"To the Shore Once More, Volume III"
Three of my paintings are in this newly published coffee table book .
It is filled with beautiful prose and poems by Frank Finale and artwork by 45 artists.
Available from the Jersey Shore Publications
Also from Amazon
Book signing is scheduled at Things A Drift, 406 Long Beach Blvd, Ship Bottom during LBI Open Studio & Gallery Tour June 25th and 26th from 11am-3pm.
Thursday, May 19, 2016
Wednesday, April 6, 2016
Monday, January 7, 2013
Sandy Survivors
January 7, 2013
Today I went to LBI to retrieve four of my paintings that miraculously survived Hurricane Sandy in Swell Colors, a Glass Studio and Gallery in Haven Beach. Mary Tantillo, the owner and glass artist, told of the destruction within her gallery. The large heavy workbench had floated in the four feet of seawater within and had smashed the front window and the wind had blown the door open.
This was the first time I went to the south end of the island. All along the boulevard were businesses being emptied of their contents or contractors working on their restoration.
I drove around past all the places where I had stopped to paint in previous years since they all have special memories. Some were almost unrecognizable and others were damaged but less so. The damage increases as you head south. When I got to Holgate there was a sign stating only residents and contractors were allowed to go further. I really just wanted to check on the fisherman's cottage, built in the 1920's, that sits right on the bay. I love to just look at it. It would be a perfect studio for a painter like me. Heeding the sign, I did not see it today.
My heart was heavy. I decided to go back to Beach Haven, to the lifeguard house, to see the ocean and beach which usually lifts my spirit. Benches sit in front of the twisted building with damaged doors and windows. There was yellow caution tape surrounding the building. I walked past the building and climbed to the top of the large piles of sand and stood looking down to the sea which was flatter than I had ever seen it. Not even a breaker just flat, licking the sand. As I looked out I thought how could this calm have turned so ugly and caused such destruction, this wolf in sheeps clothing.
Today I went to LBI to retrieve four of my paintings that miraculously survived Hurricane Sandy in Swell Colors, a Glass Studio and Gallery in Haven Beach. Mary Tantillo, the owner and glass artist, told of the destruction within her gallery. The large heavy workbench had floated in the four feet of seawater within and had smashed the front window and the wind had blown the door open.
This was the first time I went to the south end of the island. All along the boulevard were businesses being emptied of their contents or contractors working on their restoration.
I drove around past all the places where I had stopped to paint in previous years since they all have special memories. Some were almost unrecognizable and others were damaged but less so. The damage increases as you head south. When I got to Holgate there was a sign stating only residents and contractors were allowed to go further. I really just wanted to check on the fisherman's cottage, built in the 1920's, that sits right on the bay. I love to just look at it. It would be a perfect studio for a painter like me. Heeding the sign, I did not see it today.
My heart was heavy. I decided to go back to Beach Haven, to the lifeguard house, to see the ocean and beach which usually lifts my spirit. Benches sit in front of the twisted building with damaged doors and windows. There was yellow caution tape surrounding the building. I walked past the building and climbed to the top of the large piles of sand and stood looking down to the sea which was flatter than I had ever seen it. Not even a breaker just flat, licking the sand. As I looked out I thought how could this calm have turned so ugly and caused such destruction, this wolf in sheeps clothing.
Thursday, November 1, 2012
After the Great Storm 2012

Living in New Jersey my entire life, the shore has been loved and cherished as the most beautiful special place on earth. Cape May, Stone Harbor, Margate, Atlantic City, Seaside, Lavallette north to Asbury Park and the place I love the most Long Beach Island have all experienced natures wrath. The coast is the place where nature is complete. Sky, earth and sea, serenity and great power at the same time. The negative power of nature has always been considered but no one could possibly envision the devastation that has taken place to these towns over the last few days.
Everyone I know has some connection to the coastal areas affected. Homeowners, boat owners and business owners all are experiencing unimaginable loss. There are people still in those areas that decided to ride out the storm never imagining the dangerous conditions they would encounter. Walls of ocean so powerful they overtook dunes, crashed though anything in their path with ease and connected with the bay on the other side of land. Fires burning through the sand in some areas, adding a second assault to already damaged homes, destroying what remained. In other areas there is a strong smell of gas adding additional anxiety for people who still have not been allowed to return. No matter what section of the coast, it has all been turned into what looks like a bombed out war zone.
Many people, who live year round in these areas, took only enough for a few days away from their home. They have the suffered the greatest unimaginable loss.
My mood is one of great sadness for every one's loss and gratitude that we were forewarned and optimism that it won't be as bad as it looks when we actually are able to return. I keep thinking of the devastation in NYC on 9/11 and how their recovery progressed. It gives me hope.
I am grateful that people are spared, property can be replaced.
The painting shown here was done on 9th St in Barnegat Light on Saturday afternoon as the surf was starting to churn and the wind was kicking up announcing the beginning of the worst storm experienced in all time.
Labels:
Barnegat Light,
LBI,
Long Beach Island,
the Great Storm 2012
Friday, July 6, 2012
The Making of a Painting- How Long Did It Take?
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March, La Jolla, CA |
People often ask how long did it take you to make that painting?
The answer is not an easy one. There is so much that comes before and after the actual process of applying paint to the support.First comes the education which as it turns out is a lifelong process. This is one of the things that most attracts me to painting. I have always been strong-willed, determined to succeed, and painting presents a formidable challenge. Learning to paint is like the internet you can never reach the end. The more you know, the more you realize you do not know.
Workshops, videos, books all offer valuable information but the only way to really learn is to paint and paint a lot. Only then does the real understanding begin.
Each painting is begun as a challenge to myself to apply the paint in a new and improved way. It may be a particular palette of colors that I am trying out, with new mixtures of paint, and how they appear when applied next to each other. Sometimes it is different or more challenging subject matter. It could just be to paint the light as it appears at a given moment.
What else goes into a painting?
Ordering supplies-paints, supports, frames
Photographing the finished work.
Cataloging into my database.
Varnishing and framing the piece.
Delivering to the selected gallery.
More paperwork - log location of work into database
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Art and Survival in the New Economy

When the economy was booming everyone seemed to want large paintings to decorate and fill the large walls of their newly built or purchased homes. Then came the bust. There are still those people out there. They just seem to think a little bit longer before making a big purchase but they do still buy.
How would I continue to maintain income from sales of my art?
My thought process was to create a mixture that included an increased percentage of smaller, lower and moderately priced work, along with larger paintings.
With this in mind, I started doing monotypes using gelatin as the printing plate. Painting directly on the gelatin, using both additive and subtractive methods, tonal areas and areas of visible brushstrokes can be acheived. The printmaking process is thoroughly enjoyable, both playful as well as painterly. My choice to use only black was deliberate. I wanted to keep these prints distinctly separate from my paintings in oil.
With this in mind, I started doing monotypes using gelatin as the printing plate. Painting directly on the gelatin, using both additive and subtractive methods, tonal areas and areas of visible brushstrokes can be acheived. The printmaking process is thoroughly enjoyable, both playful as well as painterly. My choice to use only black was deliberate. I wanted to keep these prints distinctly separate from my paintings in oil.
The resulting prints have been well received both with sales and awards.
There are always people willing to spend on work they love, including me. I, too, have continued to purchase pieces of art each year that speak to me.
My strategy seems to have worked and I am thankful.
Sunday, April 1, 2012
It's Not All Painting

Art Things- A Peek at the Week of the Artist Life
Painted a new 18 x 24 beach scene with three figures. Finished a work in progress 24 x 30. Competed a 24 x 24 of children at the jetty "Digging for Sandcrabs" that was begun several months ago. (image to R.)
Painted an 8 x 16 marina scene and 12 x 16 of sailboats.
Took photos of all work recently completed, uploaded to my computer, edited and filed. Made a history sheet with a thumbnail image on each so I can quickly identify the work. These are used to keep a record of each show or gallery that receives the painting and when it is due back or is sold. I then logged each work into a database record that includes title, medium, size, year and price. This is then saved in three places. There is also space in the database to input the location of each painting that leaves the studio. It is then an easy task to make labels for the back of each piece and to print out a retail price list of just the ones I am delivering to a galllery.
Took six paintings outdoors to varnish and, after picking the pesky little gnats out of the wet varnish, set them out to dry on my enclosed porch. After they are dry I will frame each one and then make appointments with two of my galleries to bring in some new work. Maybe next week.
Worked as volunteer to assist jurors and hang the upcoming show at the Philadelphia Sketch Club for almost 7 hrs .
Attended an art reception followed by dinner with art friends.
Picked up works from a closing show.Updated website with events and two new paintings. Updated my art event calendar and updated speadsheet with income and expenses for the month.
Began mentally planning and reviewed opportunities for upcoming shows.
It pays to be organized!
It pays to be organized!
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