Tag Archives: equine art

Appaloosa in the Snow


We spent Christmas Day with my cousin and her family, near Swift Dam, west of Dupuyer, Montana.  On the way to her house, we stopped to take photos of this beautiful horse.  I liked the way his colors contrasted with the snow and the blue of the mountains!

You can purchase this image here on my Red Bubble site, Appaloosa in the Snow

Tweet Me a Ridgway Studio Update!

©Copyright 2009 by Donna Ridgway. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Delaware All Horse Parade

This past Sunday was the Delaware County All Horse Parade which kicks off our County Fair, the best fair East of the Mississippi! I am a staff photographer for the fair this year and will be covering the Little Brown Jug and the Juggette as well as the rest of the races. I will also be poking around the show barns and arenas and catching the action at the Open and Jr. Fair shows. This is always a very busy time but oh so fun to be a part of the action. Best seat in the house for the Little Brown Jug!

The fair starts on Saturday, September 19 and runs until the 26th.

Here are a few shots from the parade. Hope you enjoy them.


©Copyright 2009 by Patricia Getha. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

09-09-09 a cool date to post

09-09-09
Visually pleasing.
A post today is a must even if it means not posting the finished portrait.
Here it is nearing completion.


Bridle still to do and all sorts of fun fiddly bits
Will tackle all that tomorrow.
Off to mow the lawn while the girls play and the sun lasts!

©Copyright 2009 by Sheona Hamilton-Grant. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Follow up steps in Equine head portrait

Calle is taking shape.

He now has a more defined expression, a fluffy mane and a silky nose.

The tricky bridle work is being left to the bitter end…
Drawing leather is still not #1 on my drawing list despite tackling the bull by the horns a few years ago and producing a drawing I was quite chuffed with. (Some of you may be familiar with “Leather”.) Any road this is slightly off subject.

Below a few more steps in Calle’s progress.
The steps are pretty straight forward.
All completed with a 2B.
The darks were drawn with a 6B and established earlier on.
Pressure put on the strokes and the number of layers used are the key elements to getting the soft yet detailed end result

Step3: detail added to neck and mane. Blaze taking shape.

Step4: forelock started as well as more detail around left eye and on the end of the nose.

Step 5: work done on nose and lower part of the neck. White space left for the double bridle.

The way the pencils are flowing: smoothly and precisely.
I can’t help thinking that the final steps of this bonny chap’s portrait will be posted very soon.
Until then leaving you all with a cheery cheerio!

©Copyright 2009 by Sheona Hamilton-Grant. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Visiting Freeport Visiting Maine

Several months ago I learned that I had received a grant from the Maine Arts Commissions, along with some other members of The Freeport Creative Arts Organization. We were charged with portraying life in Freeport, Maine.

My family and I used to live in Freeport YEARS ago…. then moved to Pownal , Maine where we lived for over 25 years..raised our sons and started into farming and raising horses there. For several years of those years so long ago.. I belonged to a Freeport art club. I was into tapestry weaving and block printing at that point in my creative endeavors. I wasn’t doing a lot of equine art…I just liked to depict animals of any “denomination”!

It has been years now that I have been painting the horse…painting what I love and know so well. As my husband and I got more involved in carriage driving, I also was drawn to depicting the driven horse and carriage turnouts. Today I do do some figurative work…some canine work and an occasional landscape. But it is so true that most artists paint what they love, what fires their artistic flame….and for me that is the horse. SO it was with some hesitation that I took part in the FAC project. My best friend and a fellow FAC member, Karen, pushed me along. I am so glad she got me out of my comfort zone…….

I ended up doing a 4 x 4′ casein portraying the Freeport Firemen of the 1930’s. It is displayed above….. and in an attempt to honour the Freeport firemen, titled it “Freeport Heroes”. Our eldest son is a fireman, one of the first responders in Portland, Maine. He helped me get my information to create the painting…..and I will tell more about that another time.

I just am so honored and exciting about taking part in this MAC adventure!
The reception for “Experiencing Freeport – Showing Our Town Through Art” will be held at The Freeport Village Station in Freeport, Maine on Friday, September 4th from 5-6:30 pm with entertainment and refreshments. I would love to see you there!!!

©Copyright 2009 by Kathi Peters. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

‘Blue Shadows’ Equine Horse Art Oil Painting by Laurie Pace

‘Blue Shadows’
5 x7 inches Oil on Watercolor Paper
Contact me to purchase: Laurie

© Laurie Justus Pace Graphics One Design 2009

The Painting: The musing of color so small is a switch for me. Doing this small paintings truly enable me to see what is possible for the larger pieces. If I were working large I would not have patterned colors quite like they are here. The next step is to paint large and see what happens.

www.lauriepace.blogspot.com
http://www.ellepace.com

©Copyright 2009 by Laurie Justus Pace. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Good News Abounds!


If anything, today’s weather is worse than yesterday’s. It’s cloudy, a stiff wind is blowing, a drizzly rain is falling, and the temperature is a chilly 56 degrees F as opposed to yesterday’s high of 66! Even so, I prefer this weather to last week’s heat and high humidity. It’s a good chance to catch up on indoor chores without the misery of constant sweating and clammy floors and furniture.

At the height of last week’s heat, I was visited by a newly found saddle fitter who evaluated my saddle and my horse and declared that he could take my saddle apart, narrow the tree and restuff it to fit my horse better. Since it’s a quality saddle in good condition and needs only these minor adjustments, I won’t have to go saddle shopping again! The long and short of it is that this culminated a long-time goal of mine to “do something” about a saddle that I knew was a little too wide for my horse but that is comfortable for me and that I love. Thanks to a Chronicle of The Horse online forum, I was able to find a saddle fitter in Michigan who was highly recommended by other dressage riders. If the fit turns out well, I’ll share his name.

The other thing I accomplished over the past week was to finish weeding the flower beds, plant the wax begonias and install edging blocks along the front of the old garage flower bed. That made a huge improvement in its looks and helps to hold the water in, since one end of the bed is higher than lawn level. All of my new perennials that survived the winter are doing spectacularly, and the foxgloves are now blooming in lovely hues of magenta and cream. I’m going to wait until next year to move plants around after evaluating their different growing characteristics and bloom times. This year I’ll install more edging blocks along the long fence bed and dig out more sections between shrubs which will make mowing the lawn easier for my husband.

In about ten days, Horse Shows By The Bay will begin its expanded three week series of shows in Acme, and I’m hoping to get over there to shoot at least a couple of times. There will be an all-afternoon series of polo matches that are must-sees as well.

In honor of HSBB, I’m thinking of starting a new painting or drawing using one of my images from past shows. There are so many good ones to choose from that it will be difficult to make a choice! Should it be hunters, jumpers, dressage, ponies or a general horse show scene? Or, perhaps I’ll start my planned series of horse show dogs.

There is more good news that Mural Mosaic’s The Horse Gift will be displayed at this year’s Calgary Stampede. That’s the mural I did a panel for last year, so if you’re up that way and going to take in the Stampede, be sure to search out the mural. You can’t miss it; it’s 22 feet high! So far, the mural has been shown at Spruce Meadows, Quarter Horse Congress and the National Finals Rodeo; all top horse venues with lots of visitors. Reports are that visitors are just blown away by it! You can buy your own poster of it, too, or buy a book and put together your own life sized horse poster of the mural. I have books, if anyone is interested.

At the top are my foxgloves blooming. And below is my panel for The Horse Gift.

©Copyright 2009 by Karen Baker Thumm. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

“Wild Flowers” Equine Horse Art Painting by Laurie Pace

“Wild Flowers”

30 x 30 inches
Acrylic on Canvas

Contact me to purchase. Laurie

© Laurie Justus Pace Graphics One Design 2009

“They met together to go and console and comfort him.” Job 2:11

The Painting: This is all acrylic. I started with a charcoal sketch of the horses and then I began to see shadows and colors. Cross Hatching the palette knife gave it a woven feeling and that is where I saw the flowers…wild flowers.

The Thought: Almost late for the day for me…busy catching up on email…

Reflecting on the bible verse above… and tying it into the painting is always a start for me. Where do you go or what do you seek when you are sad or in need? Sometimes a good walk will clear your head enough that you can get your brain back in balance.

We all need comfort in our lives. It is this part of living that happens to all of us, the feeling let down by someone or something in your life… the feeling that you want to run away or hide under the covers. Perhaps that instinct is not bad, the under the covers instinct. This is the time to take an inward journey to the core of your being. That is were you will find God.
That is where you will be aware of His great compassion and love for you. God will strengthen you and reassure you as you become uplifted by communing with Him.

When you realize that this source is never ending, you begin to realize you can comfort others around you. God gives you the gift of compassion and empathy to speak to others in need. He will give you the words to comfort them.

I am lifting you up today in my prayers, that each of you will find comfort to fill whatever hurt is there.

I have a visitor today to the studio. My high school friend Barbara is in visiting from Salt Lake City. This will be the third summer she has come to paint with me. She has a natural way with the brush and I cannot wait to see what will become of today and her painting.

Laurie

(He will find you ….)

“Can anyone hide in secret places so that I cannot see him?” declares the LORD. “Do not I fill heaven and earth?” declares the LORD.” Jeremiah 23:34

©Copyright 2009 by Laurie Justus Pace. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Equine Art Horse Oil Painting by Laurie Justus Pace

“Three Down South”
30 x 30 inches
Intense Oil on Canvas
Palette Knife Painting

Contact me to purchase: Laurie

©Laurie Justus Pace Graphics One Design 2009

“He brought him outside and said, “Look toward heaven and count the stars, if you are able to count them.’” Genesis 15:5

The Painting: So many things played into this composition. It was painted in 2008 but I retouched and reworked it as I brought it home from one of the galleries. The gallery lost it’s lease and it was sad as it had just opened two months ago. This is one of my palette knife paint pulls of my horses. You can feel the summer day as you are pulled into the sunlight in the pasture. Using contrasting colors of reds and greens through out most of the composition, I down played the oranges and blues to build a quiet symphony of color in the background. Are they pausing at water or are they sharing the grass?

My Thoughts:

Have you ever stood outside (as an adult) and looked up into the vast night sky? Here in Texas you can see forever counting the stars and watching for the occasional shooting star. If you are a science buff or had a grandfather that took you star gazing, you begin to see the patterns making out the constellations in the sky. Another one of God’s magnificent masterpieces! There seems to be no limit to His creation when you are realizing each star is a planet in itself. How deep your thoughts can go in His vast creation.

There is of course no limit to the good awaiting you as a child of God. The good He brings into your life is right there. But if you are like me, you might be missing it because you are so busy “living”.

Live today by looking around to see what He has brought into your life. Health, wisdom, resources, family, home, friends, gifts to give back,… make a list and it becomes obvious that you have a multitude of good in your life.

Laurie

“As a father has compassion on his children, so the LORD has compassion on those who fear him;” Psalm 103:13

©Copyright 2009 by Laurie Justus Pace. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Equine Horse Oil Painting by Laurie Pace

Rugged Color 2006

15 x 30 inches
Oil on Canvas

SOLD Private Collector Europe
Contact me for commissions: Laurie

© Laurie Pace Graphics One Design 2006

“When they had finished breakfast, Jesus said to Simon Peter, ‘Simon son of John, do you love me more than these?’ He said to him, ‘Yes, Lord; you know that I love you.’ Jesus said to him, ‘Feed my lambs.’ ” John 21:15

The Posted Painting: A struggle between palette knife and color and the color won out. This is one of my earlier horse paintings from 2006. We are still recovering from the storms here and not much painting is happening right now.

My thought for the day:
Partnerships are great. Think of what positives comes from having someone working with you toward a goal. That could be a spouse, a business partner, a teacher and student, a minister and his flock, or you and God. There are many possible combinations. When there are two together, they stand stronger than one. When you stand with God, you cannot be defeated by your circumstances. Maybe it is good to take His divine ideas to heart and apply them today.

Standing with Him, you become a thinker and doer of the best intentions. You become alive and participating in life enthusiastically. Energy flows through you into your plans and your own well-being.

Today accept the partnership with God and His gift of life. Give thanks and live it fully…. I am, even as we clean up mud, leaves and broken tree limbs. God is good.

Laurie

“For where two or three come together in my name, there am I with them.” Matthew 18:20

©Copyright 2009 by Laurie Justus Pace. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Virtual pARTy, my entry

I have entered a Virtual pARTy with the above watercolor. It is 5×7 and is titled “Determination” and is being offered for $125. It will be matted with a black mat, ready for an 8×10 frame. Postage is included in price.

What is a Virtual pARTy? ….”On a given day an image will be shared, along with the subsequent artwork painted by the pARTy hosts. Participants are then invited to create art from the referenced image. Anything goes, but the artwork must have been started and finished within a 24 hour period…”

To see the reference photo, which was graciously donated by Juliet Harrison (http://www.julietrharrisonphotography.com/) please visit the Virtual pARTy website (http://www.the-virtual-party.blogspot.com/).

If you wish to purchase my entry, please contact me. Thank you! sues.art@gmail.com

©Copyright 2009 by Sue E. Kroll. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

The Licensing Agent; A Cautionary Tale


“Sweetie” 11″x14″ pastel painting

I’m giving you fair warning now that this is going to be a long post. I’m writing it because this incident has been haunting me for almost two years, and I’d like to let it go and move on.

A couple of years ago, I was contacted by a licensing agent who was looking for an equine artist to represent in a new venture into licensing horse images for her corporate clients. She was very enthusiastic about my art and very flattering in her comments. She told me that my art had the WOW! factor and that she wanted to “brand” me with a big marketing campaign and thought that I could become another Chris Cummings in the licensing world. Pretty heady stuff, right?

The problem was that I already had a licensing agent/dealer, but, I hadn’t had much luck with her for several years. I told the new agent (I’ll call her Cindy) that I would consider her offer. We chatted on the phone, and she built herself up by saying that she had a background in marketing and worked with many big companies which licensed images for their products and that she had a very good reputation in the industry. Then I contacted two of her artists, a husband and wife team, who gave her an enthusiastic endorsement. Next, I checked the contract I had with the current licensing agent and found that I could cancel it by giving her 60 days’ notice.

After doing this due diligence, I felt safe in accepting the new offer from Cindy who was willing to wait the 60 days. I told her right up front that the only images I had available for licensing were on my website, and she didn’t express any concern about that. I notified my current agent, and Cindy sent me a contract to sign that would be effective at the end of the 60 days. She also requested that I send her images so that she could put together a marketing sheet to show to her clients. I asked her which of my current images she wanted for this purpose.

That’s when the trouble began. I never got a direct answer. Instead she emailed me a list of ideas for paintings based on requests that she’d gotten from her contacts. I asked her several times more which images to send. Her response was always to tell me that certain ones would be better in color or with a different background or with the horse facing the other way or this or that. I asked her what sorts of images to work on first. Her response was to just send me the same list of ideas that she’d gotten from her clients which was a long one.

Without any guidance from Cindy, I had no choice but to do my own research. I reviewed all of my sales records and came up with a list of best sellers and worst sellers in prints and note cards. I presented that to her and got no response. I looked through all of my horsey gift catalogs and horse catalogs to see what sorts of images are on the market to give me ideas for what works best. Based on those findings, I finally gathered ten of my best sellling images on a CD and mailed it to her. Her response was that they were “a good starting point”.

Two weeks later, the contract went into effect, and I emailed her to find out what was going on. I didn’t hear from her for two days. Then she emailed to say that I didn’t have an “extensive” enough portfolio of current work and that she was talking to another equine artist who had a “large” portfolio. She explained that she needed a “minimum of 20 strong images” in order to launch a marketing campaign which was something she had never mentioned before. She was still willing to represent me with my limited portfolio, though, if I was willing to continue.

Naturally, this came as a shock since she hadn’t given me a clue before that there was any problem from her point of view. So, I went through my images again and sent her 16 more possibilities by email that I’d originally eliminated for one reason or another and asked her to let me know if any of them were suitable. By this time, I was getting very uneasy about the whole situation and Cindy’s lack of communication and candor.

Over a week went by, and I heard nothing from Cindy. So, I sent her another email asking if she had gotten the images. I heard nothing for another two weeks and emailed her again, asking for advice as to what to paint first. There was still no response, so I phoned her. She told me that she couldn’t talk now because she had a business client coming for the weekend but would phone me on Monday. That was on Friday. On Sunday night I got an email from her saying that she had found another “incredible established artist” with “a large portfolio” to represent and would not be able to represent me after all. She went on to twist the knife deeper by saying that it would take many years before I would reach “profitability”for her in licensing due to my limited portfolio and lack of dedication to regular painting.

I wrote her back and agreed that I wasn’t the right artist for her and hadn’t been happy about the way things had been going. I also expressed puzzlement over why she had contacted me in the first place and why I hadn’t been told in the beginning that I would need X number of images and why she hadn’t given me more guidance in what to paint for her.

The funny thing is that no new artist appeared on her website, and a year later she contacted one of my best artist friends and other artists as well. So, what became of that “incredible” artist I wonder?

I’ve since come to the conclusion that Cindy knew nothing about the equine art licensing market and that she expected “her” artists to produce paintings quickly. I also suspect that her view is that the artists work for her rather than the other way around.

This whole incident was a huge blow to my ego; one that I’m still struggling to overcome. I’m hoping that this post will help to put the unpleasantness behind me once and for all. My biggest regret is that I let go my former licensing agent. She helped to establish my career early on, was always supportive and helpful and was familiar with the world of equine art. I’ve found her advice far more helpful than the little bits that I received from Cindy. I regret that by hastily cancelling that contract, I also lost a friend.

Perhaps that’s what’s bothering me the most.

©Copyright 2009 by Karen Baker Thumm. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Speckles

This was one of those impossible angles, but the puppy looked so cute, I couldn’t miss the opportunity to paint him as he slept. Basset Hounds have a wonderfully distinct personality, and this innocent, velvety cuddlebug grew up to steal a roast – a whole roast!

I like the way the colours in this one bounce off each other, a hint of the bright little personality snoozing so comfortably in his bed. “Speckles” is a 4 x 6 inch watercolour sketch and is available.

Heather Anderson

©Copyright 2009 by Heather Andserson. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Over Hill and Dale Art Show

Click on this link to get more information on this great Equine and Landscape art show.

http://www.harlemvalleyherald.com/maplebrook-school/artshow-kentuckyderby.html

©Copyright 2009 by Juliet Harrison. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Whatever Happened to Spring??


Our snow was pretty much all gone until last night. That’s when the Winter Storm Warning began for us, and now we have plenty of the white stuff again, along with high winds and drifting. It’s a good thing my husband hadn’t taken the snow blower off the tractor yet.

I’ve worked a little more on the Belgian painting the past two days and have made a little more progress. Most notably, the inside of the trailer has been painted, and this has given the painting more depth. Later I’ll give some tone to that interior so that it isn’t such a dark hole, but it’s an improvement for now. I also painted the chrome strip on the roof, added more highlights and put in the reflections of the horses and the grass. I may need to add more grass color to make the reflections more believable later on, and after that, the whole trailer will be glazed over with a darker blue.

Now that the trailer is well under way, I can turn my attention to the horses again; the part I’ve been anxiously waiting for. In the next step, the left hand horse will be painted and made darker as was my plan from the beginning. The painting should really come alive with this step.

Since it’s tax season, I’ve also been working on taxes, and they will be my focus until today’s paint is dry. I can’t wait to get the taxes done and to the accountant so that I can spend more time on art again. That should be enough incentive to keep going and not procrastinate any longer, like I’ve been doing along with just about every other American.

©Copyright 2009 by Karen Baker Thumm. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

Virginia’s Finest Equine Series

I have been working on a series of painting cented around horses in Virginia.  I titled the series, “Virginia’s Finest Equines”.  I’ve been working on this for almost a year.  Originally I had wanted to have a “real” exhibit of the paintings, in a “real” gallery.  In the economy of our times that did not seem to possible.  So I wanted to put on an online  show of the work I did.   Many of these paintings were done from people around the state who were generous enough to allow me to use photos of their horses.  Others were done from photos that I took of various horses around our state.  It has been a wonderful challenge.  I actually have two more paintings which are not on here now, which are not finished yet!  Most are done in oil, a few in pastels.  Many of the people wrote short stories about their horses.  I am enclosing these her also.  I will be posting these on my website also, elainehurst@mac.com.  There will be a short write-up going into The Virginia Horse Journal and Horse Talk. I hope you enjoy my work, and what others have written about their special equines.  Thank you all!

©Copyright 2008 by Elaine Hurst. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Elaine Hurst’s website.

Moving Along with The Green Team


Here is today’s progress, and as you can see, finishing the trailer made a big difference in the looks of the painting.

The first thing I did today was correct the rail on the right side. I may make more corrections when I paint the interior of the trailer and the next layer on the outside, but for now it will stay as it is. Sometimes it’s better to correct in increments to be sure they’re needed as the rest of the painting progresses.

One of the frustrations I’ve been having as I paint these days is due to arthritis in my hands. I can’t flip brushes around in my fingers as I used to, and I’m dropping them more. That is taking some getting used to and requires greater care in brush handling. I just hate it when a brush drops into blobs of paint on the palette!

And, that’s all I have to say for today. Except that the trailer color really isn’t quite as neon looking as it may appear on your monitor.

©Copyright 2009 by Karen Baker Thumm. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

St Paddy’s Day horse. You guessed it, he’s green!

Thought I’d paint you a green horse today, seein’s it’s St Pat’s Day! Here’s how I started out….

This next image is about half way done…

And here’s the green horse! (below)

You can see a bit of my easel on there, on his face. Down at the bottom. Outside of that, he’s wishing you a Happy St Pat’s Day!
Donna Ridgway

Tweet Me a Ridgway Studio Update!

©Copyright 2009 by Donna Ridgway. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit her website.

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