Acrylics on Masonite, 30 x 20 cm:
This work is for sale. Contact me at brianvds@gmail.com.
Acrylics on Masonite, 15 x 20 cm:
I decided to play around a bit with a palette knife, and liked it so much I may well make something of a switch in equipment.
Acrylics on Masonite, 20 x 15 cm:
The Japanese call it wabi-sabi: the beauty of imperfection, and of old, used and withered things. Everyone (except perhaps very rich people?) seem to get it intuitively, which is why still life paintings are so often filled with such old things. One wonders then why, in the west, billions upon billions of dollars are spent annually in an attempt to make ourselves look younger more perfect.
Acrylics on Masonite, 15 x 10 cm:
I cheated a bit for this one, using a photo instead of the traditional mirror. But I made a point of staring intently into the camera, as happens when using a mirror, to create that typical staring self-portrait look.
Acrylics on Masonite, 15 x 20 cm:
I grew up in the rural boondocks, right next to train tracks, which is perhaps why trains have fascinated me all my life. I am not, by any stretch of the imagination, one of those train spotters who can tell you the make, model and origin of every train, but I always love watching them. Perhaps just about time for me to finally paint one too.
Acrylics on Masonite, 15 x 20 cm:
I tried out a limited palette of titanium white, ivory black, burnt sienna and yellow ochre. Supposedly, ivory black has a bluish cast, so one can mix subdued blues and greens from it, but it depends on the brand, I think: my tube is as pitch black as lamp black, so no blues, and my attempt at green (by mixing some of the black into ochre yellow) perhaps came out more brownish than green. Well, with the limited palette, you do not expect bright colors, and for some subjects I rather like the stark, subdued tone you get from monochrome or limited palette paintings.
Acrylics on Masonite, 15 x 20 cm:
This work is for sale. Contact me at brianvds@gmail.com.
I found this a rather interesting subject to tackle - trying to get that molten metal glow effect turned out quite a challenge. But I had so much fun, I think I'll return to this sort of thing in future.
Acrylics on Masonite, 20 x 15 cm:
I have long thought that dolls, particularly antique-looking ones, are the most wondrously creepy things. And now I finally got around to painting one.
Acrylics on Masonite, 15 x 10 cm:
This work is for sale. Contact me at brianvds@gmail.com.
Painted from a police mugshot. I have no idea who the guy is or what he supposedly did, and I don't really care either. Call me crazy, but I find the faces on mugshots far more interesting to draw or paint than those of most other people. I may well do a whole series of these...