Andrea Doughtie, Rural Painter

September 30, 2009

Post Office Pig

Filed under: Life in Vermont — miasmagladness @ 11:41 am

100_0870The other day I went by the post office and there was a small pig rooting around outside.  The woman who lives next door raises one for meat every year and this one roams  freely.  Yesterday Ed stopped by to get the mail  and there was the pig, inside–eating candy corn doled out by his owner and by the postmaster.  I love living here!

September 27, 2009

And One More…..

Filed under: Uncategorized — miasmagladness @ 10:04 am

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Beef:  It’s What’s for Dinner    casein  9×12″  $400

Here’s the third in my whimsical casein series.  I found the little knight lying on the road and thought setting him up in a confrontation with the bull would be amusing.  The title is from an advertisement for beef, although nobody seems to remember it.   Clouds fascinate me so it was fun to tack one up on the blue background.

September 22, 2009

More Whimsy

Filed under: Uncategorized — miasmagladness @ 12:59 pm

Here’s another casein painting.  Meerkats crack me up.  These three were sold together and I’ve had fun setting  them up in various scenes.  (Am I in my second childhood?) I constructed the set in a cardboard box, complete with a landscape painting made from a card from one of my shows.  I loved painting the velvet drapery.  Casein is such a time-consuming medium but it’s something I can keep on my drafting table and work on when I have a few minutes, unlike oils where setting up takes more time.

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Gossip   casein on birch panel  9×12″  $400 framed

September 16, 2009

Trip to the Adirondacks

Filed under: Painting — miasmagladness @ 1:12 am

Early in August we went to visit friends who’d rented a house on Star Lake in New York State, not far from Lake Placid.  Our hosts were a composer and a violinist who had also invited a pianist and an art historian.  Ed was in heaven playing and I was in heaven painting.  I took casein– a big mistake since it dried way too fast outside.  I stood out on the dock and painted one of the lake houses; it wound up too finicky and I didn’t like it.    But forunately I also took oils and found a beautiful pond with some dead trees for punctuation.  This time I used a larger support than I ordinarily use for plein air and the size forced me to slap down paint fast and furiously.  I got most of it done while I was there and only added a few touches after I got it home.  It’s looser than my usual style and I’m pretty pleased with it.    All in all, we had a fabulous time, produced great collaborative meals and just fell into wonderful conversations in between music, kayaking and hiking.  The art historian to our delight turned out to be a colleague of our son-in-law who teaches at Hamilton College.  Altogether a terrific group of people and a memorable few days.

Tranquil Turns

Tranquil Turns  oil on birch panel  18×24″  $600 framed

September 7, 2009

Woodchuck Summer

Filed under: Life in Vermont — miasmagladness @ 12:36 pm

This summer has been defined by the presence of an infuriating little rodent–our resident woodchuck.  He ate my delphiniums, my phlox, the green beans and even the Jerusalem artichokes.  He dug out a huge den under our porch and every time we’d fill it up with stones and dirt he’d open it up again.  We soaked tennis balls in ammonia and threw those in the den but he was undeterred.  More plants disappeared.   Ed was muttering about acquiring a rifle.  Then we finally broke down and bought a Havahart trap, a device for trapping an animal without harming it.  We baited it nicely with apples and sure enough, within a short time we caught our woodchuck.  Ed loaded him into the car and returned a short time later.  He’d taken him about 2 miles away and I had an uneasy feeling he might find his way home.  For two days my plants flourished.  Then we were coming home one afternoon and there on the driveway, running home right before our eyes was–guess who!?  We continued to bait the trap and even went online to purchase commercial woodchuck bait.  We bought the best broccoli, supposedly the woodchuck’s favorite, but to no avail.  He had learned his lesson well.  He continued to dig out his den and feast upon what was left of the garden.  Then several weeks later, with only some dried-up bait left in the trap, he once again fell for the trick.   Ed ran into the house shouting gleefully that we had us a woodchuck.  So–we loaded him up and drove on the Interstate for many miles before liberating him into a nice wooded area.  At this point, two weeks later he hasn’t returned and the plants are sending out new shoots.  We even  have a few green beans.

September 6, 2009

Back to Blogging

Filed under: Uncategorized — miasmagladness @ 2:14 pm

I read recently that 90% of bloggers haven’t posted in 4 months so there you go.  I do have an excuse.  My opening for a solo show of 42 (!) paintings was last weekend and I was frantically finishing up paintings, varnishing, framing, etc.  I was pleased with the way it looked and the turnout for the show so now I can relax and catch up.  One of the paintings that took the longest was “Cat’s Cradle: Mother/Stepmother.”  I thought the cat’s cradle game was a good metaphor for step families–the relationships are complex but the members are tied closely together.  It took me a long time, working from three different photographs; putting them together wasn’t easy.  Of course this is my former daughter-in-law, the two boys and my daughter-in-law.   I gave up getting a good likeness but it’s the idea that counts.

Cat's Cradle:Mother/Stepmother

Cat’s Cradle: Mother/Stepmother    oil on masonite 36×36″  NFS

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