Chair Paintings

Chair paintings I have known

chair-painting-01
Chair Painting

Chair Paintings, harumph! I have one too. It’s empty. I called it and empty chair painting but no one asked for that so I seek a loftier set of words. If I succeed you see my painting. If I do not succeed, my painting remains on the wall of my dear Niece Cindy Jackson in Clarksville Tennessee. You can see it there or in any one of the attics in which it may reside in the future.
In order for you, some nameless person somewhere, to see my chair painting I have to say chair painting now. I also need outside links for my robot friends. I must be the chair painting expert. There I said it again.
Chair Paintings. Let’s See there is Van Gogh’s chair painting:

Van Gogh Chair Painting
Van Gogh Chair Painting

Paul Gauguin was Vincent’s buddy. They lived together for awhile and then Vince cut off his ear. That would put a strain on any friendship.

Gauguin Chair
Gauguin Chair

Abstract Dog Painting

Abstract Dog Painting

Abstract Dog Painting is certainly a keyword name as I am an internet artist for sure. This painting actually has a title, The Dog Running Left. It is the second of the abstract dog series. I didn’t set out to paint the beast. I don’t set out to paint anything. I make shapes. Later I need a file name and have to “see something”. After I painted these I said, “Oh it must be the dog.”, They are now abstract dogs. I’m not even sure what that is.

The second of the dog paintings is The Dog Running Right:

Abstract-dog-painting-02
Abstract-dog-painting-02

Here is my painting of an old dog who used to live next door:

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dog painting

Abstract dogs aren’t as sweet as real dogs. They are a bit unpredictable, like the artist/ poet/who-ever the hell I am. Anybody wanna buy an abstract dog painting from an old dog, well….
I haven’t given these away like I did the rest…so far.
See more of David’s Abstract Original Paintings
david michael jackson 2012 editors@artvilla.com

Impasto Art Painting

Impasto Art Painting

Impasto-Art-Painting
Impasto Art Painting

This painting hangs in my house. It is painted with thick globs of oil paint applied with a stiff brush and a knife. It is the take what you get method. This is a very expensive painting to make. I’d actually have to sell paintings to be able to afford the method of this art.
It took five years for the paint to harden on this painting. It wasn’t practical to produce the most beautiful art.
It’s touchable, you see. They have to have guards in the museums to keep us from touching the art. It is our nature to want to touch the surface the artist touched, to feel the thing itself. We revere this thing the artist scraped and sometimes pounded and sometimes threw against the wall. We act like it’s a holy surface.
I touch this painting. I find it hard to think of it in a place where no one can touch it.

Connecticut Artist Leif Nilsson

Connecticut Artist Leif Nilsson

Connecticut Artist
Leif Nilsson Spring Street Studio and Gallery, LLC

Connecticut Artist Leif Nilsson is an impressionist. A modern form of Monet in Connecticut. His art is wonderful. His site is so very well done so get out of here and go there.
Click on the pic above and use Cntrl + to enlarge. It’s high-res and you can zoom to the brush strokes. Very pretty close-up. With impasto the eyes loves to just look at ther brushstokes. They are part of the art.
The internet is about content and links. Our little show and tell gene is a bit more out of hand than most and our posts and links mean that we can help other artists be seen on their sites.

Artist Leif Nilsson is our content today. We like the way he goes for it.
Any artist knows the cost of materials and impasto is expensive. To paint Van Gogh’s paintings with his materials would cost a small fortune. We admire Leif’s work!

Creek Paintings ~ Three Paintings of a Creek

Creek Painting 48″ x 36″

creek painting
creek painting

This creek painting was painted from a photograph of Passenger Creek in 1989. There was a tree in the photo which was not falling but certainly about to fall. It makes me think of the “tree falling in the forest” statement we all know. Maybe it was caught up in that branch. It adds an element of anticipation on the creek.  Here is our earlier post of this creek painting

All paintings have a story and even maybe a byline. This one has a byline. I painted it the day my brother died. I’d cut it into a thousand pieces if I could get him back. The last strokes went on when the phone rang. I was painting it for Wayne Jackson.

Creek paintings are plentiful. Fcreek-painting-02creek-painting-o3amous creek paintings I cannot seem to reference. Maybe this should be one.  Things don’t turn out that way though.

My first effort with this photo was this smaller creek painting . This painting was owned by  Wayne and is now in my possession. I had just started painting and he put it on his wall and bought a light for it. This sparked my painting efforts. The creek, in particular passenger creek has always been special for me. The creek represents a small out of the way unnoticed peace and tranquility. A place of small sounds, insects and birds. I grew up on a farm on a creek. My earliest memories are walking the trails beside this little creek, fishing and swimming with my brothers.

These creek paintings were my earliest efforts and maybe my best. They were impressions of peaceful times, of good times as a child. Oil paint has a way of becoming more translucent over the years. These creek paintings were painted in 1989. A few years later I began painting on paper and painted this last painting of the creek. This one is dated 1992. It is the last of the series.

Here iwayne jacksons a pic of my brother, Wayne Jackson.

 

 

Here is a link to his poems. He was, and is, my brother and friend. These paintings and my art are dedicated to him. He encouraged me. That is the greatest gift.

David Michael Jackson

editors@artvilla.com