painting

Carousel Dream

Carousel Dream

I was falling behind on my one a day, Fun-A-Day, carousel animal painting prequel, so I made a valiant effort and painted 12 in this moonlit carousel. This is the first time I have included passengers. It is clearly a dream, however. There are no spectators, no adults, no carnival hubbub; just a lonely, half-dark carousel, under the moonlight, with happy, sleepy children waving good night to the world. We see a dozen carousel animals. I will list them as we see them from right to left, before they pass out of view: a peacock bench, a white stallion, a pink zebra, a brown pony, a green tortoise, a pink burro, a crocodile, a purple draft horse, a blue colt, a pink mare, and an ostrich.

Painting is acrylic, including some metallics, on 24″ x 18″ stretched canvas.

Price: $100 reduced to $50 plus postage

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Carousel Snoopy

Carousel Snoopy

Imagine riding Snoopy while he dreams of being the Red Baron while riding Charlie Brown’s mailbox. My sister went to college with Charlie Brown. Well, he looked and acted a lot like Charlie. His name was Mark, though. He was Charles Schulz’s son.

This is my 23rd carousel animal in my Perkasie Fun-A-Day 2018 ‘Prequel’.

Painting is acrylic on 6″ x 6″ x 1-1/2″ stretched canvas.

Price: $50 plus postage. SOLD.

Carousel Caterpillar

Carousel Monarch Caterpillar

“What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the master calls a butterfly.” – Richard Bach

This carousel animal is a Monarch caterpillar. The ‘saddle’ is a Monarch Butterfly. It was another of the creations of The Carousel Works.

Painting is acrylic on 6″ x 6″ x 1-1/2″ stretched canvas.

Price: $40 reduced to $15 plus postage

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Carousel Goat

A carousel is the only place I know where one can ride a billy-goat  without ending up smelling like a billy-goat.

Painting is acrylic on 8″ x 8″ stretched canvas.

Price: $50 reduced to $15 plus postage

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Carousel Sawhorse

Carousel Sawhorse

Apparently this carousel is permanently under construction. It has a sawhorse where an animal likeness usually is. Perhaps someone didn’t pay their pledge to the zoo.

This is my 18th carousel animal in my Fun-A-Day ‘Prequel’.

Painting is acrylic on 6″ x 6″ x 1-1/2″ stretched canvas.

Price: $50 plus postage

SOLD

Carousel Piglet

Carousel Piglet

“Some pig.”

This little piggy went to the fair and took first prize before it was immortalized on this carousel to be ridden by generations of children of all ages.

This is my 17th carousel animal in my 2018 Fun-A-Day ‘Prequel’.

Painting is acrylic on 12″ x 12″ stretched canvas.

Price: $80 reduced to $25 plus postage

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Carousel Cuttlefish

Carousel Cuttlefish

This Cuttlefish is on a solar-powered carousel at the Smithsonian. How would you like to cuddle up to this mollusk?

From Wikipedia:

Cuttlefish have a unique internal shell, the cuttlebone. Despite their name, cuttlefish are not fish but mollusks.
Cuttlefish have large, W-shaped pupils, eight arms, and two tentacles furnished with denticulated suckers, with which they secure their prey. They generally range in size from 15 to 25 cm (6 to 10 in), with the largest species, Sepia apama, reaching 50 cm (20 in) in mantle length and over 10.5 kg (23 lb) in mass.
Cuttlefish eat small mollusks, crabs, shrimp, fish, octopus, worms, and other cuttlefish. Their predators include dolphins, sharks, fish, seals, seabirds, and other cuttlefish. The average life expectancy of a cuttlefish is about one to two years. Recent studies indicate cuttlefish are among the most intelligent invertebrates. Cuttlefish also have one of the largest brain-to-body size ratios of all invertebrates.

This is my 15th carousel animal in my Fun-A-Day ‘Prequel’.

Painting is acrylic on 14″ x 11″ stretched canvas.

Price: $90 reduced to $25 plus postage

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Carousel Ant

Carousel Ant

When I think about carousels, I think about picnics in the park. Of course, no picnic is complete without an ant or 146. Here we put one to recreational use on a carousel! After all, they say that ants can carry many times their own body weight. This one can even carry your’s.

This is my 14th carousel animal in my Fun-A-Day ‘Prequel’. We need to raise funds to put this on. We have no stands or racks for people to hang their artwork on. There are other expenses related to starting an organization as well. Please buy art now and share this site.

Painting is acrylic on 4″ x 4″x 1-1/2″ stretched canvas.

Price: $30 plus postage

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Carousel Bat

Carousel Bat

Imagine riding a bat! On some carousels you can. It’s going to go in the same direction as all of the other animals on the turning ring. Can’t you just imagine Eddie Munster or any one of the Addam’s Family riding it? This is my 13th carousel animal in my Fun-A-Day ‘Prequel’.

Painting is acrylic on 6″ x 6″ stretched canvas.

Price: $30 plus postage

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Carousel Ladybug

Carousel Ladybug

I first saw this Carousel Ladybug in a photo of the carousel at the Kansas City National Park. I saw it again at the company who manufactured it from hardwoods: Carousel Works. They will make carousel animals to order of any animal or insect one could desire. They even made one non-animal: a baseball bat, with the glove for the saddle! I painted this mostly using a pencil partially sharpened, then the eraser for the large dots.

Painting is acrylic on 6″ x 6″ stretched canvas.

Price: $30 plus postage

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Carousel Armored Horse Rock

Carousel Armored Horse Rock

This is the first actual carousel horse I have painted. All of these carousel animals on this site, and the many more that are to come, are for the 2018 Perkasie Fun-A-Day. This piece is not for sale. It is a promotional piece for the Fun-A-Day gathering on February 3, 2018. I will be placing it somewhere in Perkasie. It has an instruction label decoupaged to its back. If you find it, follow the instructions to receive a free coffee or tea and a chance at a free piece of art from the Fun-A-Day.

You see, Perkasie Rocks is one of the sponsors of Perkasie Fun-A-Day, so this it is only reasonable that I would paint one of my carousel animals on a rock. The rock is kind of hard to miss. It is roughly 6″ x 10″ and has silver glitter on it.

Have fun! And rock on!

Carousel Rabbit

Carousel Rabbit

I painted this Carousel Rabbit in the limited palette I typically use in my Heroes Series of paintings.

Painting is acrylic on 6″ x 6″ stretched canvas.

Price: $30 plus postage

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Carousel Seahorse

Carousel Seahorse

This Seahorse is on a carousel at an American, Atlantic coast beach. The carousel is filled entirely with sea creatures.

Painting is acrylic on 12″ x 12″ stretched canvas.

Price: $60 plus postage

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Carousel Howler Monkey

Carousel Howler Monkey

This Howler Monkey is from a 19th century carousel. The poll was made to look like a sapling. Howlers are native to Central and South America. There are 13 species. This is one of the red species. All of the species are under pressure or endangered due to disappearing habitat, predation, capturing for pets and zoos, etc.

Painting is acrylic on 6″ x 6″ stretched canvas.

Price: $30 plus postage.

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Carousel Frogs

Carousel Frogs

These carousel frogs are reproductions of 19th century zoo carousel animals. I painted them for my 6th and 7th carousel animals for my Fun-A-Day ‘prequel’ project.

Painting is acrylic on 11″ x 14″ stretched canvas.

Price: $100 plus postage

SOLD.

Carousel Swan

Carousel Swan

The first thing you may notice about this carousel animal is that it is facing left. I guess it must be on a British merry-go-round! It also is not simply nailed down to the deck like the swan benches I have ridden in. It is round-bottomed and mounted on a little deck that gently tips backward and forward as the carousel goes around. The seat is only big enough for two children or two ‘very close friends’ to snuggle together in a semi-reclined position.

Painting is acrylic on 6″ x 6″ stretched canvas.

Price: $30 plus postage

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Carousel Peacock

Carousel Peacock

This is a carousel Peacock painted as my fourth Fun-A-Day warm up piece. Peacocks are male Peafowl. This is an Indian Blue Peafowl. There are three species of peafowl.

Painting is acrylic on 6″ x 6″ stretched canvas.

Price: $30 plus postage

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Carousel Tanager

Carousel Tanager

This is a Green-headed Tanager (Tangara seledon). He/she’s way out of scale compared to the painted ponies he/she’s obscuring on the carousel. The Green-headed Tanager is found in the Atlantic Forest in southeastern Brazil, far eastern Paraguay and Misiones, Argentina. It is about 13.5cm or 5-1/4″ long. This one is saddled up and ready to ride on a fantastic carousel.

Painting is acrylic on 12″ x 12″ stretched canvas.

Price: $60 plus postage

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Carousel Aardvark

Carousel Aardvark

Aardvaark’s have always been my favorite exotic animal. For my second carousel animal for my Fun-A-Day prequel, I painted this little, saddled aardvaark. It was the first time I used glitter on a painting.

Painting is acrylic on 6″ x 6″ stretched canvas.

Price: $40

SOLD

Carousel Flamingo

I determined to paint carousel animals for my project for the 2018 Perkasie Fun-A-Day. I am supposed to wait and just do it in January. I did some research on Sunday. I found more than 31 carousel critters from zoo carousels built in the late 19th century, without including a single horse or pony! This is more fun than one month can contain. I just had to get the ball rolling. I also decided to not limit myself to 6″x6″. On Monday, I painted a Carousel Flamingo in acrylics on a 16″ x 20″ stretched canvas.

Carousel Flamingo

Price: $150 plus postage

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Plywood Goldfinch

Plywood Goldfinch

This is the Goldfinch I just painted and hung on my shed. It is based on a photo I took through the window of the front door of our house. It is about 2′ 9″ from beak to tail. I painted this in the same yellow that is the trim color on our shed. I can adjust the shades on these to match your trim or siding, within reason. It is mounted on a 1×3 to provide dimension or to give the option of mounting it on a steel fence stake in your yard or garden.

Price: $100. Pick up at my place in Perkasie, PA.

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Parrot In Flight

Parrot in Flight

This Parrot In Flight is not promoting any cause other than  to celebrate color and life!

Painting is acrylic on 16″ x 20″ stretched canvas.

Price: $100 plus postage.

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Ruby-throated Hummingbird

Ruby-throated Hummingbird

I painted this Ruby-throated Hummingbird on coarse canvas to echo the one I painted on the cinder block wall as part of the Birds of Perkasie mural that I painted the summer of 2018. This is Bethann’s favorite. I painted the Beebalm in shades of lavender instead of pink. This is closer to the color ours was. This is now pasted on one of the bedroom walls, where I live. I was on the hallway wall of the house we rented on Ridge Ave. I simply used warm water and a sponge to peel it off without damaging it or the wall. The clay based, wallpaper paste remains water-soluble forever.

The painting is acrylic on a 25-3/4″ diameter canvas.

Price: $200 plus postage.

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Chickadee

Chickdee

This is a painting of a Chickadee clinging to a hanging pine branch on a tree in front of our house. Last year and through the winter, Blue Jays dominated the huge, sprawling pine. This Spring, the Chickadees drove them out! They are now sharing the far pine at the right, front corner of the lot with a small flock of intrepid Mourning Doves.

The painting is acrylic on 6″ x 6″ stretched canvas.

Price: $40 plus postage.

SOLD

Great Blue Heron

Great Blue Heron

I may have mentioned before, that I grew up in Minnesota. In my day, there was a strong and booming middle class, thanks to an aggressive, progressive income tax structure on both the federal and state levels. On weekends, holidays and vacations (Working people actually took vacations back then), it seemed just about anybody and everybody went “to the lake”. That is what we all said. Our cars’ license plates advertised “10,000 Lakes”. The Almanac counted 12,512 lakes plus a few thousand ponds. One did not have to leave “the Cities”, short for “the Twin Cities”, Minneapolis and St. Paul, to go to a lake. Mpls. is a mash-up of Sioux and Greek meaning “City of Lakes” and has 25 lakes within the city limits, including one manmade one, since they just needed to round up, I guess.

When I was in junior high, my folks bought a lake place just across the river in Wisconsin. I learned the cheeseheads called Minnesotans “swampies”. But this article was supposed to be about my painting of a Great Blue Heron. I grew up seeing these beautiful, fishing birds on the edges of lakes and swooping down and diving into them all of my young life, growing up in Minnesota and Wisconsin. I have seen them occasionally, if only fleetingly, in PA.

Painting is acrylic on 10″ x 10″ stretched canvas.

Price: $90 plus postage.

SOLD

Clyde

Clyde

I painted Clyde using just black and white paint based on a photo shared on Facebook by our friend Deb Vriesen of their dog just after she buried him. It was so cold in Minnesota, they had to wait several weeks, with his body frozen in a shed, until it was warm enough for them to build a fire to thaw the ground enough to dig a grave.

I never met Clyde in person and only saw one photo, so I hope I caught something of his personality. If it doesn’t look much like Clyde, I think he looks like a friendly dog at any rate.

The painting is acrylic on 24″ x 24″ stretched canvas.

Price: $150 plus postage.

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Rupert

Rupert the cat

I painted Rupert for our son-in-law Vincent’s 30 somethingth birthday this month. Sadly, as it turns out, Rupert is slowly dying. He has been a wonderful cat, friendly and affectionate. He has lived longer than we expected, what with his taste for toxic chemicals and his talent for escaping outdoors. Even though he hasn’t eaten for days, the sweetheart still roused himself to stand up to greet me when I visited yesterday.

The painting is acrylic on 10″ x 10″ stretched canvas.

Oreo

Oreo the cat

It seems I need to paint all of the family’s pets. It was Oreo’s turn for her portrait to be painted. She is Skittles’ litter mate and playmate. They have very different temperaments. Skittles will lay, purring on my chest for hours. He will come when I call and let me pick him up and snuggle him. He just settles in and enjoys it. Oreo comes if she smells chicken or hears her food bowl hit the counter. She surprises  us when she jumps up on us and jumps down just as suddenly. She likes to sleep in Bethann’s clothing drawers under the bed.

Both of them like to race back and forth in the middle of the night.

Of course, I have painted Skittles and Oreo a few times before in CUDDLE!, SNUGGLE!, and SPOON!

The painting is acrylic on 12″ x 12″ stretched canvas.

Price: $70 plus postage.

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Cat Eyes

Cat Eyes

I saw an image of fierce-looking tiger eyes composed like this. I decided that I needed to portray my cat Skittles’ inner tiger. This is part of my Perkasie Fun-A-Day 2019 home decor project.

The painting is acrylic on 24″ x 12″ stretched canvas.

Price: $200 plus postage.

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Weltanschauung

Weltanschauung

These are Oreo and Skittles sitting on the window sill looking out for birds and rabbits, bees and butterflies. They may also notice some of the human activity on our corner. I call the piece Weltanschauung because it is my view of the world. We rent a 500 square foot house. The house we owned was foreclosed on and auctioned after I had several hospitalizations and my business failed, and Social Security (falsely so called) took three years to get me disability, and then did not pay my retroactive back pay for another two years, until after I finally happened upon a sympathetic Social Security employee who risked her job to fix the problem for me. While that was happening, I found out that the illness I had before had damaged my aortic valve. So I had it replaced with a pig valve last June. I had three rounds of infection in my chest incision after that. The week we moved into this tiny house, last September, I was weak with pain and had to spend time chasing down a rare antibiotic that is now the ninth on the list of those I am allergic to.

Of course, Weltanschauung means far more than just one’s view of the world out of a window. Surely you can see how the experience of the last several years has shaped and reformed my worldview. While this may look like an idyllic picture of country life, it is actually facing a very busy street in the middle of town.

The painting is acrylic on 12″ x 12″ stretched canvas.

Price: $150 plus postage

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SPOON!

SPOON!

Comrades Skittles and Oreo are ordering us to take our positive affection opposition to fascism up another notch with this one. First, there was “CUDDLE!” Then it was “SNUGGLE!” Now it’s: “SPOON!”

Couldn’t you just see it; a couple hundred thousand couples spooning on the mall in DC, gently asking for no more imperialist wars, an end to subsidies to petroleum, full conversion to solar power, conversion to cradle-to-cradle production cycles eliminating landfills, … ? Cats can dream, can’t they?

Painting is 16″ x 20″ acrylic on stretched canvas.

Price: $200 plus postage

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SNUGGLE!

Phase Two of the Revolution: SNUGGLE!

SNUGGLE!

Cuddling was phase one. I realize we need to work on that. Some may be asking what the difference is between cuddling and snuggling. C’mon, comrades! Are we serious about making progress and spreading love and joy? Well, then, the difference should be obvious. Snuggling involves more motion. It can be done in larger groups. Think mosh pits, only embracing. Now put that on the road to Mar-a-Lago to block one of the so-called president’s golf vacations he said he was never going to take. The international press would have fun with that, so would all of us snugglers.

“Make New Friends, Not New Refugees!”

This just came out from my fellow Minneapolitan. It expresses the sentiment of the movement:

The original is for sale now, but within a week, hopefully, I will have posters, postcards and lawn signs.

Painting is 16″ x 20″ acrylic on stretched canvas.

Price: $200 plus postage

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CUDDLE!

CUDDLE!

I have been searching for ways to use my art to positively respond to the current horror that we face in American governmental breakdown. Each day, there is a new attack; a new round of newspeak. One day it is a congresswoman proudly proclaiming that her vote giving permission to internet service providers to sell all of our browsing histories to whomever wants to buy them “protects your privacy.” The next day, Sean Spicer is giving a grimacing Park Service employee a huge, game-show, donation check for $78,000 (supposedly Trump’s 3 months’ net salary), two days after Trump’s budget cut the Park Service budget by over $1.5 billion. Fact checkers have determined that 69.1% of Trump’s statements are false. One White House reporter said in frustration, “It is hard to know what to think when you can’t tell what Trump means when he uses words.”

Yesterday, I started to paint this portrait of my cat, with a Che Guevara beret. Skittles helps keep me sane. He climbs up onto my left side and cuddles. If things get too intense, he lies on my keyboard. We have matching heart murmurs. He will get in my face and command me to “CUDDLE!” It struck me that this is what America and much of the world needs right now. I can see it now, massive cuddle-ins in front of defense contractors and fracking stations; cuddlers blocking access to United Airlines offices; cuddlers circling the Pentagon; cuddlers on the mall in DC asking for an end to military expansion and for universal healthcare.

“Make Love, not Human Services Cuts!”

HUG O’ WAR

I will not play at tug o’ war.
I’d rather play at hug o’ war,
Where everyone hugs
Instead of tugs,
Where everyone giggles
And everyone giggles
And rolls on the rug,
Where everyone kisses,
And everyone kisses,
And everyone grins,
And everyone cuddles.
And everyone wins.
– Shel Silverstein

Painting is 16″ x 20″ acrylic on stretched canvas.

Price: $300 plus postage

SOLD

Pepi

Pepi the dog

Pepi was a Golden Cocker Spaniel. Our family purchased him at a service station along Route 8 on our way home from family camp at Camp Lawton on Deer Lake in Wisconsin, when I was six. He was the runt of the litter, so they let him go for $10. I was the youngest of the four children. I spent the most time with him. He pretty much became my dog. Like me, he had a wide circle of friends, and roamed freely in a wide area of the neighborhood. We had Jewish next door neighbors who dearly loved him, and welcomed him into their house regularly. He would defend their front step as vigorously as ours from the paperboy or the mailman. The mailman always brought a Milkbone for Pepi. Pepi would bark, at first, for show. He would receive his treat and petting, then he would accompany our mailman along the rest of his route. This helped him a great deal, as Pepi would keep any dogs busy while he delivered the mail. If any pets were loose, Pepi would make sure they would not come near to, or harm, the mailman.

Pepi would always get excited when my dad got home from work. He knew when the normal time was and he would sit on the manhole cover in the middle of the street, looking East in anticipation of his car. Our neighbor’s Hebrew school bus would sometimes come to drop Elaine off after her lessons. Pepi would not budge from his spot on the manhole cover. The driver would have to veer way to the right to go around him. Pepi loved kosher food. Whenever there was a Jewish family picnic in the neighborhood, even if he had to cross the highway, somehow he would sniff it out and find it. He would beg for food and scarf up anything that was dropped. Then he would come home, eat grass and throw up. We found out just how far he had ranged when our neighbors, the Shermans, had a big gathering on the occasion of a visit of family members from Israel. Pepi, of course, attended, as well. So many of the guests said to each other, “So you know this dog, too?!”

The painting is based on a 4″ black and white snapshot I took of Pepi eating from his dishes in the back yard of our house on Lowry Terrace in Golden Valley, Minnesota. In the background is the fort that my dad built from plans from Popular Mechanics. It had a locked shed in the back for the lawn mower and yard tools. The front had a little play house with a ladder through a hatch to the top deck with the turrets. It was great for snowball fights, etc. That fort was a famous landmark for children for miles around. More kids played in our fort than I ever knew. Behind the fort was a swamp that had milkweed, so we had loads of Monarch butterflies and other wildlife. Behind that was a sledding hill with four rows of American Elms which separated three great sled runs, that terminated on the swamp, which, of course, froze in the winter. The lower part of our yard, next to the fort, was flooded for a skating rink, for several years when I was growing up. In the summer, our yard was the middle of three mostly flat yards, with only one tree, that ran together without fences, where we could play football, baseball, soccer, dodgeball, etc. It was a great place, and a great time to grow up.

The painting is acrylic on 12″ x 12″ stretched canvas.

Price: $100 plus postage

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Catnip

Catnip

This painting represents my first headlong plunge into abstract art, with a whimsical, primitive twist. I decided to name it “Catnip”. Whether you want to think of the cat’s mind being altered or the viewer’s is up to you.

The painting is acrylic on 24″ x 12″ stretched canvas.

Price: $40 plus postage

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“Punkinseed”

Punkinseed

I grew up in the Land of 10,000 Lakes, Minnesota. It actually has more like 12,512 lakes and 90,000 miles of shoreline. That’s more shoreline than California, Florida and Hawaii combined! So I did some fishing as a child. We caught Northerns, Walleyes, Bass and Perch, but the most fun and the best eating were the simple Sunfish! If you found a good spot, you could just pull them in one after another! They weren’t that big, but they always put up a good fight. We knew a bay on Lake Lizzy near Detroit Lakes, MN, where we regularly caught 3/4 lb. to 1-1/2 lb. Pumpkinseed Sunnies. We would catch them by the cooler-full. Then we would scale them and fillet them. Then we would batter and fry them up; invite the whole clan and a few strays over. We’d fry up ‘chips’ (potato wedges); make tossed and 3 bean salads; and have plenty of beer and other libation on hand. We would have a Minnesota fish fry, where the fish is finger-lickin’ good! One time I was cleaning a cooler full of Sunnies on our back patio and our mailman came around back for a signature for something. He saw how I was filleting the fish. He got down on his knees and showed me a better method that would get more meat out of the fish.

My dad always intentionally mispronounced this variety of Sunfish and called them “Punkinseeds” for fun.

Painting is acrylic on 12″x12″ canvas.
Price: $100

SOLD!

Goldfinch

Goldfinch

This painting commemorates the day last June, shortly after my open heart surgery to replace my damaged aortic valve with a pig valve. I had just exited our house and was passing the front “garden”, a jumble of native plants and weeds. I was moving slowly. A male goldfinch landed on one of the many Echinacea that were in bloom. He was within arm’s length of me. He tilted his head and looked at me; then he began to sing. He went through all of his repertoire, then it seemed as if he turned to me again for a response. I said, “Thank you, Mr. Goldfinch!” He nodded and flew off, It was a magical moment, like something from one of those classic Disney movies.

The painting is acrylic on 6″ x 6″ stretched canvas.

Price: $40 plus postage

SOLD.

Buttonwood Bush Blossom

buttonwood bush blossom

These globular blossoms are about 1″ in diameter with tiny tendrils poking out on all sides. The bushes are native to Pennsylvania. They were here before white men arrived. This is a painting of a blossom on a buttonwood bush in front of our house. That is why the red siding color is in the background. This is acrylic on a 16″ diameter canvas. The edge is painted bright yellow to facilitate frame-less hanging.

Price: $200 plus postage

Sorry. SOLD.

Butterfly Garden

Butterfly Garden

This painting was inspired by our visit to Edge of the Woods Native Plant Nursery. They have a beautiful butterfly garden that contains all of these plants plus several more in a dense, four foot tall jumble. We have all of the plants portrayed, in our yard in front of the little house we rent. They are goldenrod, milkweed, boneset, butterfly weed, native bee balm, oxeye daisies and red lobelia.

Several types of bees were all over the blooms, this summer, along with about a dozen types of butterflies.

It is also available on a deck of cards and soon on other things from our Zazzle store. Click here to learn more:
Butterfly Garden Playing Cards
by ShoutForJoyNet

Painting is acrylic on 30″ x 40″ stretched canvas.

Price: $300 plus postage.

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Coneflower

Coneflower

This is not a natural color for a coneflower unless one is looking at a yellow coneflower through black light sunglasses, naturally.

The painting is acrylic on 12″ x 12″ stretched canvas. The edges are painted black.

Price: $50 plus postage

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Echinacea

Echinacea

Echinacea is commonly known as coneflower. It is native to where we live in southeastern PA. By native, I mean it was here before European settlers arrived. Yes, it is the same Echinacea that is in your cold remedy to help dry up sniffles. They grow and spread quite nicely in poor soil, as long as there is good sun and drainage. They are my kind of flower, as they thrive on neglect and attract all sorts of beautiful birds, butterflies, moths and bees.

Painting is acrylic on 12″ x 12″ stretched canvas.

Price: $60 plus postage.

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Bumblebee on a Virginia Rose

Bumble bee on a Virginia rose

I painted this bumblebee on a native Virginia Rose based on a photo from our garden from last summer.

Bumblebees are now endangered in US (regardless of what the so-called president Trump says) due to the use of Monsanto’s RoundUp, mono-culture farming, and the supplanting of native plants with exotics.

We replaced 30% of our lawn with native plants and always see lots of bumbles and other bees, along with butterflies, moths and birds of all types. Native plants are those that were in the area before Europeans arrived about 400 years ago.

The painting is 6″ x 6″ acrylic on stretched canvas, so is about life-size.

Price: $40 plus postage

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Life is too short to be in a hurry.

A word of explanation so you are not put off unnecessarily. I am sure you have heard of atheistic Jews. Well, I am an atheist follower of Jesus. So any talk of Jesus is not to proselytize. It just helps tell the story.

"Life is too short to be in a hurry."

Jesus said, “And why take ye thought for raiment? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin: and yet I say unto you, that even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass of the field, which today is, and tomorrow is cast into the oven, shall he not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith?”

The point is that there is always enough to go around for everyone if we’d only learn to share. The object lesson is taken from daylilies which are native to Asia, including Palestine. Daylilies are glorious. I have about 90 varieties in our tiny yard. This is a painting of a stem of daylily buds that are yet to open. The largest will open the next day. So “consider the lilies” and get out in a garden. Dig in the dirt. Spend time in a park. Connect with the cycles of nature. It will lower your blood pressure and calm your psyche’.

I painted this on April 30, 2016. I was facing open heart surgery in June. I was thinking that just seeing the first bud of Spring one more time will be pleasing. I don’t hurry in grocery lines. I talk to the check out people and the other people in line. Life is for living every part of it, even when you aren’t in full bloom. 

I have been saying “Life is too short to be in a hurry” to cashiers and bank tellers who have apologized to me for having long transactions or difficult customers ahead of me for some time now. Before I painted this, I googled the saying. I found it attributed to Oscar Wilde and an obscure poet. I had never read it by either of them, though. I think it just makes sense and treat it as an aphorism of those who have lived long enough to slow down; like all those white heads driving 45 on the freeway!

Now, in the COVID-19 quarantine, it has even more poignancy, as people are antsy to get out and about; to get back to work, etc. But opening too early may kill a lot of people, as the experience in Hong Kong suggests. This brings new meaning to the phrase: “Life is too short to be in a hurry!”

The painting is acrylic on 12″x12″ canvas, painted on the sides as well, so no expensive framing is required.

Price: $75 plus postage

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Dot Daylily

Dot Daylily

This daylily was painted entirely using a pencil instead of brushes to apply the paint. The large dots were done using the fresh eraser end repeatedly dipped and dotted. The medium-sized dots were accomplished by sharpening the writing end halfway, so the lead was not quite exposed. The small, bright yellow dots, for the stamen, were made by sharpening the pencil to a point, then rubbing it down to a blunt point. For the effect, it helped that the yellow paint was thicker, as well. I even titled, dated and signed it in dots, but that is in fine tipped artist marker.

Painting is 20″ x 16″ acrylic on stretched canvas.

Price: $150 plus postage

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