Showing posts with label Queensland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Queensland. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Respite


At the close of January I left winter for summer, traveling from southeast Minnesota to southeast Queensland, Australia. I spent the next two months there, living with my sister's family, sweltering in the heat and humidity, resting, reading, letting my big sister take care of me, spending time with my growing niece and nephews, getting better acquainted with the place they call home, and, of course, painting.

People:
 I wanted to take this opportunity to work on drawing and painting figures and portraits, especially my niece and nephews.
5 x 7" oil on linen/hardboard. February 1, 2018
 Tired from travel, and settling in, I did a quick study of my niece, who was reading a Calvin & Hobbes book.

 This pencil sketch is the closest I got to getting a likeness of my elusive eldest nephew. Someday I'll get to paint him. :)

7 x 5" oil on linen/hardboard. February 5, 2018
 My niece and I did a lot of drawing and painting together. Here I painted her profile while she worked on an excellent little painting of her dog.

 An allergy discovered: A quick little sketch done for my nephew, who gave us a scare and was spending half the night at the hospital under observation after reacting to eating a prawn.

10 x 8" oil on linen/hardboard. February 12, 2018
A better day, attempting a painting of my youngest nephew. Nothing like being asked to sit still to remind a person of how much he likes to move and all the things he'd like to be doing. (But he kind of tried!)

10 x 8" oil on linen/hardboard.
 Painted over a couple of days, another portrait of my (very patient!) niece reading. Sometimes she read aloud to me, which was just lovely.

Asleep on the train after a long, eventful day. Graphite.





Still life:
 Studies of local flora.

9 x 12" oil on gessoed hardboard. February 3, 2018
 Lilly Pilly. This was painted on a rainy day; a sprig plucked from a shrub by the house with its glossy green leaves and bright pink berries.

10 x 8" oil on linen/hardboard. February 19, 2018
 Though not native, frangipani or plumeria are a common sight, and their fragrance often fills the humid evening air.

10 x 8" oil on linen/hardboard. February 21, 2018
 Eucalyptus leaves and gumnuts, picked up off the path of the neighborhood forest after a rainstorm.

10 x 8" oil on linen/hardboard. March 1, 2018
 Gumnuts again. A different kind of eucalyptus tree with very different shaped leaves and fruit than the first one.

10 x 8" oil on linen/hardboard. March 5, 2018
 Banksia, in a Bundaberg lemonade bottle. I often saw this particular species - I think it's a swamp banksia - with its reddish-brown bottlebrush-like flower stalk and leathery leaves and I knew I wanted to try to paint it.

8 x 10" oil on linen/hardboard. March 9, 2018
 One more gumnut study, this time from a flowering gum tree. The fruit of this one were heavy and ridged, the flowers a lovely pink, slightly bedraggled after heavy rain, and the leaves long and narrow.

10 x 8" oil on linen/hardboard. March 13, 2018
Beach Hibiscus. These grow to be large trees, which my niece and nephews liked to climb. Its bright yellow blossoms only last a day, then fade and fall. Handed to me after a conversation while I was painting one windy day by the bay, I took this flower back to the house with me and painted it that night before it wilted.





Forest:
8 x 6" plein air oil on linen/birch. February 4, 2018
This was the first plein air painting of my visit. My niece and I trekked down to an area in the neighborhood forest and painted in the evening. The trunk of a strangler fig along a small stream. The light didn't last long, however, the mosquitoes began to hum, and the crows in the treetops sounded as though they were laughing at us.

8 x 6" plein air oil on linen/birch. February 6, 2018
 Painted in Point Halloran Conservation Area: a study of midday greens and blues.

6 x 8" plein air oil on linen/birch. March 8, 2018
On Mount Tamborine, downstream from Curtis Falls, upstream from where a colony of fruit bats was hanging out. The light grew dim early down amongst the trees, and a little rain fell in this little bit of rainforest while I painted.




By the bay:
 Tides, mud and sand, wind and rain and sunshine.
7 x 5" plein air oil on linen/birch. February 10, 2018
 Raby Bay. I was all set up to paint when I discovered my brushes were not in with my gear - not one! This little painting of the water was done mostly with pieces of dried leaves off a nearby plant. A rough little color study.

6 x 12" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. February 16, 2018
 Point Halloran, painting while watching the tide go out. In the hot and humid weather it made such a difference to get down to the shore and feel the wind off the water.

9 x 12" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. February 25, 2018
 HMQS Gayundah. Appropriately, perhaps, my time painting this old gunboat "said to be named after an Aboriginal word for lightning" was interrupted by a sudden crack of thunder and lightning as a storm broke overhead. I was happy to get a chance to go back and finish it later in the afternoon as the tide came in.

9 x 12" plein air oil on linen/birch. February 27, 2018
 Wellington Point. Low tide and cloudy skies, looking out towards King Island.
Two 5 x 7" plein air oil paintings on linen/hardboard. February 27, 2018
 Later, as the skies cleared and the wind picked up and blew hard, I walked around the point and painted this one (two) of the red rocks and mangrove tree, as the tide began to come back in. The sunshine brought out such color on the ground and water.

16 x 8" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. February 28, 2018
 Victoria Point. A beautiful old gumtree by the footpath. The water was high, covering the trunks and roots of the mangroves, and the morning shadows dappled the ground.

6 x 12" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. March 2, 2018
 Also at Victoria Point, painting amongst the mangroves. An overcast sky made the colors of the landscape a bit more subdued.

5 x 7" plein air oil on linen/birch. March 4, 2018
 Raby Bay. A little sky and water study. A cloud overhead gave shade and a little rain, and cloud shadows moved across the bay.

6 x 8" plein air oil on linen/birch. March 7, 2018
 Victoria Point: Sky drama and mangroves at the bay. Glimpses of sunshine between rain showers.
Trying to take in and capture something of the colors and textures of sky and sea.
Listening to the wind, the little crabs crawling around the rocks, and the incoming tide.

5 x 7" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. March 13, 2018
 Thompson's Beach, Victoria Point. A little painting done in the wind and an occasional downpour. A beautiful old boat and the fantastic shapes of the mangroves.

9 x 12" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. March 16, 2018
Redland Bay. A quick study of the evening light at the bay; shadows falling across the mangroves and the sand and mud of low tide.

7 x 5" oil on linen/hardboard. March 2018 sold
Point Halloran Conservation Area. I really liked the feel of this place, tidal wetlands where salt and fresh water mix. There was a beautiful harmony in the colors of the wet landscape and sky and the delicate branches of the she-oaks. I would have liked to paint on location there, but the mosquitoes won the battle that day; I took a few photos and waded out. I began this little painting that night while the memory was fresh in my mind.


Mountains, skyscrapers, and ocean waves:
6 x 12" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. March 11, 2018
 Boonah, Queensland, along Mount French Road, looking across pastures towards Moogerah Peaks. The weather passing through alternatingly obscuring and revealing the mountains in the distance.

8 x 16" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. March 12, 2018 sold
 Peak Crossing, Queensland. Sunshine and mountains, and farmland that made me feel a little more at home.

6 x 12" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. March 17, 2018
 The Spit, Goldcoast. A quick study. The waves rolled in and washed around the legs of my easel and retreated again, pulling the sand back to the sea. I held on to make sure my easel didn't go out with the water. My little niece and nephew appointed themselves my protectors, digging trenches and lying on the sand to attempt to block the waves! Such good little buddies. :)

6 x 12" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. March 19, 2018
Mt. Coot-tha: We went up early to the lookout hoping to catch the sunrise over the city of Brisbane. Instead we looked out into fog. I painted this as the sun rose higher in the sky and the fog began to clear.
5 x 7" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. March 19, 2018
The morning sun grew hot and the fog lifted, bringing the city into view. 

6 x 12" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. March 24, 2018
Where the Noosa River meets the sea.
We spent the last weekend of my visit at the Sunshine Coast. I painted with my feet in the sand and the sound of the ocean in my ears.

8 x 10" plein air oil on linen/hardboard. March 24, 2018
 Sunshine Beach. Sand and sea and clouds at dusk.

6 x 8" plein air oil on linen/birch. March 25, 2018
My last painting in Australia: A little study of the water, watching the waves roll in and trying to take in all the color and form and movement. Beautiful day.

Sunday, March 26, 2017

Australia


The end of February and first half of March were spent in Australia visiting family, with a little bit of painting tucked in.
All the paintings out of their boxes while I cleaned sand off of all my gear.

On our first full day there, we went to Wellington Point. We waited awhile for the tide to go out, and when it was low enough for us to easily wade through, following the sand bar, we headed out to King Island. Stopping to collect shells and watch hermit crabs on the way.


 Then time to throw some paint, while watching the clouds change and the tide continue to go out. Coming back, walking all the way on the sand this time, we saw soldier crabs and other creatures.
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Hellooooo, Noosa! It's been awhile! You're as beautiful as ever.
Watched a glorious sunset over the main beach as the kids played in the surf and ran on the sand.
The next day we visited these rock pools, paddling in the deeper ones and being pushed by the waves as they crashed in and refilled the pools nearest them. 
I haven't quite got the hang of this umbrella yet, but it really came in handy on this day, and the wind wasn't too much for it.

This next one was a sprint, as the sun set and the clouds rolled in over the Sunshine Coast and I knew I didn't have much time before dark. The light went faster than I'd even expected, as the weather moved in and the rain began to fall. I'd left my umbrella, and so got pretty wet, but my sisters came to my rescue and helped me get moved up under a tree to watch the clouds as I finished up.


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Another place I wanted to see again: The Glasshouse Mountains. I'd love to have more time to explore this area some day. But I got to take a little bit of it home with me in painting it. This was also a special time because my niece and oldest nephew joined in and worked on their own paintings. It was messy, but so good. They both have a good eye, and it was fun to see what and how they painted.

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Another day we visited the Daisy Hill Koala Center. Lots of gum trees and wildlife, and grills to cook on for a picnic. My niece and I did some watercolor painting as well.


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Byron Bay, New South Wales. I had not been here before, but I'm glad that's changed. It's a beautiful place, and there was some great scenery just on the drive there. I loved being up on the ridge near the lighthouse, looking down at the waves rolling in and crashing against the rocks. Great views. Also very windy. My hat was no match for it, and getting my brush strokes to fall where I wanted was tricky!
Painting like this requires staying put for a length of time. You may miss out on seeing some of the sights, and exploring more places. But on the other hand, you get to really take in something in a very intentional way. I noticed in much greater detail the layout of the land, and the structure of the lighthouse and the way the sunshine hit it than I would have only passing by. And I appreciate it that much more now.
After I was done and thoroughly windblown, we took a tour of the lighthouse, which I would definitely recommend.
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This last one was done at The Spit on the Gold Coast. Waves, dunes, and skyscrapers. And on this sunny day, hot, foot-burning sand! But such fun waves, and the sandy, shallower area went out pretty far, perfect for landlubbers such as myself to enjoy and not get swept away. There were also an abundance of dogs! This place is a favorite on weekends for people and their pooches.



So much sand had to be cleaned from my gear! And so many good memories to take home with me. A huge thank-you to my family both here and there who made this trip possible.
Till next time, Australia!

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Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Tiny Beach Painting

Yeah. It gets to be mid-January and I start thinking about warm places and sunshine and....
Clouds over the Beach, 4x4inches, oil on linen canvas
Copyright 2011 Hannah C. Heyer
Sold
This painting was done last month using photos from my stay in Australia as reference. The tiny canvas made it both fun and challenging. I may need to invest in some smaller brushes! I love the smoother texture of linen for doing detail.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Old Government House


A few days ago we went and saw the Old Government House in Brisbane. It was a cool place, had interesting historical displays, and I think there was a lot to see. Upstairs was the William Robinson Gallery, which was pretty interesting. My favorite pieces were those inspired by the rain forests.

Silly as it sounds, one of the places I liked best in the house was the cellar. To me it had such a nice, homey feel (and smell) to it, and I liked the lighting and the curve of the ceiling and the texture of the walls. Here, in its first layer, is my painting of it.