Tag Archives: Jack Russell Terrier

Two Paintings Done – Dog And A Horse

“Aiming For The Target” watercolor on paper 13 x 18″

This watercolor was finished this week, along with this small casein on board of the Jack Russell Terrier and her favourite outside toy, that is a bit chewed up and raggedy. I will have these two new paintings on my website,

“Play With Me” casein on board 5 x 5″

The past week , for the most part, has been sunny and warm.What a joy! The snow is melting and even though it is February I am thinking of my gardens and what needs to be moved, transplanted and pruned!

Speaking about moving……..I am moving my studio out of my loft and into our walkout basement room that will afford me more room to work in, and direct access to the outside and gardens. I am thinking that this summer, I will be able to take my easel out and paint in the back patio near my arbor and gardens! I will miss my window on our world on the farm…my studio window where I can see all the fields, the barn and our horses. But the trade off will be I will be able to actually stand up anywhere in the new studio!!!… and can step back and look at a painting I am working on with out having to worry about falling down the spiral staircase! I am excited!

New studio…..New paintings!!

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

“Man On A Mission”


“Man On A Mission” 8×10 oil painting on canvas board

I had an email from my mentor recently. “You need to do some one hour paintings! Use big brushes and heavy paint”.

I must admit that this assignment was thoroughly intimidating because I’m a very slow, careful painter, but I knew it would be an excellent exercise to “loosen me up”. For my first attempt, I chose a foal photo, but decided that it was too complex an image for my first one hour painting. So, I found this simple photo of Spinner, a Jack Russell Terrier who belongs to a friend and sometimes riding instructor.

Yesterday I forced myself into the studio, and this was the result. I used a #12 bristle flat to apply a tone to the canvas and then used #8 synthetic flats to draw and paint the dog and the background. I cheated a little by using a round bristle for some of the small details, but that was it. I managed to do the dog in one hour but then spent another hour applying the background and fussing over the dog. I probably could easily have stretched the time into another 2-3 hours to refine everything but resisted the urge and put down the brushes.

I’m supposed to do a couple of these per week and already have a German Shepherd picked out to do next. It’s quite a departure from my usual cautious and detailed style and requires real discipline to resist the urge to pick, pick, pick at the painting. Now I’m looking forward to doing the next one.

I don’t think I’m in any danger of becoming a “loose woman”, but you never know.

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

Another White Horse

I have been working on this 11 3/4 x 13 3/4″ casein for a few days now, on and off. Yes, another white foreshortened horse. This is a subject that I can not get tired of exploring. And I will be doing more white horses over time…a series of sorts. [Like my 'Shades of Black' series that can be seen on my website.] This is a stallion from the Darley Farm in Lexington KY., a wonderful Thoroughbred Stud Farm that I was privileged to visit last spring. You don’t see many farms like this here in Maine!

It is quiet today at Cob Cottage Studio…Nellie, our non-stop Jack Russell Terrier, is at the vet’s, where she will spend the night, recuperating after having been spade this morning. She is doing well..or so I was told when I called a bit ago to check on her progress. Addie, our Corgi, is enjoying her reprieve from her nemesis and napping and taking leisurely strolls around the farm. How Nell has changed our life…for the better….since she came into it a year ago. But for today we are enjoying a quiet time.

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

Reclaiming Old Field Farm & More!

“She Rode a Purple Horse” is headed down to Locust Valley , NY to Anderson Galleries for a show they are hosting. “The End of Season Reception for Old Field Farm” happens Thursday, Sept. 10th from 6-9 pm. If you are in the area do stop in and see my work and enjoy the wine and refreshments. I am also sending down one of my new small JRT caseins, “Leapin’ Lizards”.

Old Field , an historic Long Island show grounds with a long equestrian tradition is being brought back to life as a center for the Long Island equestrian and community events. I so believe it behooves us to take care of our past….as much as our future. Hopefully the new events staged there will bring present horse lovers memories for their future.

I am busy getting new works ready for the Skyline Farm art show due to open towards the end of September.

And Sept 4th , Friday evening is the reception of the Maine Arts Commissions grant paintings for the Freeport, Maine’s FCA group show. I will be there…I so hope you can make that!….. and see “Experiencing Freeport- Our Town Through Art”. It should be fun! It takes place at the Freeport Village Station from 5 to 6:30 with refreshments and music! Come on down!!

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

A Small Gem of a Jack Russell

On my trip to Kentucky I met two new Jack Russell’s and this is my first painting of one little lady who was a JRT to the core. She entertained us as she ran around her yard…a perfect lady!

This is a small [5 x 7"] casein on board. It will be available on my website in the Small Works Collection.

My studio is a mess…I am finding it hard to find my paint! Tomorrow calls for a clean up, I am sure! meanwhile, our Addie seems to be doing so much better. She is being her usual bossy Corgi self and walks around the house like a queen in her E-collar. Her cohort in crime is fascinated with Addie’s new collar. She is acting like she wants one too. That could be arranged!!

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

Can’t STAY Inside Today

Things were getting heated downstairs as I worked in my loft studio…the pups were wrestling and Addie ,our PWC was being terrorized by Nell the JRT. Sometimes I think they do this to get my attention, just like my kids used to! It works! So I headed down to break it up.

The sun was so inviting so we took our lunch and sat on the deck getting some of those rays we were not blessed with during the winter months. Nell is a Florida girl…she LOVES this weather!

Sitting and listening to the brook bubbling by and the birds singing…. Things we just dream about during Maine’s chilly snow filled winters.

So after our sunbath and lunch break I went back up to my loft to work on a casein painting I am doing and happened to look down to see who was scratching at the back door wanting to go out. Who else but the “beast”!! So like a good mom that I am ….out we went to rake the front gardens and enjoy the day some more. Really! This weather is our award for having survived yet another Maine winter!!! At least that is what my canine companions tell me!!

And I agree!!!

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

What I Do When The Snow Falls


And I have been doing a lot of it lately.. CREATE!!… as we get hit with yet another round of snow and wind and cold!! The only hope that keeps me sane is the fact that winter is almost over and under all the snow sleeps my perennial gardens…and I will be digging in dirt and transplanting soon!! [After all this snow melts!] The above “work-in-progress painting is a 18 x 18″ on canvas that was started in casein and I am into it now with pastels. It is coming along ’smashing-ly’ and I can’t get enough of it! The hunt reference shot was provided by a fellow EAG-er …I just loved the way the tails of the hounds fill the air and wag throughout the composition. I have changed things a bit for my purpose..but still the tails wag! My dogs were just walked and love the new snow….all I see of Nellie, the JRT, is her butt most of the time. She is hunting varmints under the white blanket…..Addie, our PWC , is busy rolling around in the snow…..to each their own!

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

Nell’s New Coat

This afternoon I was working in the studio on the two small paintings that I had started yesterday afternoon, when I heard someone in our front deck. By the time I got downstairs I saw a neighbor walking back to her car parked in the driveway….I called out to her…invited her in, but she said she was in a hurry….and she had left something for the puppy in the basket on the deck …a early May Day present? Actually it is Nell’s birthday.five months old!!! .or very close to! How neat! So the canine girls and I inspected the basket of goods….a squeaky hedgehog with bow, a blue rubber dumbbell and a fleecy faux sheepskin coat for Ms. Nell…the Florida girl! She had to model it and we have sent photos to Robyn to thank her for her gifts!

Addie is not very impressed….she says” Silly old JRT…..she does not have a beautiful three layered coat like I have!!!”

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

Sweet pup

I went to the weekly adoption event for the SPCA of Southwest Michigan last Saturday and saw a whole pen full of these incredibly cute Jack Russell mix puppies. I think this little guy found a home that day but there are some of his brothers and sisters still available. Here is a link to one of them- JRT puppy
The SPCA has weekly Saturday adoptions at 5036 S. Westnedge in Kalalmazoo. It is spacious, well run, with lots of dogs of all ages and sizes and breeds all eagerly waiting for new loving homes. Go check it out- it’s fun!

This original 5×7 matted (8×10) watercolor is available for $95 plus $5 S&H to the first emailer to lojomjnc@charter.net.
I am also offering 5×7 matted (8×10) giclees for $15 plus $5 S&H. 20% of all proceeds will be donated to the SPCA of Southwest Michigan.
Thanks for looking- show your friends and family, too.

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

Work In Progress

Work in progress…..I write that and I think. “My goodness…I am a work in progress!!!!” :-)

Anyway…here are two “From The Loft “ shots as she stands today. I will do more this afternoon…. while I wait for a watercolor to dry.
Since the last time I posted I have gone into the painting with Titanium White casein mixed with Ultramarine Blue Deep casein and a bit of acrylic thrown in to the mix. I find that makes the casein dry a bit faster and glazes it so that it doesn’t give up so much of the bottom color as I brush through. My shadows are started to get where I want them and the darks are reaching the depth that I want. I have started highlighting the reflected light…and did you notice there is a lot of gray in white snow???

Here is a close up of Miss Vicky…there is Shiva Violet added to her body and glazed on the shadows. The hay will be the next project.


And then here is Nell! …Waiting for popcorn! She barks at the microwave. I think she thinks that makes it POP faster!!! Silly little JRT!

Now back to the drawing board!

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

Jack Russell On Watch

Here in Morrill, Maine it is bitter cold today. I guess this cold has blanketed the North East. I threw more hay out for the horses, and the dogs only go out for short time..an in and out… and I am spending the day in the studio where the sun beats in.

This morning I did this 6 x 8″ casein of our JRT ..she likes to look tough and alert! What I see, when she is surrounded by snow, are the shadows and the play of color on the snow. She is SO BIG and brave in her own mind. But she IS a cutey, that’s for sure!

I painted this work on a toned board that I prepared and I let the background show through the paint as I glazed and scumbling….I like the effect it makes.

I will be putting this small painting on my website and it is available for purchase.

Time for a cup a joe….hot and steamy!

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

Only vaguely connected

Another week and a few more photo shoots for me. The alarmingly nice (hot, even–we had to have the air conditioning on much of last week, pretty well unheard of in October in Saskatchewan, where we’re much more likely to have snow than untoward heat) weather continued right up to this past weekend, so my outdoors shooting has carried on apace, marred somewhat by a head cold that made me a tad miserable for a few days.

The only good thing I can say about the cold is that it left in record time, and less than a week later I’m pretty well good to go and planning to ride again tomorrow. Saturday I was so feeble that I couldn’t even drive myself to the barn to see Alpac–Jim had to drive me out to see him.
That’s pretty bad. I’m of the persuasion that if you’re so sick that riding doesn’t make you feel better, you’re in very poor shape, but I was shaky and unstable enough that I didn’t put it to the test this time round, just accepted that riding wasn’t going to be a good idea for a few days.
Another side effect of the cold was general brain slowness and poor function. I was with it enough to know that I wasn’t with it much at all, if that makes any sense.
On Thursday I had a couple of photo sessions booked at the barn, and while riding didn’t seem like a good plan, I thought I could at least get the shots that were needed while the weather was so nice. First shoot was of a jumper in training in the outdoor ring. It was really hot (of course I was over-dressed since it is October and not supposed to be that warm) and quite windy, with a brilliant sun and hard shadows in mid-day when the shoot was scheduled. I got all the settings in place (I’m shooting manual these days for the first time ever, since I finally figured out what to do when, at least most of the time) and other than me feeling over-heated (possibly partly due to fever) and a bit shaky, that shoot went well.
The second shoot that day was of some very tender little Jack Russell puppies that belong to one of the riders at Ebon. I wanted to do this one in the shade of the north side of the barn, where we wouldn’t have the harsh sun on the mostly white coats of the puppies, also where we were sheltered from the wind which had by then become quite wild. I do vaguely remember thinking that I needed to change settings on the camera, but apparently that’s as far as I got on that front, since when I got home and downloaded the photos, they were all rather badly exposed and with a lot of digital noise. I’m still not quite sure how that happened, but the bottom line was that they weren’t acceptable so I was going to need another go-round.
Friday the gracious puppy owner brought them out again for a second shoot, which went much better from a technical point of view. I think it was actually better in general, as the puppies were a little more adventurous and outgoing on their second outing.
It’s a good thing we got these shoots in as the weather has finally broken, with pouring rain yesterday (actually much needed since we’ve had very little moisture since July) and colder, windy, and still drizzly today (which caused the cancellation of the foal shoot planned for this afternoon). I like weather that other people tend to complain about, so I was quite happy with the wind and cold today. Makes a refreshing change from being too hot, which I don’t handle well. I may not feel so cheery about cold after we’ve logged the first four or so months of the coming winter, but at the moment I’m all for it.
Today’s photos are vaguely connected, since the owner of the terminally cute puppies is also the person that gave me the heads up about the beautiful place on the river featured in the first two shots. I took these about ten days ago at this picturesque horse farm on the North Saskatchewan river, about a forty minute drive north and west of the city. This is an absolutely stunning property with quite a variety of terrain (including a stream that goes down through the trees into the river, although I didn’t get that far on this visit) that has been left in its natural state. Just my kind of visuals.
The only problem was that because of all the trees and bush, plus the ups and downs of the terrain, it can be really hard to locate the horses that I was assured were there. I spent the first hour and a half of a two hour visit looking for the horses, having unerringly headed off in exactly the wrong direction when I started out. Eventually I did locate them, though, and had a very happy time gathering photos of several small herds in this wonderful environment. Luckily I was blissfully oblivious of a potential danger there until after I had finished wandering through the brush beside the river, and tramping up and down the hills, when I finally ran into the owner of the land (who had approved my visit but wasn’t around when I got there) and he told me he had spotted what he was quite sure was a European wild boar emerging from the riverside bush a few days previous. These wild boars are becoming a danger in some parts of the province, where they have escaped from breeding facilities and reverted to the wild, causing considerable havoc in the process. They don’t hesitate to attack people or other animals, and besides being imposingly large (up to 204 kg/450 lbs) they are ill-tempered and armed with large tusks and sharp hooves. All in all, a good creature not to run into in the bush or anywhere else.
Shot number one is the view from the yard site looking downriver, to the east. The second shot, taken after I spent a lot of time wandering the landscape featured in shot one, was upriver to the west where I found several bunches of horses. Logically I should have gone that way first as it is a bit more open, but really these horses seem to cover every inch of the property so it is anyone’s guess where they will be when.
The other shots, of course, are of the very cute puppies. These are Jack Russell terriers. I asked for details as there are now (confusingly to me) two subsets–the Jack Russell Terrier and the Parson Jack Russell. Here is what the breeder said about them… “These are JRTCA (Jack Russell Terrier Club of America) and JRTCC (Canadian version) who are show *and* working terriers. We are the oldest Jack Russell registry and we and our affiliates (JRTCGB-Great Britain) are the copyright owners of the name Jack Russell Terrier. Our club motto is to ‘preserve, protect, and work the Jack Russell Terrier’. We are pretty proud of our little white dogs. The puppies were only four weeks old when you shot them and are fearless, typical terriers”.  So I am of the impression that the Parson Jack Russell is the show and/or pet version, while the JRT is the working version, but of course can also be show and pet dogs as well. Hope I’ve got that right!!
I did meet Mother as well on this shoot, and as a working hunting dog, she was pretty keen to find something with her scenting nose and skills. We were at a barn, after all, and she knew there had to be rodents of various sorts and sizes if we would only let her set to work. On the other hand, she also had to keep the kids sorted out and vaguely contained, so it was a bit of a conflict of interest for her. Mostly she got to stay in the car while we did the photos, a less than satisfactory situation from her point of view.
First puppy shot shows one heading north with great determination. This was pretty much their first experience of the big world of the outdoors, and while initially a bit backed off, they soon set their little legs in motion and motored along. I love the way the legs get lifted up so high with these little ones. They have the right idea about how to use their limbs overall, just need to fine-tune the process a bit. Reminds me of how horses are when you put unaccustomed leg wraps on them. The first few steps have a very exaggerated lift to them quite similar to this. Shots two and three are pretty self-explanatory. Checking out the leaves, sniffing the wind, being way too cute!
I don’t get a lot of chances to do puppy shoots, especially of ones so young, so this was a great treat for me. I’m hoping I’ll be able to have another go-round when they are a few weeks older and are interacting and playing with each other. Guess that will for sure be dependent on what the weather is doing by then!!

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

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