Click on palette below and see me paint a portrait in 2 minutes!

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Oh What A Beuatiful Mornin' ... Oh What A Beautiful Night!

The views were spectacular. On December 12th, the moon appeared to be a giant silver blotchy ball in the sky--the brightest I'd ever seen. As reported on TV, that night's full moon would be brighter and closer to the earth than it's been in 15 years. What a sight. I followed it all night long, darting out onto the patio in my nightgown to see the moonlight bounce off the water and the trees and grass. It was eerily beautiful! And so I took this shot of the moon with our light-bedecked young holly tree, just as the moon's glow started to appear.
Two days later, after getting up at 4:30 a.m. to do a tent show and getting ourselves to Humiston Park in Vero Beach, this unbelievable sunset greeted us. It would have been worth it just to get up and drive to that spot and see this, without the art show. However it was such a blessing to be able to see the sun slowly rise, peeking through the clouds and causing a rainbow of changing colors while we set up our tents. This is one I'll have to paint, but who would believe it was really that beautiful? I love this place.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Seasons Greetings All,

Although this is last year's Christmas painting, I'm happy to share it with you as a sign of the season. Been so busy with shows and the upcoming holidays that there was no time for blogging. Another show to do this Sunday, and then I can breathe.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Terrific Student Painters at Eau Gallie Arts Festival!

Hello to all those budding artists that painted on my canvas at the Eau Gallie (Florida) Arts Festival November 22nd and 23rd! E-mail me for any inquiries about the flower garden paintings. They are still up for bid but I removed them from this blog. Contact me at 772-581-8281 or via e-mail bjburgarella@bellsouth.net.
Also, the winner of my oil painting on a wooden palette," above (soon-to-be completed) Apple on Palette," is Carol Woodginski, who has been notified and is thrilled at her good fortune!
Thanks to all of you who visited my "tent gallery" in the Eau Gallie Arts Festival. I enjoyed teaching and talking with you, and I hope you continue to visit my website for news of upcoming shows, and my blog for news of new works. And thank you for supporting the arts.
Regards,
Judy

Friday, October 24, 2008

Well, it's Friday, October 24th and I am lost without my camera. I managed to take a few pathetic photos with my broken Olympus, but they're not great. After much time with tech support I felt it was time to give up and take the thing apart, or at least take the uppermost lens out and see what's going on behind it. That's when I discovered ... there was no longer an outer lens -- it was missing. Must be why my zoom only functions half-way, and my uploaded pictures on my computer look like a fish-eye lens took it. So off to the E-Bay "store" I went, found a non-working one for $25, ordered it, and am waiting to cannibalize the thing when it arrives. I hope it works or I'll be selling TWO broken old cameras on E-Bay. Just got back from the Opening Reception of the Backus Four-County Show in Fort Pierce, where my bronze "Seminole" and pastel "Walpi Indian" were exhibited. Great show, great hors d'eouvres, and lots of local people from the art scene here on the treasure coast. Love going to these things--all the talking about art, critiqueing, comparing, buzzing about other artists. Surrounded by all that art is a good way to get inspired. It was a good end to a Friday night. Tomorrow I go to Melbourne to paint with the Arts League. These people can really paint, and the atmosphere on this third-floor bare-bones studio feels like the Art Students League in New York--with even less frills! No air conditioning, paint is everywhere, dust is everywhere, but everywhere there are signs that great painters have left their DNA in that place. Hope to post tomorrow's pianting using this lousy fish-eye camera. We'll see.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Good Red Things!

Well, it's been a few days since I have blogged. Silent migraines have plagued me for a few days, a very rare event, though I managed to start a very enjoyable painting that distracted me from the headache distraction. Attached is a good start for "Good Red Things," an oil painting from a photo of a still life setup I had painted from before. My other painting of this arrangement was done on a wooden palette, which I floated in a black box frame. It sold the first time I showed it, and so I thought it would be a good subject for The Garden Of Art's "Bon Appetit" show come November.
I think my headahe and back pain is payback from building that patio, but it was worth it. When I am done here I will go out on my patio in the dead of night to gaze at the beautiful full moon and the stars, without having to worry about creepy-crawly things at my feet in the grass.
Attached also is a portrait study I did a couple of days ago. Spotted this beat-up old poster at a Habitat For Humanity thrift store for $5. This was actually the 2nd time I saw this poster there, and had resisted buying it the first time because the frame was broken, there was no glass, and the picture had a scratch through the face. But what a face ... and it was a face I knew I had to paint. The poster was from the opening of the National Museum for Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C., which I had been a member of at one time. "Lady with a Bowl of Violets" by Lila Cabot Perry (1848-1933). What I'd give to actually gaze at this painting in person, and see the actual brushstrokes firsthand. Nothing compares to being in the presence of a work of art created by such a master. To own something like this must be such a thrill, and to have it actually hanging in your home--well I can only dream ... and try to copy one for myself!
Well, my camera is on the fritz. The zoom is acting crazy, blurry when I try to zoom in. And I notice photos are distorted in birds-eye fashion, but I've done my best to correct them as best I could. I've about worn this one out, like I did my last digital, taking thousands of pics a month, trying to capture every beautiful thing I come across to keep for my own.
Tomorrow I must finish my pastel of a Walpi Indian and frame it, and buff up my bronze bust of a Seminole Indian, to ready them for entry in the Backus Gallery's Four-County Competitive, which I won the watercolor prize for last year. I'll try to post them tomorrow. The competition is fierce as many accomplished artists enter this show, but I may just get lucky again. I hope tomorrow also to have enough time to work on "Good Red Things" ... the doily under the still life will be so so much fun to work on. And then there's the table, that's always an adventure trying to create a weather-worn-looking piece of furniture from my head. It's like the sections of a jigsaw puzzle, each section is distinctly different from the other, and enjoyable in a slightly different way, and when completed is a collective joy to see as a whole, and a source of accomplishment and pride. I hope I don't screw this one up.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Christening My Patio!

Today's pic is me painting on our newly-finished patio. Started painting at 6:30. What a pleasure being out there painting, watching fish jumping and herons, egrets and ospreys flying by, and watching the sun set just to my right. Just did some practice work, honing my water ripple-painting skills with oil, and practicing painting palm trees.
Today it poured this morning, so no plein air painting. Instead went to a media breakfast for people who do marketing for non-profits, and then went out soliciting sponsors with Rita Z for the Vero Beach Art Club's "Art-By-The-Sea" show. In spite of the economy, we've been quite successful. That's all for today.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Begging for Bucks!

Today started out with a spectacular sunrise, took this picture out my back door. Met Rita at 10:00 to find sponsors for a Vero Beach Art Club Show we're having in January, raised over $700 today from some generous Vero businesses. Then came home and painted the little gem attached entitled "McKee en Plein Air," while watching the debates. It's only 5"x7". It was started a couple of years ago at McKee Gardens.
Will try to post another one tomorrow, going plein air painting on the Pointe again after a 9:00 meeting in Vero.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Some Not-So-Important News (compared to World News!)







Well, it's been quite a few days since my last blog. Lots has happened in the world since then, finance- and politics-wise. Not that it's as important to anybody but myself, but lots has happened with me too--went fishing, went swimming, went to some art-related meetings, finished laying my patio, threw my hip out (patio), got my hip back (swimming), transplanted a tree, 2 bushes and a dozen or so plants, saw a really dumb movie, went to an art/craft fair, overcame my lifelong fear of speaking to a large audience, reorganized my studio, and finished another painting--one that I started with the Plein Air Painters of the Treasure Coast at Royal Palm Pointe park in Vero Beach. It was a lovely sunny day painting with friends and watching children play in the fountains as we painted and chatted. Life is good when you paint, and life is better still when you paint with other artist friends.
Shown also is a photo of a flock of ibis which flew down in front of me while I was sitting at the water's edge in our yard. Imagine my delight when they lingered long enough for me to set my wine glass down, run into the house for my camera, and run back outside to find these birds waiting for me as if they were posing for their portrait! The other photo was taken from our friends Rita & George's boat at sunset. I was the only one who caught a fish which I sauteed whole (which freaks everybody out) in Cajun spices and had for lunch the next day. Lucky day for me ... not so lucky for the fish. But the end of a perfect day.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Plein Air Painting with Friends

Hi folks,
Well, another perfect day in paradise, painting outdoors with friends. Picked up some morning jo at Dunkin, and joined Barb and Lee at Royal Palm Pointe to start the season's plein air painting sessions on Wednesdays. The day was perfect and we each set up our easels under green canvas umbrellas and began constructing our compositions. We enjoyed chatting and watching the children play in the fountains while we painted. Being a much slower painter (and way too chatty) than my colleagues, they were finished and packed up by 12:30 and I remained by myself, "In The Zone," until after 3:00. My buddy Rita came by at 2:00 and convinced me to not go home and get ready for our Art Club Website meeting at 4:00, but to join her for a swim and a glass of wine and leave from there together. How could I resist? Posted is my partially-finished composition which hopefully I will post finished tomorrow. Although right now it's at the really ugly stage, I've learned not to get discouraged because they almost always get better (with some exceptions unfortunately).
Also posted is yesterday's finished painting of "Tuscany," started at the Sebastian River Art Club, and painted from a picture my friend Julianne brought.
Posted too is a picture of my friend Cathy who passed away earlier this year. Her husband Phil called this morning from Texas, and I told him of this lovely photo of her I took while we plein air painted at McKee Gardens in Vero Beach, and sent it to him. That smile is vintage Cathy, in happier, healthier days. She was one of the most pleasant, likeable people I've ever met--never a harsh word or a complaint, always happy and smiling. A terrific artist too.
So at 7:00 Bob and I bid adieu to the sun, sitting on our adarondak chairs with a glass of wine out by the canal's edge, winding up a busy and fruitful day. Bob did a lot of stuff too ... but who cares? (only kidding!)
Judy

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

So Far Not-So-Daily Blogspot!

Hi again folks,
Well, here it is a couple days later, and I'm blogging again. It is 7:15, and the sun is setting, a very dramatic orange and gray again at the end of a rainy day. The sunset pictured is from last night. I am always amazed at the beauty of the Florida sky all through the day, and then there's the big fireworks a the end of the day. What a wonderful gift to receive every day.
The first picture is of an orchid growing from THIN AIR on our holly tree! All I did was twist-tie it to a branch and then do absolutely nothing to keep it alive, roots exposed and all. Eventually it sends out tendrils to attach to the tree, and then the twist-tie gets removed. I've twist-tied dozens of them to the tree, so soon I will have a bouquet. Imagine, an orchid growing in my tree, and with no help? Amazing, since after living in Connecticut where you had to break you neck digging through the stones just to grow a geranium!
The second picture is a VERY pregnant stick bug (so I've been told) that perched herself on my studio sliders. I taped a penny nearby so that you could see how big it is. It is a very ugly bug that didn't flinch when I taped the penny up. She stayed there all day, then disappeared at night (probably to lay her eggs).
The third pic is my "Patio Project," which I'm almost done with. Just need to level a dozen or so more stone and it will be finished! Please excuse all the messy "Tools-of-the-trade" on the porch. Can't wait to frame the patio with floral hedges and furnish it with plants in clay pots, and recover the patio chairs with something a little livlier, then Bob and I can sit down on our new patio and give a toast to the sunset.
I hope to post a painting tomorrow, one which I started today at the Sebastian River Art Club's Tuesdays get-together. I took my neighbor Julianne with me to show her how to paint with oils, and to see if she would like to join the club. It's a good club with good, friendly people who love art.
Tomorrow I go plein air painting with the Treasure Coast group in the morning and I may end up posting that on the blog, if I can fit it in before going t the website meeting for the Vero Beach Art Club at night. My work and others can be found on www.verobeachartclub.org.
Well, thanks for looking in at my blog, and like I said I don't know where this is going to go, but I would like to get used to use it so that eventually I can use it for an art project I am working towards.
Judy

Sunday, September 28, 2008

My First Blog

Hello friends, neighbors, relatives, duaghters, and anyone who wants a peek into my world.
I have no idea what's going to happen with this blog, not being very familiar with the whole process, but here goes.
I guess I'll start by using it as a kind of diary to begin with, then see where it takes me or where it evolves to.
First of all, I am an artist, albeit a starving one, trying not to throw too much money down that big hole that is called "art supplies, shows, and trips." My husband Bob tags along, helping with shows and tents, occasionally acting as bartender when needed, cheering me on when I win a prize or when something gets sold. So it makes for a busy, happy life in Florida in our retirement.
Friday was the opening of "The Body Beautiful" at the Garden of Art Fine Art Gallery in Wabasso, of which I am one of the artists. Posted is "Nude with Drape," one of five oils and one pastel I did for the show.
Not that anyone would care, but another love of mine is working with stone. In my former home (3 years since) of Clinton, CT I set many a stone wall on our property, and thought that I left that art form I loved behind. Well, here in Florida, on our small plot of land, I have built 2 small terraces for vegetables and herbs, and now am working on a patio off our lanai (back porch). It consists of about 70 16" blocks and I have lots of leveling to do with it yet, put in about 50 hours so far piecemeal. It will be a wonderful place to sit at night with a glass of wine and watch the sunset over the palm trees here in paradise. My brother-in-law Richard was the inspiration for it, as he loves to sit outside the lanai and watch what's going on at the water's edge. It'll be waiting for him on his next visit.
Well, that's all for now. Have to see if this all worked.
Judy