose as the tiny flecks of red showing through gives the copper a vibrancy.

In this painting I added hills in the background which is done by painting the area green and then adding the details when this is dry. Next I painted the leaves which takes many days as I needed to paint several layers and to wait for each layer to dry. I had made a drawing of a shepherdess driving her sheep from an old manuscript, and thought I could use this idea. I redrew the image changing the clothing etc and traced it onto my painting before I added colour.

The final part of the painting was the millefleur. I started on the left hand side and work across. Adding the millefleur took 3 -4 days!!

Each of my paintings takes an average of 3 or 4 months but I work on two or three at the same time as I wait for areas to dry. I work on my paintings most days.

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