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Showing posts with label Carol McArdle paintings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carol McArdle paintings. Show all posts

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Carol McArdle's New Painting


My newest painting is of leaning sable palms with resurrection ferns on their trunks and a moss covered oak at the edge of the Caloosahatchee River in South West FL. It is just after sunrise and the early rays create glowing highlights on the trees and grasses.

"First Light" oil on canvas, 36" x 24"

See more great paintings of Florida's natural beauty at http://www.carolmcardle.com

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Birds in Art 2010 Finalist


It has happened again! My art has been accepted into the Birds in Art 2010! Last year's painting in the exhibit was
"White Hope", this year's piece is "Movement and Stillness in the Swamp"

Out of 922 entries from around the world 115 final pieces were chosen.

The judges were;
Judith A. Hayner, Executive Director, Muskegon Museum of Art, Muskegon,Michigan;
Thomas W. Jones, Executive Director, Museum of the Southwest,Midland, Texas;
and Ann Landi, Journalist and Contributing Editor, ARTnews, New York

I will keep you posted as we get closer to the exhibit which will be in September at the
Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum, Wausau, WI.

I have prints available on my website, or just email me at, carol@carolmcardle.com if you have any questions.

Have a beautiful day!
Carol

Wednesday, May 5, 2010


"Green Heron Haven" is a 20" x 16" oil painting of the shy little bird among the young red mangrove shoots in Southwest FL.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Carol McArdle Bird Paintings for Sale


My newest bird painting can be seen on my website, www.carolmcardle.com. It is of a great egret caught in the glowing rays of sunset while perched on the top of a cypress tree in the Big Cypress Preserve in South Florida. The bird's white feathers were catching the rays of the setting sun and turned subtle pink, orange and yellow.
To achieve the effect of the radiant sunset sky I painted many layers of glazes with acrylic paint and medium. Each layer of paint was transparent with slightly varying colors to create more 'shimmer' and depth.
To paint the cypress branches and leaves I spent a lot of time brushing in hundreds of individual leaves to simulate the effect the tiny needle type leaves. I love the long 'dripping' cypress blossoms and they really add to the mood of the painting.
The Title of the painting is "Cypress Sentinel" Acrylic on canvas 20" x 16" Own the original for $1,800 or.....
Purchase a signed giclee print on canvas or watercolor paper, of the same size, 20" x 16". Price for paper, $250, or on stretched canvas, $275 plus shipping, other sizes available. Call or Email Carol McArdle now to order and to get more details. Email: carol577@embarqmail.com Ph: - 239-267-4750

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Who's Hanging on Your Walls?


Why You May Have Better Cultural Taste Than Most!
I used to make a living from commissioned murals, tromp l'oeil and faux finishing. I still do some murals and examples of them are on my site. http://www.carolmcardle.com But that's not the point I want to make here, what I want to talk about is what I learned about the art that many people have on the walls of their homes, even expensive dream homes that can afford some of the better art available.

Do You Know Who's Hanging on Your Walls?
I often work with interior designers, those artists of a different medium that can visualize your whole house, room by room, who know every high end name in fabrics, furniture, accessories, wall treatments and papers etc. I very much admire them and I cannot do what they do. Designers love to be hired by the wealthy who are able to have a large budget to get their interiors just right. What a pleasure to be able to create without too much thought for cost. Each chair around the dining table may cost thousands, the light fixtures can be imported from Italy and the cost may easily be in the double digit thousands. A tiny decorative pillow that is rarely seen may cost a weeks pay for some of us. Same goes for the rest of what they fill their houses with, you get the point. (I LOVE these customers by the way, they provide work for of many, many people!)

After the house becomes a showcase for the best of the best, then we come to the art for the walls. Many times what I saw on the walls in million dollar homes with all the best designer furniture and fabrics etc. were decorative prints, often manufactured in China and many that you could get at any home decor chain store. While there is nothing wrong with decorative prints, in my opinion they do not do justice to the beauty of the rest of the house. Many designers and home owners do not have real art on their radars and it becomes an after-thought with very little of the decorating budget assigned to it. More time, care and money can be spent on the wallpaper or wall-finish or even just the plain wall paint color than the art. Yes, the contractors painting the walls of a room may cost more than the decorative prints that are placed on them.

Did You Know....Not All Originals are Original?
Sometimes I saw original paintings instead of just decorative prints. What the homeowner may not know is that many 'originals' are more mass produced 'art' from China. There are many factory-studios where the same painting, often plagiarized off a real artist's work from America or Europe, is painted over and over again. Original painting? Hand painted, yes. Art? Is it or isn't it in your opinion? That's at the higher-end of the art from these factory-studios and some of it is very well painted. In many cases the 'original art' is painted by multiple 'artists'. Each one has one color and paints the same one or a few strokes over and over again as the painting goes from 'artist' to 'artist' down the conveyer belt. To any artist or a trained eye these are easy to spot as the style has such disconnect and it's obvious that the strokes are different all over the piece. There are many galleries, high end designer show rooms and 'exclusive' furniture and accessory stores full of this 'art'. They are filling a demand but I just want people to know what they are buying and how huge the mark up in price is. If they still are happy with it then that's fine but you cannot make a real choice without the real information.

Is A Brush Stroke Just a Brush Stroke?
Talking about strokes, did you know that an artist's brush stroke is unique and usually the more developed the artist the more distinct and refined their style, including strokes? Artists train and practice hard for years and years to get their strokes just right and to make every one count. Beginner artists often have no idea that it's their strokes betray their inexperience, it can take years just to build an awareness and an eye for them. The most 'careless' strokes can be the hardest. It takes excellence to make a stroke that looks like it was quickly slapped on but is done exactly how the artist wants. That stroke communicates something in a different way than a smooth 'invisible' stroke. (both can be equally important in paintings). What the viewer sees is something that they love to look at, something alive and magical about the piece they are viewing. You may just see a great painting, but the well trained, perfectly placed strokes are what makes it sing. Most of the time you need to see the original, not a photo or reproduction to really see this in a painting. (Although I must say that some giclee prints can be quite extraordinary in how well they reproduce a piece, they are still not originals though!)

So, if you enjoy art and if you own original art, or even a print that you carefully chose, you are better informed than many, even many of the super wealthy who rely on their interior designers' choices. The pleasure that art can give you; just coming across or hunting for the right piece and falling in love with it; purchasing and owning the piece that captured your heart; being able to enjoy it, sometimes with glances, sometimes with long looks in different lights, seeing how the light changes it; knowing you own something special and even watching the value of that piece increase as you watch the artist's career develop, is something that you can value and be proud of. In my biased opinion it makes you a special person that I am deeply thankful for. Without you there would be far less opportunity for artists to develop their art. There would be far less beauty in the world. You, your understanding of, your love of, and your purchasing of art is the vacuum that art fills. You really do help in the process of the art that we artists create.

Anything about Carol McArdle's art, paintings, photography and murals. Thoughts about art, my career and anything else that affects my life and thoughts as an artist.