Category Archives: Tuscany Paintings

Shadows of La Crete

I achieved my goal of finishing up this painting last week, but it left no time to post. This is the final product of the resurrected work-in-progress I last wrote about.

 Tuscany landscape painting by Jennifer Young

“Shadows of La Crete”
Oil on Linen, 24×30″
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The Tuscan region known as La Crete is known for its dramatic undulating hillsides. I loved the way vineyards and olive groves were cultivated clinging to the slopes. One afternoon while we were staying in southern Tuscany near Montalcino, my husband and I took a drive through the winding roads of this stunning landscape. We spent the day driving, stopping to walk around, lunching and sketching (well I did the last bit). No plein air painting there, but it was still such a great day!

Now that I have the wee one and I’m on a very different (but awesome) journey, I am not sure when I will get back there to La Crete. But I’d really love to go back and dig into some plein air painting one day.  Nevertheless, I am grateful to have been able to go at all, and to have taken so many good reference photos for my studio work. 

Over the years I have learned how to take better reference photos. When I first started landscape painting I’d really be disappointed by the lack of information I’d gathered from a trip. It seemed like I’d take a ton of photos, but often what I found when I came home was that I’d only have one shot of the most intriguing scenes. I learned from those experiences to take a number of shots of each location, from several angles, at several exposures. I also took close up “detail” shots of foliage, flowers, textures, etc.   It still does not compare to the information that becomes seared into my brain whenever I can photograph and actually paint on site at a location, but it helps a great deal. My photos don’t really do justice to my memory of this beautiful land, but hopefully through my paintings (if I do enough of them) I will be able to express how I feel about this place.





Jennifer Young; Vibrant Landscapes
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Resurrection of a W.I.P

I’ve been doing a little Spring cleaning lately and came across a few unfinished canvases tucked away. Why I never finished them, I don’t know (I look back at my former self a little jealously now when I think of all of the time I had to paint!) But at least a couple of these lost souls seem worth the attempt. Except for some paint and a little more time, what have I got to lose?

I decided to work on this painting of the Tuscan hillside first, since the whole canvas was pretty far along and just needed to be fleshed out a little more.

 oil painting tuscany work in progress

Looking back through my blog archives, I actually posted this as a W.I.P. back in October of ’09 (!) According to this post, I was suffering from shoulder tendonitis at the time. I guess between that and whatever else I had going on at the time, this canvas fell out of sight, and subsequently out of mind…until now.

When I first worked on this painting, I used an alkyd medium to speed the drying. So I’ve started in again by using some of the medium to “oil out” the areas that I want to work on. I’ve altered the composition slightly by elongating the shadows (it’s a dusk scene) and also by simplifying the road in the foreground. It seemed to be moving too fast around the bend and leading me right out of the canvas, so I altered that area slightly by extending the shrubs to slow this movement down. I’m also toning down the yellow in the hillside because the foreground shrubs are meant to be yellow broom, and I want a different color behind them to contrast. As a result,  I’m laying in a lot more of that terra cotta earth so prevalent in this region. We will see how this goes…  A lot more work needs to be done to the hillside, the olive trees, and their shadows, and I may need to add some of the greens back. But for the moment I’m liking the predominately warm tones. I’m working more on this painting this afternoon, so if all goes well, I hope to post a conclusion by  Friday.





Jennifer Young; Vibrant Landscapes
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A Painting Completed (at last)

Happy New Year everyone!  Ok, so I know I am a tad behind, but this is my life right now!

Tuscany landscape painting poppies, wildflowers

“Wildflowers in the Grove” (Tuscany)
Oil on Linen, 20×24″
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This is one of a few paintings I had gotten to a point of 80 to 90% complete and then set aside for- like- ever! Even though baby E. is now 6 months old, sleep is still the most precious commodity at our house. Yes, I know–excuses, excuses! But I never knew what a challenge this life-change would be on creative work. So hats off to creative people everywhere who still manage to “do their thing” with a baby at home! (And while I’m at it, any tips?)

I had to finally table the Venice painting I’d been working on in my prior post (before Christmas- ack!) I’ll come back to it at some point soon, but progress was really slow and it got to the point where I had looked at it for so long that I couldn’t “see” it any more. So for my own mental health, and to feel like I can still complete *something* in my life every now and then, I did the old switcharoo and returned to one of my favorite subjects- Tuscany in springtime. 

Hubby and I discovered this olive grove strewn with wildflowers on a well-remembered drive one day in the beautiful Val d’Orcia. It does my spirit good to meditate on that day of abundant sunshine, especially when we are in the midst of a mostly gray, soggy winter here in Virginia.





Jennifer Young; Vibrant Landscapes
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A small commission, with just weeks away…

Given how long it has been since I’ve posted anything new here at all, I am almost embarrassed to write another “yes I’m still here” post. But here goes!  The baby is now less than a month away from her due date and I am finally feeling as if I have gotten our household in some kind of order to prepare for her arrival. Unfortunately, now that I’m getting a little respite from the baby books, the shower, the classes, and prepping the nursery, I am, in this final trimester, also feeling my least energetic and creative. In truth, I don’t think I was prepared for just how exhausted I’d feel throughout the pregnancy. But now that I’m getting really big, I can’t really seem to do any one thing for very long before I start to feel quite uncomfortable.

So needless to say, painting has pretty much taken a back seat during most of my pregnancy, and it’s hard to say when that will change to any great extent after the baby comes. However, I do have one new little piece to share. It’s a small watercolor/pen and ink painting  (8×10″ on 11×14″ paper) that a client commissioned to commemorate her daughter’s upcoming wedding:

watercolor tuscany painting by Jennifer E. Young, all rights reserved.

“Flavor of Fagiolari”
Watercolor and Pen & Ink on Paper
sold

The scene is of a B&B in the Chianti region, not far from where I myself have traveled a number of times. It’s a special place to the betrothed because they met in Italy and stayed at Fagiolari during their travels through Tuscany together.

When I paint from photos, I prefer to work from my own references. I just have a much better feeling for the place if I, myself, have traveled and painted there, and my photos serve as a trigger to call forth those experiences. I also take several different viewpoints of a given scene, plus a number of details, so that I can have as much information as possible when I get to work. So it’s always with a bit of reservation when I consider working from a client’s photo, which is normally more of a one-off tourist snapshot.

But this commission was actually quite a joy for me. Not only was it great to be doing something in the painting realm again, but the photos provided were excellent. Having also traveled the area fairly extensively myself helped a good deal as well.  Plus I was given much leeway as to how I wanted to interpret them (the photos) and what I wanted to include, rather than being tied to making an exact, literal interpretation  (a.k.a. an illustration) of a scene.

What was most important to the client was that I caputre the “flavor” of the place (hence the painting’s title). Luckily, the client was delighted with the finished piece, and I had a good time getting my hands back in some art-making to boot. I tend to feel somewhat more intimidated by watercolors (as opposed to oils) but given its manageable size and the properties of the medium, I was able to stop and start more easily than I can with oils. It’s not without reason to think that maybe I can even attempt a few more before “D-day” (or make that B-day) but we’ll see. The one thing I can say about my life this past year is that it is anything but predictable!





Jennifer Young; Vibrant Landscapes
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Time and process

Well, for the most part, my resolve last week to get “back to painting “ crumbled, as I found myself distracted by a number of other issues. I haven’t been in the best command of the schedule I’d set up for myself, setting aside my painting time to do a million different errands and tend to personal issues as well. The tendinitis continues to bother me, too, which isn’t helping my stick-to-itiveness.  In hindsight, in spite of my injuries, I  probably should have made myself stick as much as possible to the same schedule regardless of whether I’m actually “painting”– filling the gaps with new art-related activities (like reading one of my gazillion art books!) In any event, I am starting again–finally– with a color block-in which I’m including below:

tuscany painting in progress by Jennifer Young

Because of the shoulder/arm thing, I’ve had to make a few changes to the way I work so that I’m not in a huge amount of pain by the end of the day.  I’ve lowered my entire painting setup, paint for shorter intervals, and also set a timer when I am painting to go off every 30 minutes. It reminds me to stop and stretch and give my muscles a chance to release the locked position I tend to take when I’m hyper-focusing during painting.

Coincidentally, artist Robert Genn wrote an interesting little article last week in his twice-weekly newsltetter about the timed exercises he uses for  attention and focus, (which naturally caught my attention!)  In the article, Genn suggests that by imposing shorter time limits on a work session (in his example 37 minutes), one is required to come into sharp focus, thereby energizing mind and spirit (and often one’s painting as well.) I don’t think Genn is suggesting that one should always commit only 37 minutes to complete a painting! Rather, these are exercises to ‘shake things up’ and breathe new life and energy into old, comfy work habits.

It’s a good idea. And it’s one I’ve implemented myself (though  I used a kitchen timer rather than an elusive 37-minute hourglass.) While Genn required his students to complete small paintings in his timed exercises, I’ve also found that the practice works great for plein air and larger studio paintings when you want to limit how long you spend working on each stage of the process. 

For instance, in plein air painting, where the shifting light already imposes a certain time limitation, the amount of time you spend establishing your composition is important not only to the painting as a whole, but also because it will dictate how much time you have left for the block-in and finishing. So for a smallish painting, I might wish to limit myself to 15-20 minutes to lay in my composition- DING! And 40 minutes for a block-in-DING! That leaves another 30 minutes to (possibly) an hour to make changes, refine shapes and edges and finish before the light changes too drastically (DING! Brushes down.)

You can play around with division of time if you wish, but the result, as Genn suggests, is often that you learn to hone your focus and think better on your feet, without giving yourself the chance to “noodle around” endlessly or jump into detail  too early in the game. It helps in more ways too, than just keeping you on track. For some reason, the timer helps to address all of the canvas during each of the timed stages, thereby avoiding the tendency to  get lost in only working (or overworking) one section of the painting to the sacrifice of the others. I’m not sure why this is. Maybe it’s just that using the timer stage-by-stage causes you to take a more deliberate, conscious approach at each stage, making the approach more methodical by breaking things down into digestible chunks.

While the timed-stages works particularly well for plein air painting (when time is truly of the essence,) I’ve found the same principal can also be worthwhile when applied in the studio, either by similarly timing myself at different stages in larger pieces, or, as Genn suggests, by (attempting to) finish an entire smaller piece in a short interval, as an exercise drill or a warm-up. So I thought I’d try it for the painting above, timing the initial compositional sketch and the color block-in at 15 and 40 minutes, respectively. I don’t intend to finish this piece in just an additional hour. It’s a 24×30″ canvas and I certainly don’t want it to look completely slapdash. On the other hand, I do hope to keep it as fresh as possible to re-energize myself now that I’m getting back to work.

Of course, anything can be annoying if taken to the extreme, but I can see how using the timer periodically can serve a useful purpose. It also provides good insight for me about my process, and just how much time I am spending therein.





Jennifer Young; Vibrant Landscapes
Oil Paintings and Art Prints Online
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