Showing posts with label acrylic on canvas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label acrylic on canvas. Show all posts

Monday, June 23, 2025

The Mountains are Silent as the Wind Howls Revisited - New Painting

The Mountains are Silent as the Wind Howls
The finished piece, revisited in 2025.
42 x 59.5 inches
Acrylic on Canvas
Purchase Information Link


The Mountains are Silent as the Wind Howls
The piece, as created originally in 2021.

My painting experience while painting the piece above depicts what feels common to today's current events. Chaos all around me. The wind is blustering my canvas, moving my supplies, tossing the pieces of wood I had stacked on the canvas edges. I reckon with it, giving my greatest retort and my warmest sweet talk. Nothing would be heard by the wind that day. It was all powerful. But, the strength of the mountains is silent; they are unshakable by anything the wind can blow their way. They are unmoved by anything I say to them like, "and you're just going to stand there with nothing to say while I'm getting tossed around here"? Ha! The mountains are silent as the wind howls, waiting for me to settle down and begin painting. 

I was excited to get outside to the land to paint. My painting location was the old abandoned salt mine with a beloved view.

Mother Nature doesn’t comply with my wishes for a peaceful time. On this day, no amount of declaration, soothsaying, or bargaining worked. The mountains stood there in silence, expecting me to begin. The painting session was exhilarating, with billowing plastic and flying canvas edges. Giggles ensued while playing with the elements at work. Dust, dirt, weed particles, and salt become part of this painting.

The 60 x 60-inch unstretched canvas is an enormous size for a Plein air painting. I laid it on the ground to work. There were old timbers and pieces of wood lying around, so I grabbed them to secure the corners. I placed it on a hill so the angle would tilt. It was a next-to-impossible task to paint that day as the wind howled, scoffing at me as I worked to secure the painting. I figured out the general layout, and the desired composition of the land, painting as best I could.

Mary Rush with her painting in process.
The Mountains are Silent as the Wind Howls

I’ve been Plein air painting for years. The new way of painting Plein air began about five paintings ago. Now, besides the small-size stretched canvas, I work on large-size flat raw canvas, either placed on the floor or on the land instead of working on an easel.

There are places on this painting, which to me, depict ancient Native American stories. These came forth during the painting process, much to my surprise. The old salt mine served as a ritual site for Hopi Native Americans before people developed it into a mining operation. Please take time to tune into the energy of this painting. It will be satisfying.

I painted this piece four years ago, leaving the painting in its raw state. I revisited it to refine it from that first visit to the land.

I’m told my Plein air paintings capture the spirit of the location. I believe I captured the experience of being there with the fierce wind howling and blowing my canvas all over the place. It was an untamable moment. My artwork depicts the vibrant, untamed spirit hidden within the tranquil mountain landscape, a place whispering ancient stories.

Painting on location.

What do you think of this painting? Do you see any tales from the distant past expressed on this painting?



Saturday, October 15, 2022

Sugar Sweet - New Abstract Painting

 

Sugar Sweet, 42 x 60 inches, Acrylic on Canvas

The color scheme and mood of this painting are childhood innocence. The abstract subject matter reminds me of a dream or a scene out of a children's book. It gives me the feeling of sweetness, sugar sweet.

Enjoy this short video panning the painting for a closer look.

Video of Sugar Sweet Overall Painting


Sunday, July 10, 2022

Buffalo Spirit - My Newest Painting

 


Buffalo Spirit. It's acrylic on canvas, 60 x 60 inches. An abstract painting with the feeling of the wild west. If you tune in, you can see American Indians and buffalo roaming the land with the sun shining.


The buffalo spirit is a strong, gentle mighty presence. The American Indian's spirit attunes to the natural world flowing with the rhythms of Mother Earth and the elements. The strength of the wind carries both the spirit of the buffalo and the American Indian forward. A deep abiding respect for life is honored between them. Life is sacred on the plains of the Southwest where buffalo spirit roams.

Survival, stamina, and strength is required for life in the wild wild west. Living from the wild place within is advised. Rock steady presence in tune with your center, ready for anything that comes your way. Buffalo spirit aids your journey.

This painting is available. Inquiries can be emailed to Mary@WildfeatherFineArt.com.

Monday, May 16, 2016

New Painting: Cherry Tree Promise

Cherry Tree Promise, 24 x 36 inches,
Acrylic on Canvas Floor Cloth.
Copyright 2016 Mary Gravelle aka Braylee Rush.
The Cherry tree blossomed just feet from my front door. The delicate pink flowers against the rich red leaves was something to behold. It grabbed an excitement from within promising new life coming soon.

En Plein Air beginning of this painting. As you can see,
I took huge artistic license in the composition
and color scheme.






















Plein Air Painting

I gathered my paints and canvas and went outside to capture its essence and beauty. I finished it up in the studio.


Painting from Life

While I was painting the leaves and the cherry blossoms, I had walked underneath the tree where some of those rich red leaves were laying. I picked one up. I made a stencil of it to paint the leaves on the painting. I couldn't quite figure out the color and shape of the cherry blossom, so I plucked one from the tree since I couldn't find a suitable one laying on the ground. What joy those specimens brought me during my painting process. They have dried as beautiful as they were when live on the tree.

Until Next Week

• Create art
• Appreciate art
• Buy art

Braylee Rush


About the author: Braylee Rush (Mary Gravelle) is an artist and writer who resides in Sedona, Arizona with her beloved assistant, Sir Kitty. Her art can be seen on her website.


Sir Kitty





Monday, July 13, 2015

Showing Art at Open Houses

My abstract art showing in a house for sale.
Left: Birth, 48 x 48 inches, Acrylic on Canvas.
Center: One panel of Walking in Faith, Triptych,
72 x 108 inches, Oil on Wood.
Here is a good opportunity for artists to put their art in front of potential art buyers, open houses.

I was recently invited by Damian Bruno of Sedona Real Estate Agents Damian Bruno and Danielle Giann Coldwell Banker, to hang my art in a unique home for sale in Sedona.

Damian explained that it's a dome home where the walls are white and need some color added to the space. Furthermore, it has been vacant for a couple of years. YES! was my response.

Even though my initial response was Yes, I wondered afterward how this could benefit me.

I think we artists generally are so tickled to have an audience for our art that we leap into situations that might not be all that great for our art and potential sales.

New Day, Mixed Media on Wood, 12 x 12 inches.
Copyright 2015 Mary Gravelle. All rights reserved.
Especially if we have opted to not go the gallery route, we need to use caution and common sense when hanging our art in a venue for free. Will it be of mutual benefit and not simply a tactic used by the venue to enhance their decor?

Damian has been fantastic. He was all about the win-win. He felt like he had already won his part of the bargain; he got some color added to those blah white walls, giving the home a more lived-in appearance. He told me that now we need to figure out how the deal will benefit me. Indeed. I think that might be up to me to figure out.
Left: Copenhagen, 12 x 12 inches, Mixed Media on Wood.
Right: One panel of a triptych, Walking in Faith.

My art on the walls of a house for sale.
Hiways and Biways, 18 x 24 inches.
Acrylic on Canvas.
After hanging my art and getting my price sheets to the open house half way through the event, I had an epiphany. What a perfect venue to show my art to the right audience.

I would think that home buyers are also in the market for art. And, if they buy the home where our art is showing, might they also want to buy some of the art that has been carefully placed in strategic areas of the home? Bingo.

It's all in how you arrange the thing... the careful balance of the design is the motion. Andrew Wyeth

The front of the Dome Home in Sedona, Arizona.








I'll keep you posted. In the meantime, have you had experience with art at open houses either as an artist, realtor, home owner, home buyer, or other? I would love to hear from you. Leave a comment below.

Until Next Week

• Create art
• Appreciate art
• Buy art

Mary Gravelle (Brianna Rush)
The handsome, Sir Kitty. Meow.
About the author: Brianna Rush (Mary Gravelle) is an artist and writer who resides in Sedona, Arizona with her beloved assistant, Sir Kitty.


Monday, June 29, 2015

Two Paintings Now Showing at Yavapai College Sedona Center

Keep It Light, Acrylic on Canvas, 24 x 30 x 1.5 inches, painting continues around edges.
Southwestern acrylic landscape painting of Silver City, New Mexico.
Copyright 2008 Mary Gravelle.
Two paintings are now showing at the Small Business Development Center office at Yavapai College Sedona Center.

I hope to hang a couple more. In the meantime, these two are showing: Keep It Light and Paradise; both are southwestern landscape scenes, one from Silver City, New Mexico, the other from Oracle, Arizona.

Yavapai College Sedona Center, 4215 Arts Village Drive, Sedona, AZ 86336, (928) 649-4266. Find them on Facebook.

Painting purchase inquires, please email Mary@MaryFineArt.com. Find Mary's Fine Art on Facebook or on my website.

Keep It Light, Acrylic on Wood, 36 x 48 x 3 inches
Painting continues around edges. 
Copyright 2007 Mary Gravelle.
Southwestern acrylic landscape painting of Oracle, Arizona

Until Next Week

• Create art
• Appreciate art
• Buy art

Mary Gravelle (Brianna Rush)
The handsome, Sir Kitty. Meow.
About the author: Brianna Rush (Mary Gravelle) is an artist and writer who resides in Sedona, Arizona with her beloved assistant, Sir Kitty.


Monday, May 11, 2015

Works in Process

2 Works-in-Process
These two paintings are still in process. It seems like it is taking me forever to finish either one.

The one in the back (upper portion of the photograph) is a 36 x 36 inch painting, working with acrylic paints on canvas. I would like to use it as a book cover for my upcoming book.

The one in the foreground is an experimental landscape 12 x 12 inch painting. It is acrylic on wood. I built up texture with spackle and gel medium. As I painted it, a southwestern landscape evolved. I added a thick layer of gel gloss medium mixed with paint on top of it. I didn't really like that experimental layer as it covered over the paint strokes I had so deliciously spent time on. I have added gold metallic and violet interference paint which I will sand off in my next session.

I'll keep you posted either in process or when I complete them.

Until Next Week
• Create art
• Appreciate art
• Buy art
Mary Gravelle
(Brianna Rush)
Sir Kitty

About the author: Brianna Rush (Mary Gravelle) is an artist and writer who resides in Sedona, Arizona with her beloved cat, Sir Kitty.