I’ve been working on this painting for my dad since 2005. I’m happy to say that it is (finally) finished and I’m packaging it up to mail to him in Denver!
I haven’t been working on it continuously, but it has taken me nearly 2.5 years to feel like it’s done….or, at least, good enough.
It is an abstract oil painting and is 36″x60″. It was created using a combination of my three favorite creative tools: camera, computer and paintbrush.
The concept: escape via bicycle
This piece started when my Dad asked me to create a piece of art for him to go on the large wall over his mantle in the living room. He is an avid bike rider (both motorized and peddle), and as I’m sure anyone who rides knows, he finds peace and escape from the hustle and bustle of everyday life out on the trails and in nature.
I photographed my own bicycle, brought the images into my computer and played around with different filters and cropping in Photoshop and Illustrator until I found some ideas that I liked. I took those ideas to pencil and paper and after finding the composition that I liked – transferred it to canvas using oil paint.
I wanted the painting to feel dynamic and have a sense of movement, so I chose to use complimentary colors (colors that are across the color wheel from each other) and to place the two main subjects diagonally across from each other. The abstraction of the elements also adds to the feeling of movement.
If you haven’t figured it out by now, the abstracted elements in the painting are the hub of the front wheel (lower left) and the chain guard (upper right), there is also a series of over-lying boxes that I use to suggest being outside of constraints (outside of the box).
The title “Celestial Ride” is the combination of the idea of getting outside of ones everyday life (off the planet) and the fact that several people had remarked that the painting looked like a couple of celestial bodies to them.
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