Tag Archives: acrylic

Empire State from Lex and 34th

Finished the new cityscape, and backtracked in the photos with a side cheat walk on Google streets to figure out where I was when I took the picture. Acrylic, marker, and collage on 24 x 48 used canvas.

Here’s a detail:

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New Cityscape in progress

What I’m working on today: The Empire State Building from probably 5th. Acrylic, marker, and soon-to-be collage on an old painting from Goodwill, a horizontal beachscape, 24 x 48 canvas. You can see some of the tufts of grass and seagulls:

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Michael at Castel Sant’ Angelo

Acrylic and marker on used canvas (painted over a yard-sale painting), image 12 x 16. The subject is a marble statue of Archangel Michael (with iron wings), created by Raffaello da Montelupo in 1536 for the top of the castle. (“Legend has it” that in 590, Michael appeared above the castle, raising his sword to signal the end of the plague of that year.) Montelupo’s statue was replaced in 1753 by another Michael and moved to an inner courtyard. Here’s the picture I used for the painting:

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New Venice Painting in progress

Almost done.

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Dogeater Panel 10i

One night we went to a “nice restaurant in town.” [Beaver Street Brewery, south of the tracks.]

“Me and the wife.” [He talks like a hick in his stories. Also when lying.]

He said, “I’m going to take you here on our anniversary.”

I said, “This is our anniversary. I want a divorce.”

[Close, except for the part where I spill the beans about the day.]

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Dogeater Panel 10f

He says he was tight with his crew buddies but that’s all he says about them. He describes what he thinks make have been the last straw for me:

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Dogeater Panel 10e

He cut three cords of wood for our unwinterized cabin south of Flagstaff. [Half a cord, and we both did it. He taught me how to use a chainsaw. His daughter was with us. We had fun that day.]

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Detail from One Beat-Up George

This is a detail from One Beat-Up George, an unfinished 12″ x 36″ canvas. I ask him what he wants but he won’t say. I may be onto him today.

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Dogeater Panel 10d

[Note: He may be happy leaving you with the impression he was so cold-hearted but I’m not. I know he writes a better story than this. Stuff he left out: any reason he might have married me. Why this is bad: because it makes me not care about this narrator who is wasting my time talking about this brainless passionless toothless ex-wife, or (care) about Dogeater, which is a shame because it’s such a great title.]

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Dogeater Panel 10c

Flash forward to the following summer, his hotshot crew drove by our honeymoon place on their way to a fire in Oak Creek. Riding in while the townspeople fled. “Damn hot day for a fire,” is all he is thinking and for rhythm says again, “Damn hot day for a fire.”

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Dogeater Panel 10b

In Oak Creek on our honeymoon we were mutually bummed the picnic basket we got from one of my friends contained non-alcoholic wine. We both needed a drink.

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Dogeater Panel 10a

He starts by saying how my mom wasn’t at the wedding. (She was.) His daughter wasn’t, or his nephew who was bringing her, because his car broke down just outside of Phoenix. His brother lives in Colorodo. But his sister was there. She just happened to be in Sedona attending one of the local New Age metaphysical conferences. We planned the whole thing in four days.

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Dogeater Panel 10

Still crossing the rice paddy (it’s not as easy as it looked from his 10th-floor apartment & there are other wild dogs now taking notice of the first), he thinks about: 1. How to get the dog home invisibly. He spies an alley and a peach orchard that might come in handy for subterfuge. Because if people see him with the dog, they’ll assume he’s going to cook it up with some kimchi and rice, and he doesn’t want them thinking that, even if it isn’t true and they wouldn’t think twice if it was. And 2: His marriage with his second wife.

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Dogeater Panel 9

And a little more about me: (again, paraphrasing)

I’m one of those unfathomable women in his stories now. Part Mary, Queen of Scots (doomed, and not worth listening to), part Salome (stone-cold terrifying and dragging our platters with us wherever we go, dripping with blood).

OK OK! I’m getting away with myself.

I don’t call him a bum. I try to just say what went down. As honestly–as factually–as possible. No editorializing. I almost never succeed.

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Dogeater Panel 8

My husband, according to him, via Dogeater, paraphrased by me: The usual stuff. Brilliant but misunderstood, existentialist and tragically flawed. Untouchable like Hemingway, Thomas Pynchon or Jack Nicholson in Five Easy Pieces. Taker of chances, thinker of thoughts, lover of women, saver of dogs. And P.S.: He’s sure I now describe him as a bum.

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New Venice Painting

Underdrawing and reference picture for new Venice painting, 24 x 48 inches, black marker on black paint on canvas. I thought I was going to have no end of trouble with those balconies on the upper right but they don’t look half bad in this picture. Go me!

I don’t remember where it was in Venice but you can see it’s a narrower canal, residential, no gondolas. The gondolas are all fine but they’re about the tourists. I liked seeing the real boats the people who live there use every day. This is the first painting from Venice.

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Dogeater Panel 7

Speaking of irony. The 2 major & recurring themes of our rending asunder:

1. “Explain why you’re leaving again?”

& 2. “Please don’t write about me.”

“I promise.”

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Dogeater Panel 6

He says he hopes the story isn’t hard for me and he’s not bitter. “What do I have to be bitter about,” he says. I was the bad one.” He means that ironically.

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Dogeater Panel 5

Dogeater Panel 5

The wife.

“The wife had a goob job.” (This part is true.)

“I came home from construction jobs, ditch-digging, snow-shoveling, dead tired, half frost bit. She couldn’t stand the sight of me.” (And part of this is true.)

(And this is the part he left out): The wife came home from her job as, let’s say, a librarian. And she has more librarian work to do that night that she brought with her, let’s say about 4 hours’ worth. He yawns, stretches, says: “What’s for dinner?”

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Dogeater Panel 4

Dogeater Panel 4

4) W. H. Auden’s poem describing it. “The dogs go on with their doggy life.” 5) Charles Mingus blasting on his stereo back at the apartment, loud enough to teach the neighbor’s TV a lesson in manners or taste. Or at least the person reading the story. 6) Some other shit. 7) Me. “The wife.”

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