Making hay while the sun shines

Itā€™s funny how often we psych ourselves into or out of failure.

Spring Break, 10X10, oil on canvasboard, $645 unframed, 25% off this week.

Memorial Day marks the start of the summer season here in Maine, when we throttle up into high gear for a short but productive summer season. For me that means getting up even earlierā€”at fiveā€”to hike over Beech Hill and attend to my ablutions. Getting moving that early in the morning gives me a few hours to paint en plein air before Iā€™m back at 394 Commercial Street to tend my own gallery space (from noon to six).

Most mornings I paint with some combination of Ken DeWaardEric Jacobsen, and Bjƶrn Runquist. In March I told you how whiny we can be about choosing a subject. That indecision melted along with the snow. Now the question seems to be how fast can we paint. Yesterday we chased lilacsā€”Ken in Camden, Bjį½‚rn in Clark Island, and Eric and me in Rockport. I would never have painted lilacs without their prodding, and Iā€™m glad I did.

Abandoned farmyard, 11X14, oil on birch, $869 unframed, 25% off this week.

ā€œI havenā€™t a clue how to paint flowers,ā€ I said, because complaining is an important part of starting a painting. Then I remembered that lilacs are really just small trees with purple appendages. I understand trees, so all the mystery vanished.

Itā€™s funny how often we psych ourselves into or out of failure. When someone asks me, ā€œhow do you paint such-and-such?ā€ Iā€™m at a loss to explain. Objects are objects and we paint them all the same wayā€”we look, see, and interpret. That includes people, by the way. But there are some subjects Iā€™d rather not touch myself. I would have gone to the harbor without Ken, Bjį½‚rn and Eric prodding me to do something seasonal.

Three Chimneys, 11X14, oil on birch, $869 unframed, 25% off this week.

Iā€™m actually an experienced plantswoman, but gardens are one of the few landscape subjects that donā€™t stir me. Domesticated plants are too civilized for my tastes. Syringa vulgarisā€”the common lilacā€”is different. For eleven months of the year, itā€™s an ungainly, overgrown shrub, with a not-too-pretty growth habit. Lilacs easily escape cultivation and can be found on hedgerows and in wasteland. Thereā€™s nothing ungainly about them when theyā€™re in flowerā€”they put their hearts into that heady display. I had five different varieties in my tiny yard in Rochester, and Iā€™ve got cuttings rooting on my windowsill right now.

Neither of these lilac paintings are ā€˜trueā€™ in the sense that theyā€™re a photographic representation of place. Thereā€™s no farmyard beyond the break in Spring Break, and that shrub doesnā€™t grow in the field below Abandoned Farmyard. In both cases, I took significant editorial liberties in pursuit of a less-boring composition. But both are true in the sense that they represent what Maine really looks like.

Lupines, 9X12, oil on canvasboard.

As is typical for Memorial Day weekend, it was rainy and cold here in the northeast. My husband went camping near Ticonderoga, NY. I stayed home to man my outdoor gallery, which mostly meant raising and lowering the coverings depending on which way the wind was pushing the rain. It was a lousy weekend for selling paintings, so I amused myself by doing some long-overdue planting in my own yard. The temperature dropped into the 40s, and I burned the last of our firewood. But I had it easy; it snowed in the Green Mountains of Vermont, just a few miles from where my husband shivered in his tent. And, of course, as soon as the world returned to its desks, it warmed right back up.