Tuesday, February 16, 2010

The Golf Course President




I painted this portrait of my step-dad Bummie several months ago. He's the president of a golf course in Ohio, a course he and his family founded 50 years ago. In planning this portrait, I wanted to capture the essence of this man's spirit, his good nature, his kindness and his work ethic.



Many times an artist doesn't know the portrait subject well, so painting Bummie was especially rewarding. He's a remarkable man. Raised on a farm in Ohio, he went on to college and after graduating, he went into the Army during World War II. His German language skills were a determining factor in his being sent to the Normandy shortly after D-Day. Most of his fellow trainees went to Pacific theater of conflict instead and few survived. Bummie served under General Patton as a forward artillery observer--not a position with a long life expectancy either--and saw action through Normandy and through the Battle of the Bulge. Before the war ended, he went on to serve with the troops who liberated the Dachau concentration camp.



After the war, Bummie stayed in Europe and did graduate university work before coming home to marry Ruth and raise four children. His first child passed away as an infant and his wife Ruth passed away at a young age, too, leaving Bummie a widower with four children. During these years, he helped create the golf course while teaching and later counseling high school students.



When I was a teenager, my mother Marilyn and Bummie married and they raised his four children along with my brother, sister and me. Imagine raising seven children, five of us teenagers at the same time. I shudder to think....

During all those years, Bummie worked at the high school during the school year and worked on the golf course weekends and summers. Besides working, he taught Sunday school and was active in the community with numerous civic organizations. When Bummie retired as a high school guidance counselor decades ago, he just turned his summer job on the golf course into full-time work. He turned 90 this past summer and it was the first year he didn't drive tractor and work full-time.


So when I thought about how to do Bummie justice, I wanted to show him in day-to-day life. He's a humble man and very down to earth. Instead of painting a more formal portrait, I chose a photo of him at work on the golf course, on his trusty tractor, just stopping by to say hello.

Setting the composition, I took an old photo of Bummie on his tractor and cropped it tight, exposing just enough of the tractor to set the scene and to bring the focus to the man himself. I admit there's a whole lot of red in this painting, just as there was in the original photo. Normally, I'd edit out some of that red since it's so dominant and draws the viewer's eye away from the face. However, for this particular subject, the red was appropriate as it's Bummie's favorite color. Somehow, even with all the red, it works...especially against the green of the golf course in the background.

Capturing the true likeness in a portrait is the crucial factor to a successful painting. Sometimes I've been known to slim people down in their portraits, erase a few lines here or there and just generally try to present people in their best light. The more I worked on Bummie's face, the more I wanted to capture every line and every crease, the crinkled skin at the corner of his eyes, the lines on his forehead, the strength of the nose, the softness through the jaw line. I'm guessing he was in his late 70's in the original photo.

So, all this realistic painting of a 70++ year old face does bring to mind our culture's emphasis on beauty and youthful beauty at that. How many times have I looked in the mirror at my own ever-changing face and thought, "if my forehead falls any further, my eyebrows will be on a line with the bridge of my nose." The puffiness over my eyes signal "you know you could get your eyes done...a little nip here, a little tuck there." And those creases in the cheeks and on the forehead..."wonder if Botox might help?"

However, Bummie's face doesn't bring any of those thoughts to mind. His face snaps me back to reality. Here's a face that reflects all the hardship, all the joys, all the struggles, all the accomplishments. His is a beautiful, authentic face in the fullness of life.

So, this year, in a few short months, it will be spring again in Ohio and Bummie can get back out on his beloved golf course on a golf cart. If you see him out, stop and say hello. He's the kind of man who always takes time to talk....and to listen.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

On painting the departed....






For the past few weeks, I've been working on a portrait of my great-niece and her mother who passed away three months ago. My niece asked for a portrait of her mother so she could see her mother's face every day. That's more than enough incentive to attempt your best work.


This project has been challenging in a number of ways. After looking at photos of this young woman, none of the pictures of her alone captured what I wanted to portray. I settled on a picture of the mother and child together. It's a very casual photo with my great-niece sitting on her mother's lap. Her mother leans to the side to smile at the photographer and the girl's eyes are looking to the side towards her mother. Very charming, I thought.


Sketching the mother was the hardest part of the entire process---which suprised me. I would have thought it might be more emotional as I saw her face emerge from the canvas in paint, but I found myself tremendously saddened as I sketched her face, her eyes, her smile. What a loss. What a tragedy. I want this portrait to convey the young woman in a happier state and show the bond between mother and daughter. It's quite something to think about a young child only being able to see a painting of her mother every day rather than the mother of flesh and blood.

So, surprisngly to me, the process on this particular painting has been a positive one. Above, I've posted a picture of the painting in process and eventually will add the original photo and the final portrait. First of all, I wanted this painting to be about the people and have simplified the background, deleting the background of the original photo and painting in a loose, shadowed grey/teal wash. I also changed the colors of clothing to a more subdued palette---all this with an intent to focus on their faces. The finest details of the painting are in their faces, especially their eyes--all in an attempt to draw the viewers gaze there first.

Painting is a joy: mixing the palette, placing the first details, seeing a face come to life. Generally, I start with the cheeks and nose, laying in the underpainting of shadow and placing the features. As I build on the underpainting, placing lighter and darker values to define the face, the subject begins to emerge.

With this particular portrait, I started with the mother's face and had that fleshed out in a few hours, but hadn't added the eyes. While my first thought was to wait to paint her eyes the next day when I was rested, I discovered that I couldn't stop painting until her eyes looked out from the canvas. Only then would I know that this painting could be good.

As the painting progressed, I found myself thinking more and more about this lost young woman. Would she like what I had created? What will happen to this painting over time? I imagine that my great-niece will keep it with her throughout her life...at least I like to think so. Maybe someday she will have children of her own and this is how they will know their grandmother. Interesting, not to mention rewarding thoughts for an artist.