Faces of Planet Earth                                                 

 

This group of paintings is inspired by our planet earth--aerial views and views of the air.  Traditionally, landscape painters record the view across the surface of the earth with the inevitable horizon line dividing the canvas into two basic areas.  It is like painting a figurative portrait in profile: the canvas is divided into two fundamental compositional areas, one side of the face and whatever lies behind it. 

 

I am experimenting with an unconventional view.  I am painting her full face rather than her profile.  Looking down at the earth or up at the sky there is no visible horizon: the earth’s features alone serve as the fundamental compositional elements.  There is no horizon, no predetermined division of my working surface.  The result is more abstract, less predictable. 

 

This series, Faces of Planet Earth, focuses on the workings of the elements wind, water and fire on the face and the atmosphere of our earth, as well as the marks left by technology such as agriculture and mining.  The Dunes series remark on sunlight and shadow moving over windswept sands.  The Water Wheels series comment on agriculture’s circular irrigation in the Great Plains of the United States.  From the air you can see well-defined active circles and disappearing, abandoned, partial, and less round circles overlapping each other, forming fascinating accidental patterns. 

 

Like the moon and the other planets in our solar system, the earth is a reflective body, absorbing and reflecting the sun’s light to varying degrees—darker areas, like forests, being more absorbent and brighter areas, like glaciers, being more reflective.  I have used a metallic background and applied many thin layers of paint as a structural reminder of our earth’s luminescence.

 

AnneKarin Glass

Visual Thinker

[../photogallery/photo00003241/real.htm]

 

01182 Dunes I

24"x24"

Oil & glass bead/aluminum/canvas

2009  $2450

01185 Dunes II

24"x24"

Oil & glass bead/aluminum/canvas

2009  $2450

01186 Dunes III

24"x24"

Oil & glass bead/aluminum/canvas

2009  NFS

 

01187 Dunes IV

24"x24"

Oil & glass bead/aluminum/canvas

2009  2450

01188 Dunes V

24"x24"

Oil & glass bead/aluminum/canvas

2009  NFS

01189 Dunes VI

24"x24"

Oil & glass bead/aluminum/canvas

2009  $2450

01182 Watering Wheels II (diptych)

18"x24" ea.

Oil/aluminum/canvas

2008  $3600

01172 Watering Wheels I (diptych)

24"x18" ea.

Oil/aluminum/canvas

2009  $3600

Watering Wheels III

18"x24" ea.

Oil/aluminum/canvas

2009  $3600

01190 Lightining 1 Dectych

57"x29"

oil & sand/canvas

2009  $5850

01191 Lightining 2 Dectych

57"x29"

oil & sand/canvas

2009  $5850

01195 Missouri River

36"x18"

oil & glass bead/aluminized canvas

2009  $2750

01196 Rio Parana

36"x18"

oil & glass

2009  $2750 bead/aluminized canvas

 

The Figure Layered in Space

Over many years of painting the figure I keep coming back to layering the figure in space.  I favor foreshortened poses and I frequently alter the pose to fit the canvas.  I liberally employ distortion.  Composition is key.

 

01178 Tracy on the Porch

37.5"x25.5"

2009 $3100

oil/canvas

01200 Muchacho

36"x24"

oil/canvas

2009 SOLD

 

01201 Footloose

36"x24"

oil/canvas

2009 $3100

 

01202 Handy Man

36"x24"

oil/canvas

2009 $3100

01203 Best Foot Forward

36"x24"

oil/canvas

2009 $3100

01206 Foreshadow

36"x24"

2009 $3100

oil/canvas

01207 Christine

36"x24"

oil/canvas

2009 $3100

01208 Tracy's Knee

36"x24"

oil/canvas

2009 $3100

01028 Sleeper

24"x30"

oil/canvas

1996 NFS

01029 Dreamer

36"x36"

1997 NFS

oil/canvas

 

01043s Another Dream

36"x36"

1997 SOLD



OLD

oil/canvas

01056 Lorraine

36"x36"

1999 $4600

oil/canvas

01004 Crossed Ankles

36"x24"

oil/canvas

1999 $3100

01011 Reminiscence

30"x24"

oil/canvas

1999 $2550

01075 The Bottle

40x30

oil/canvas

2007 $4250

01076 Languor

20"x16"

2001 $1150

oil/canvas

01084s Unconditional Love

24"x24"

2003 SOLD

collection of Kerrie Zeitler

 

01099s Anguish

12"x12"

2005 SOLD

oil/canvas

collection of Andrew and Laura Petersen

 

01107 The Glazers

15x11

2004 SOLD

oil/canvas

collection of Michael & Sue mcCarthy, Encinitas, CA

01112 Travelers

40x20

2007 $2850

oil/canvas

01139 Tell Me

30"x30"

2006 $3200

oil/canvas

01141 Contortionist

24"x18"

oil/canvas

2004 $1530

01143 Embrace

36"x36"

2007 $4600

oil/canvas

01162 Otieno

40"x20"

2008 $2850

oil/canvas

01164 Devi

36"x36"

oil/canvas

2008 $4600

01173 Somehand

30"x24"

2008 SOLD

oil/canvas

collection of Chateau Reaux, Loire Valley

 

01000 Reclining Nude

30"x24"

1999 $2550

oil/canvas

 

 

Four Minute Gestures in Oil/Paper

  Traditionally, figure drawing sessions are approximately three hours, broken into 20 minute segments.  The model takes five minute breaks between segments.  Artists usually spend the first 20 minutes warming up, that is, drawing 30 second, 1 minute and/or two minute poses.  The purpose of this exercise is to “feel” the pose rather than to “think” about it, to “get loose.”

      I have spent about six hours per week studying the human figure since 1987. Initially, I workedonly in dry media, charcoal, pencil, crayon, etc.  Only after a number of years did I feel I had enough knowledge of the figure to add the element of color to the gesture “experience”.  For my gesture paintings, the model assumes a pose for four minutes. I paint these pictures in that span of time.

      Each painting is a culmination of what I have learned from my constant observation ofthe figure and from my experience in visually expressing my sensations in response to a model’sfour minute pose.  When I paint gestures I am learning to focus on my perception, to experience and express my emotional and visceral reaction to that visual input. Painting a model doing gesture poses expands my consciousness in the realms of sight, sensation, and emotion. I do not reflect.  I do not consider.  I do not judge.  I do not anticipate.  I am in the moment.  I respond—that’s all.

      To see a larger sampling go to my Oil Gestures page.

04122 Taking Off

30"x24" framed

oil/paper

collection of Steven & Trish Pisarkiewicz, N.Y., N.Y.

 

04190s Yes!

30"x24" framed

oil/paper

collection of Tohikazu Kobayashi, Tokyo

04196 The Winner

30"x24" framed

oil/paper

collection of Tohikazu Kobayashi, Tokyo

 

04210s Blue Dancer

30"x24" framed

oil/paper

collection of Jonata Ferreira, Lencois, BA, Brazil

 

 

04289s Royal Command

30"x24" framed

oil/paper

collection of Eric Oliver, San Francisco, CA

 

 

04463s Snarl

30"x24" framed

oil/paper

collection of J. Travis Laster, Wilmington, DE

 

 

 

Photography

This is a group of photographs taken in August 2009 at the San Francisco Conservatory of Flowers in Golden Gate Park.  My objective in shoot ing them was to create a collection of images that I could use as a springboard for a series of abstract oil paintings on aluminum foil and glass beads and shards.  For my original purpose I needed to rework them in photoshop.  Some of the images were so powerful as photographs that I want to share them as such.  The first few have been adjuted only for color, lightness and contrast.  The rest have been subjected to crativity.

[../photogallery/photo00024215/real.htm]

 

 

 

What's New Contact The Eye's Mind The Eye's Mind Contact What's New Left Brain Left Brain