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One of my favorite spots…to walk, to get art inspiration, to exhale…is the Towpath along the C&O Canal National Historic Park near Great Falls, Maryland. But even as I start a new painting with this subject, I know it will test my limits. It’s complicated.
It’s never easy. But I like a challenge. And to visit a new, unfamiliar color palette is definitely that.
Never quite sure which way it will go. I work in layers. So often what I end up with depends on how I start. It’s only after several layers of sheer color that it begins too make sense.
I had a graphic design firm for over 25 years in Georgetown, Washington DC, and I remember we often talked about art and painting around the studio. One of my employees had been an apprentice/assistant with the renowned Washington DC artist Gene Davis. He said the artist had told him that one of the most important things to remember was don’t stop too early when working on a difficult piece. Sometimes that last push (or pushes) is what it needs. You wake up and go look at a piece and think, just not there yet. Now what do I do?
So when I question whether there is something else I can do to make a painting feel complete, I think of that conversation. And I keep going until…finally, all of a sudden, I just know.
Wetlands: Autumn’s Towpath, 30 x 40″, oil




















































