S_V_H Improvisation Chasing Cars final image

chasingCarsFinal

I have finished Improvisation Chasing Cars.  One thing that surprised me was how fast this thirty-six inch painting came to a finished look.  Once I had painted all the major components  it took three or so hours of focused concentration to do the clean up.  And then that was it.  Easy to photograph, and easy to wire up.  Tomorrow out of the door, and then in a few days off to the client that commission this musical piece.

My impressions. My,  this is a small work. I can easily carry it around without concern of banging the edges. That is one advantage with the other being the physical painting of this work progresses quite fast. Let me counter that, for I have checked the date on my work sheet, and that surprisingly read August 23rd. Wow, that is over a month, spent on this small work. Of course,  some of that time I used on a sister work that I was painting concurrently, but still?  To my surprise I have learned that I put a lot of heart into all my efforts, no matter the size.  I guess I was trying to see if I could paint small canvases.  Well, I guess I can paint small works. The problem is they take about as much time as larger works, and that is the issue for larger works pay more. Although I do not paint for the money, the money pays for the paint. Interesting dilemma. For commission works the demand is certainly for small to smaller size works, a lot less than four feet. I can say this though,  I have reached my limit on the size of the music at thirty-six inches.  No smaller, no way.

In the future, I will have to charge more for the one mentioned reason,  it takes about the same amount of time to complete a small work or a six-foot artwork. I suppose if this art involves to be spontaneous, like Bebop, or Cosmos forbid, in the style of past music artists, that could speed up things.  But I do not expect that. I guess my original approach to doing small works, was to paint them using similar methods as I do with Birthday paintings.  But these small works are not Birthday paintings. They are regular artworks. The more I learn the language of music, the more complicated and interesting it has become. I like to portray as much interest as possible in each musical work, no matter the size, and no matter the time needed.

Time now to give my feedback on this work.  It is cute. of course, and fits most walls. I would have liked to have used some shades of brown on the thirty-six in canvas.  I decided not to going along with the work, which told me it was fine with the blues.  I work the blue background, considerably, in the clean-up process, which helped.  The most interesting new technique, used on this work,  is the deep depth of stripping on the small panel.  I have in the past been very horizontal in my stripping, and that little nine by twelve-inch panel now challenges that idea.  I can see this style being pushed forward on larger works. I love the words, and  I uniquely painted them using iridescent paints, which solve an issue on how to softly pop them.

 

Scott Von Holzen

 

S_V_H Vivaldi’s Spring Allegro Final Image

SpringMvt1_FinalImageThis is the Final image of Vivaldi’s Spring Allegro, first movement of his Four Seasons Concertos.  This 36 inch by fourteen foot painting that I started the end of June, I finished the end of August.  That is too long to paint one artwork.  My emotion toward this work varied over the months.  Of course I started with a lot of enthusiasm.  As the time flew by I change to more  of a technical approach to this work. I wanting  this artwork to display the colors of peak spring,  and that is what you see in the background. That is also what caused me the most second guessing of this artwork.

Since this is one of those rare works where I am depicting the up and down steps of the music from three different instruments, I knew I would have lots of open spaces, because of the balancing act of the music.  In the past I would add some extra banding of colors in open areas, but this work, my heart was not into doing that.  I decided to let the background breath through the music and hopefully it has all turned out for the good.   We shall see.  I do not see this work as a favorite from the Vivaldi Series, because of my issue of constantly balancing the background with the foreground.  But, because of its uniqueness in this series I think others may see that I have depicted in this artwork a greater depth of the music, not seen in any of the others in the Vivaldi Four Seasons series.

That only leaves one more to do. It will probably be big in size, and I see a lot of blues to come.

Scott Von Holzen

 

 

 

S_V_H All About Soul image 15 & 16

allAboutSoul15

All About Soul 11:06pm. I would say have finished this work  Tomorrow, I will clean up the edges, and fill in color. For a small painting. Yes, this four-foot painting is small, considering right next to it is the mighty Spring Vivaldi that is 36 inches by 14 feet. Again, considering how small this work is,  it certainly took way more time then I thought would be necessary. The reason is that I painted All About Soul using my current style. In the past years, especially with the Van Gogh Birthday paintings, I found shortcuts to save time, which created a more spontaneous, that I needed to finish the artwork on time.  Today’s Birthday paintings I feel it is better to challenge my current style and see what new ideas I can come up with to cut corners and save a little time. Not sure that worked today. What I am sure of is that the way I paint got a good workout.

allAboutSoul16a

More thoughts on All About Soul tomorrow. The Ebay auction for All About Soul will continue for two more days. Just so it is in print, I never thought that an Ebay auction of my work was going to accomplish anything. It is too early for this art to make it way out there on Ebay.  Right now Etsy seems the better choice.

 

Scott Von Holzen