Daily Painters of Texas

Deep in the Heart of Texas can be found a unique blend of Artists. Follow the best of Texas Art here on the Daily Painters of Texas.

Artist membership applications are encouraged, especially from unrepresented regions of Texas. Applicants must paint daily, blog frequently, and reside in the Great State of Texas. To apply email: INFO on Artists Of Texas and include a link to your art blog or web site for jury panel review.

Showing posts with label Impressionism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Impressionism. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 17, 2022

The Joys of Doing Art Shows with Contemporary Impressionist Niki Gulley

 Perhaps I Should've Listened to My Parents about Becoming an Artist...


It's interesting in talking people to find out that most of you guys have no idea what goes into exhibiting at an art show, but you'd like to know. So... for something a little different this month, how about if I regale you with the process?

It often starts with the show attempting to fit 250 artists' SUV's and trailers (or in our case an 18' box truck with a 5' lift gate) into the set up area which allows about 20 vehicles at a time to unload. Next, you dolly your canopies, display walls, art and support materials (or in our case, we push eleven 6' x 3' x 8' six hundred pound carts) to your booth space.

Yes – that's right! We all own or rent our tents and walls. The show does not supply these. Our fair fees just cover our 10' x 10' piece of concrete. Next, we then proceed to erect our outdoor galleries, which on our fastest day takes about 7 hours – that's as long as there is no heat, humidity, rain, or extra dollying (like uphill over grass at the Cottonwood Art Festival.)

Then, when the weekend is over, we pack each artwork in protective wrapping and take it all down. Luckily this process goes quicker and we can finish in 3 to 4 hours, although it's usually dark by this point. And, occasionally such as in Ann Arbor and Chicago, the show has allowed locals to drive on the streets while you are still loading up.

We then proceed to drive home, often about 1200 miles spread over two days. Usually this goes smoothly other than having to pull in at every state's commercial truck weight station, with the occasional inspections (where you pray you receive no fines or delays.) This particular summer, besides getting some warnings in Wisconsin during out impromptu truck inspection, we ran into a few other surprises. Despite our vehicle having rather low mileage, our sway bar fell off in the middle of Tennessee, we were towed and impounded for the low price of $525 in Chicago's suburbs despite having a parking pass, and lastly our tire blew out on the freeway 10 miles from a town in Ohio on a Sunday. Did I mention almost all businesses are closed on Sundays in Toledo? Fun stuff!

Needless to say, I am so grateful to all of you that come out to support us and allow me to continue my passion for painting!!! Scott's getting closer to retirement, so you may be seeing us less in future years. Sadly, this was our last summer in Ann Arbor, and I will really miss you guys! But, keep in mind I am only a phone call or e-mail away if  you need some artwork to lift your spirits.


***
To see more of my contemporary impressionistic landscape paintings, visit nikigulley.com.

E-mail -  Niki Gulley


https://www.instagram.com/nikigulley/

Wednesday, September 5, 2018

   

WEDGE OF LEMON,OILS CANVAS

© Barbara Haviland--Texas Still life Artist
© Barbara Haviland--Texas Still life Artist
Wedge of Lemon is done in oils on a canvas panel. 
I painted several lemon paintings and this one measures 5"x 5".
The painting is signed and
framed for you.

©Barbara Haviland  Barb's Garden 2018 
 by Artist Barbara Haviland
BarbaraHavilandFineArt.com

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Abstract Cityscape,Cityscape Paintings, Oil Landscape, "Blue Alley" Texas Artist Debra Hurd

 28"x22" Palette Knife Oil on Canvas

 Multiple layers of thick buttery oil paint.

 This painting is SOLD, but commissions are welcome.

 Click HERE for pricing on commissions and sizes available

 Visit http://DebraHurd.com to view more of my work.

 Visit my Daily Painters Gallery HERE

 Visit my BLOG

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

"Capitol Haze" by Robin Cheers

30x24 oil on cradled panel
Available at Russell Collection Fine Art

I'm excited to be included in the show "3x3: Three Women, Three Visions" 
opening this Friday September 4 in Austin at Russell Collection Fine Art.
I have 20 new paintings to share along with new works by Texas artists Maxine Price and Jill Pankey.
If you are in Austin, stop by the gallery and say hi!

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

JUST A LITTLE SUNSHINE BY ARTIST PAT MEYER




5 X 7 OIL ON LINEN
CONTACT ARTIST TO PURCHASE
$125
PAT@MEYER.NET

Some days you need Just a Little Sunshine in your life and sunflowers always seem to do that for me. The thick juicy brush strokes will make you feel lively and the colors happy.

Signature Member Artist of Texas, Oil Painters of America, Outdoor Painters Society

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Neighborhood Watch ~ Coronado Island Cottage by Floral Artist Nancy Medina


Neighborhood Watch
Coronado Island Cottage
by Nancy Medina
16X12
Oil on Archival Panel



Neighborhood Watch ~ Coronado Island Cottage is based on one of the outdoor scenes and interesting floral dramas of my favorite island just off the coast near San Diego, California. Visiting the island and seeing the rose and flower gardens and arbors is a feast for the artist's soul. Each spring when we visit I get out my Annual Flower Show Map and direct the hubby up and down the winding streets in search of blue ribbon gardens. Upon spotting some delectable rose arbor or delphinium bed, I shriek "STOP!" and the hubby finds a place to park while I leap out of the still rolling car barely able to focus my camera. After several gazillion dozen photos of each scene, I return to the rental car in triumph, only to find the hubby hiding behind a map pretending not to know the crazy woman with the Nikon marching all over the immaculate Coronado lawns. I suppose there is some truth to his mortification, since each time I try to hail a cottage owner to announce I am smitten with their garden, they scurry off inside and hide themselves until I wander away.

Friday, February 22, 2013

Blue Iris Balboa Sunset by Texas Flower Artist Nancy Medina


Blue Iris Balboa Sunset
by Nancy Medina
16X12
Oil on Archival Panel


Blue Iris Balboa Sunset is my newest daily painting in Flower Mound Studio, as I pack up paints and palette for my landscape workshop tomorrow in North Texas. I'm looking forward to visiting Balboa Park again in April, when I'll be on Coronado Island in Southern California for my annual solo show painting in the garden at Art and Frames by Wood Gallery. I'm working on a whole set of new four-foot container garden paintings for the show, so stop by and say hello and enjoy refreshments and art in the garden. The gallery is right in the heart of downtown, just a few doors down from Starbucks, so grab a latte and come on by! I'm sharing one of my favorite photos on my art blog today from Balboa Park here, my husband, Carlos, taking a stroll through the gardens with a jiggly wiggly lovely little girl named Dandy. Carlos and I moved from Southern California to Dallas over 10 years ago. Our best friends there like to call us every year or so to tell us how much more our condo is worth now, and how nice the sunshine is, and how beautiful the ocean and fresh the seafood is. It's always good to have friends to keep things in perspective, don't you agree?
 Nancy Medina Solo Show
Painting in the Garden

Art & Frame by Wood Gallery
Saturday, April 20, 2013
936 Orange Avenue
Coronado, CA 92118
9 am to 4 pm

Friday, January 4, 2013

Shades of Gray Tree Landscape by V. Bridges Hoyt


13002.

Shades of Gray
artist V. Bridges Hoyt 

Shades of Gray Tree Landscape 7x5 Oil Painting
oil on canvas panel
5 x 7 inches (12.7 cm X 17.8 cm)

95. + 5. s&h

How to purchase. Click HERE.

Read the story behind this painting at my blog TXsauce.net.
Thanks for viewing.
Vernita

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Blazing Transitions II - New birch painting by Niki Gulley

Blazing Transitions II ©2012 Niki Gulley
48" x 36" • Textured painting on canvas

I used to love it as a kid when my parents would take me to the forest preserves near our home outside of Chicago. We would spend the whole day bike riding, picnicking and being immersed in nature and I relished this time with my family. In Blazing Transitions II I wanted to recreate those warm memories, choosing reds and yellows of autumn to heighten those happy feelings and using energetic strokes with my paint reminiscent of a carefree, simpler time.

If you'd like more information on my textured aspen and birch tree paintings, e-mail Niki Gulley.

Or if you're in the Dallas / Fort Worth area this weekend, please stop by my booth, #J-5, at Southlake's Art in the Square.


Art in the Square 
Fri. Apr. 27 • 4pm - 9pm 
Sat. Apr. 28 • 10am - 9pm 
Sun. Apr. 29 • 11am - 5pm 
Southlake, TX • Southlake Town Square • 234 State St. 
ArtInTheSquare.com

***
NikiGulley.com


Saturday, December 31, 2011

Winter Pansies by Judy Crowe


'Winter Pansies'  7x5 oil on panel
Pansies are a favorite flower of mine because they are just so colorful.  As my mentor :) Richard Schmid says, "you can almost paint them with colors straight from the tube".  I am very very very very happy to be painting!  And I will paint tomorrow Lord Willing!!  You know, they say that what you do on the first day of the year determines what you will be doing the rest of the year as well...so if you are an artist...I do hope we all can get in our studios tomorrow!  If not, that's ok, this week then....Blessings to you and your family for the new year!  Thanks for stopping by.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Disappearing Act, watermelon by V. Bridges Hoyt


DISAPPEARING ACT
watermelon #3
oil on cradled wood board
4x4 inches


Watermelons are a July treat! Red is a July color. "Disappearing Act" is third in my watermelon series, another 4x4 mini-painting and looks great displayed singularly or in a grouping with the other melon paintings, oil on cradled wood board. Click to contact Vernita for availability of Disappearing Act. Subscribe to my blog to see my newest paintings. I hope you're having a wonderful summer. 

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Fork it Over, painting #2 of watermelon series by V. Bridges Hoyt


"Fork it Over"
watermelon #2
oil on wood, 4x4 inches
© V. Bridges Hoyt 2011 

"Fork it Over"—#2 of my watermelon series. This one is with fork in a slice. Texas Impressionist miniature oil painting on 4x4 inch cradled wood panel can be framed or unframed, displayed on wall or on easel. Email me.  artist@vbridgeshoyt.com

Click to view more at my blog.

Summer Day in Castelfranc 6x6 by Elaine Monnig

Original Oil Painting 6" x  6"
Click Here to Bid on This Painting
Beginning bid is $50

Monday, February 14, 2011

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Wild Watermelon Poppy by Nancy Medina

Wild Watermelon Poppy by Nancy Medina

Wild Watermelon Poppy is drying on the vine in Flower Mound Studio this evening, as I have taken a bit of a break from my rose journey to paint a series of poppies. I'm developing some new works to take down to the Good Art Company Gallery in Fredericksburg, Texas soon, but in the meantime I got some good news this week. My award-winning painting, From the Heart Sunflowers, has been nominated for the Irving Art Association calendar. I received word a few days ago, and have been on cloud nine ever since! This is a big honor, and I can't wait to see the finished product. Stay tuned, I'll let you know when it's available - there are some amazing artists from the IAA group so this will be a real collector's item.

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Wild Rose Tea by Nancy Medina


Wild Rose Tea by Nancy Medina

Wild Rose Tea is drying on the easel in Flower Mound Studio, as the chilly winds blow through Texas. Despite the warm tea here and the content puggies nearby, the footheaters are working overtime to keep out winter. In the yard today, I was given a small gift - a morning glory in a shape I have never seen before. The star shaped blossom was braving the cold, and enjoying the sun, bucking adversity all the while just to share a little beauty for a few more days before going to sleep for the winter. What a treat! Take a peek at my blog to see the blossom I've shared with you. Thanks for walking with me these past weeks on my rose journey. Stay warm and keep blooming!

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Fleurs dans Blue - Hydrangeas by Nancy Medina

Fleurs dans Blue by Nancy Medina

Fleurs dans Blue is my newest hydrangea painting, and is based on a beautiful pot of blue flowers from container garden last summer. Someday I hope to become a master hydrangea gardener, someone who plays with additives and changes the colors of the blossoms and grows them in profusion all summer long. For now, I will be satisfied with painting them, and adding more blossoms where petals have fallen, fattening up leaves with my paintbrush when they are thinning, and laying in colors that may never bloom on my own back porch.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Ragdoll Tulips and Sunflowers by Nancy Medina


Last summer, I received a beautiful bouquet of red ragdoll tulips and sunflowers, and could not wait to set them up for a photo shoot on my back porch. The pugs were available to supervise, ensuring that any fruit that rolled off of the table was hastily retrieved, though not always returned. The weather today is much like it was the day I took the photo on my blog that inspired this painting - sunny, a bit windy, and really beautiful outside.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

A Rose Is a Rose by Nancy Medina

A Rose Is a Rose by Nancy Medina

A Rose Is a Rose is another step forward in the rose journey that has been under way for a few months in Flower Mound Studio. What to name a red rose in a red pot? Rose on rose came to mind, and then Shakespeare was the next logical thought. I chose journalism as my professional trade as soon as I finished college, but my love of books and words came much earlier. My mother used to read stories to my sisters and I and all of our friends every day at naptime. I remember seeing her in the rocking chair with my baby sister Jackie in her arms, and a book propped in her lap. She read quietly, and confidently, and she gave every word the ability to pull me into another place.

Mom is still in the hospital this week. Each small step in her recovery from pneumonia is cheered and measured by whether she ate today, how much, did she want to sit up, and did she have a few moments when she wanted to talk and laugh. We are hoping she will be home very soon, back at the farm, where she belongs. I hope all of your loved ones are well and happy this season. Cherish the time you have with them.

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