



Today, I was privileged to be among those who were invited to lunch at White Oak Farms (posts here and here). It was a lovely day and we had a bunch of fun eating, coloring, fellowshipping (is that a word? LOL!), and loving on each other. Bonnie had the party to encourage a friend who is having surgery soon. I hope she was encouraged a little.
Afterward, two of us went to the Brown Family Environmental Center to see the art exhibit “Visual Echoes of Nature”. I have been meaning to go for a while and finally made the time. The artist is Marty Huehner and he is local (right around the corner from me). He works in clay and sometimes dental alginate. His works are quite lovely and interesting and, if you are local, I recommend that you go see it. The exhibit will be there until June 30. Following are some photos:




This is just a small sampling. I recommend you go see the whole show. It is a treat.
“Listen carefully to first criticisms made of your work. Note just what it is about your work that critics don’t like — then cultivate it. That’s the only part of your work that’s individual and worth keeping.” –Jean Cocteau

For the month of June, I would like to offer prints of Mac the Macaw.

I believe macaws are some of the most wildly beautiful of birds. I have had a few encounters in a pet store. He was very easy going, until the last time I allowed him to benefit from my caresses. He bit me! I forgive him and still love macaws, but I go wide around them, now.
“It is not only fine feathers that make fine birds.” — Aesop

Mac the Macaw — Print
Archival matte art print, 12x16, plus one inch border, ready for framing. Price includes shipping or local delivery (within Knox County, Ohio).
$60.00

This bird is called a Great Tit, which is not found in North or South America. It is found in Europe and parts of Asia and Africa. I just loved this pose. The tree that she is clinging to is rather unusual. I can’t identify it. This piece is 9 3/4 by 11 3/4 done in pastels. I wanted to be much looser than I was. I am not insinuating that I can do hyper realistic artwork, but I have to remind myself that I am not a copy machine and not to worry that I don’t make exact copies. I am trying to make myself relax and just enjoy the making of the art, just the way I want to do it. I did rather enjoy doing this one.
“Use what talents you possess; the woods would be very silent if no birds sang there except those that sang best.” — Henry Van Dyke
What’re you lookin’ at? — Print
Archival matte art print, 9.75x11.75, plus one inch border, ready for framing. Price includes shipping or local delivery (within Knox County, Ohio).
$50.00

It is the middle of the night and I am in my studio trying to get this post done and I remembered that I have not posted any WIP photos of my two oil paintings. They take a long time to dry. It is dark, but I think you can see that I am making progress, though slow. I think I had better get this done and get to bed, although I am not sleepy. LOL! Toby and Mr. Beloved are snoring a duet.
“We are such stuff as dreams are made of, and our little life is rounded with a sleep.” — William Shakespeare

I find birds to be fascinating and beautiful, as I’m sure most of you do, also. In my art, I strive to capture the beauty, grace, peace, color, and other lovely characteristics of these wonderful creatures.
“The birds nest beside the streams and sing among the branches of the trees.” — Psalms 104:12

I love when, during or after mowing the yard, the swallows swoop and dance around me. It makes me want to join them.
“She decided to free herself, dance into the wind, create a new language. And birds fluttered around her, writing ‘yes’ in the sky.” — Monique Duval
Swallow the Wind — Print
Archival matte art print, 12x16, plus one inch border, ready for framing. Price includes shipping or local delivery (within Knox County, Ohio).
$60.00

When the sun hits a grackle at just the right angle, it is breathtaking: the sparkle of the greens and purples. When they strut, they are amusingly glamorous birds.
“The crow flew closer, as if to hear its praises.” — Emma Donoghue
Grackle — Print
Archival matte art print, 14x20, plus one inch border, ready for framing. Price includes shipping or local delivery (within Knox County, Ohio).
$75.00

I believe macaws are some of the most wildly beautiful of birds. I have had a few encounters in a pet store. He was very easy going, until the last time I allowed him to benefit from my caresses. He bit me! I forgive him and still love macaws, but I go wide around them, now.
“It is not only fine feathers that make fine birds.” — Aesop
Mac the Macaw — Print
Archival matte art print, 12x16, plus one inch border, ready for framing. Price includes shipping or local delivery (within Knox County, Ohio).
$60.00

Our first rooster was a handsome Buff Orpington that we named Gerard, after a friend. When I painted him, I was in my Van Gogh mood.
“The more excited the rooster gets, the higher his voice goes. He’s got a little bit of a Barney Fife quality to him.” — Jeff Foxworthy
Rooster in France — Print
Archival matte art print, 14x20, plus one inch border, ready for framing. Price includes shipping or local delivery (within Knox County, Ohio).
$75.00

I have a love/hate relationship with blue jays. I love their colors, their call, their flight. I hate their aggressive meanness. I think the love wins, though.
“I’m just a Connecticut country boy. The people I’ve known, the changes of season, the call of the blue jay – when I’m away, all of them haunt me.” — Gary Burghoff
Blue Jay — Print
Archival matte art print, 8x10, plus one inch border, ready for framing. Price includes shipping or local delivery (within Knox County, Ohio).
$40.00

Owls fascinate and intimidate me. I always wonder what they are thinking and if they approve of me.
“Owl,” said Rabbit shortly, “you and I have brains. The others have fluff. If there is any thinking to be done in this Forest – and when I say thinking I mean thinking – you and I must do it.” — A. A. Milne
Barn Party — Print
Archival matte art print, 8x10, plus one inch border, ready for framing. Price includes shipping or local delivery (within Knox County, Ohio).
$40.00

I am finally comfortable enough with oils to attempt the next house in my large commission. I would like to thank my extremely patient and encouraging client for suffering me to do this. Here are a couple of work in progress photos. Of course, since it is oils, it is taking much longer. I am still not used to waiting so long between layers. I think my style is going to be different with oils than it was with acrylics. The first photo is the underpainting, which, in my case, is just a rough map of where things go.

In the following photo, the only thing done is the sky. The other colors are just foundation colors, which I will build on with many more colors until I get it where I want it.

I have also started another painting:

That is supposed to be water. LOL! Those ripples are gonna be the death of me!
For those of you who have not seen the May Offering, I am offering for sale for the month of May a print of the acrylic painting “Blue Jay”. Please click here for information.

The other night, I was walking Toby just as it was getting dark and noticed that the mist was rolling in after a FEROCIOUS thunderstorm the night before and a day of rain. So, I put Toby in and got my camera out. It was pretty dark, but I set the light adjustment to make it lighter and it actually looks like it is much earlier in the day! I thought that was nifty.

And when it rains on your parade, look up rather than down. Without the rain, there would be no rainbow.
— Gilbert K. Chesterton
If you recognize this person, please comment on this post.

The work in progress:
He was very cooperative for the photo shoot. He lasted almost an hour at which time he said, “I’m done. That is all I can take.” I think I will get some more in the future… LOL!
Below are the previous two portraits of the mystery man. The first one was done sometime in 2017 and the second early in 2018. I believe I am improving. (Mystery Man and I call the first portrait, “Fang”. LOL! Those “fangs” are supposed to be his white hairs in the beard. The second portrait is from a photo of him sitting under an arbor with dappled sunshine raining down on him. I like the light patterns. He does not.)
An ideal wife is any woman who has an ideal husband.
— Booth Tarkington

If you haven’t cried, your eyes can’t be beautiful.
— Sophia Loren

Hallelujah! These photos were lost and now they are found. Apparently the camera created a new folder on the memory card and I didn’t notice it. Later in the day, as I was getting ready to go to bible study, I thought, “Was there a new folder on that card?” So, I checked and, yes, there was a new folder and there were all my missing photos. I have no idea why that happened. I am not even using 10% of the card. But, now I know, if it should happen again.
So, on to more White Oak Farms pictures. I love beekeeping. We had two hives when we lived in Florida. It was very nice having our own honey and beeswax. Yes, I have adventures to tell…


The wetlands, which Bill created for Bonnie’s birthday a few years ago and which adds wildlife habitat and diversity to the farm.

The bathouse, which, along with the beehives, are located along the wetlands. On a well-run farm, bats, bees, woods, wetlands, pastures, etc., all have their place among many other wonderful things.

These cows and their calves were right next to the wetlands and I enjoyed photographing them. They are beautiful and healthy and obviously happy in such a lush pasture.





We headed into the woods to find these trilliums. They were aging very gracefully and made wonderful models. This first one had some pink on it and I thought it was particularly nice.



Well, even though I found my lost photos, I hope to be able to have photo shoots at White Oak Farms many times in the future.
We were so far back in the woods, they almost had to pipe in sunlight.
— Roy Rogers

I was graciously invited to White Oak Farms by my beloved friend, Bonnie, for a photo shoot. It was such a beautiful day and I must have taken almost a thousand shots. However, after I got home and put my memory card in the computer, I saw that I had lost about the last half of them and, of course, they were the best! Oh, the sick feeling… Well, Bonnie has suggested we try it again, soon. Yes, please.
So, this is a sampling of what I did manage to get, this morning. This was taken from up by the house.

This is Pawpaw flowers. I have never seen them, before. They are very unusual and beautiful. White Oak Farms has a nice young pawpaw orchard, of which you can see a corner in the above photo.





We played tag with this duck for quite a while. Whenever I would get close enough to take a picture, he would get up, stretch, and take off. But, he returned and would settle down for a nap. We worked our way closer and closer between escapes, until finally we were able to get some pretty good shots of him. At last, he joined his beloved and they waddled up to the barn to clean up some crumbs.

They have a very nicely stocked pond. I was standing on the bank taking these pictures with my polarizer. I was pleasantly surprised by how they turned out. I was desperately following them, clicking away, hoping I was catching something. LOL!



My lovely hostess and fearless four-wheeler driver. I have a few extra white hairs, but it was fun. Thank you, Bonnie and Bill. I am looking forward to next time.

White Oak Farms is such a beautiful place by the grace of God and the hard work of Bill, Bonnie, and their family. It is always a joy to explore their beautiful property. The photos that were lost were of the wetlands, beehives, bathouse, cows, and the lovely trilliums in the woods. Maybe soon…
What is a farm, but a mute gospel? — Ralph Waldo Emerson
For you shall go out in joy and be led forth in peace; the mountains and the hills before you shall break forth into singing, and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands. — Isaiah 55:12 (ESV)

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