
Monday, September 1, 2008
Summer 2008

Saturday, June 7, 2008
PAY ATTENTION!
How many times have we heard from our parents or teachers, "boy, girl, pay attention!"? When I created the paintings below, I was inspired by playful thoughts, thinking of students who are very creative and intelligent, but at the same time cannot hold their attention on a speech, especially if it is delivered without special effects. They tend to let their imagination run far away. A child may have a notebook paper in his hands and make a boat and in his own special world, place it on the ocean, or be in a Math class and make an airplane and send it through the mysterious and endless space. The cut-out paper dolls was my own way to avoid boredom, but in this case, the notebook paper was also painted.


Sunday, May 4, 2008
Key Biscayne, Paradise on Canvas
Sunday, March 9, 2008
Yellow Ribbon

Yellow Ribbon
The first time I saw a yellow ribbon round a tree was when I came to the US for the first time after the Iran hostage crisis (1979-1981.) I learned it served as a symbol of welcome for the hostages who were held at the embassy in Tehran. Then I learned more about it: there was a popular song called “Tie a Yellow Ribbon ‘Round the Ole Oak Tree”, written by Irwin Levine and L. Russell Brown and recorded by Tony Orlando and Dawn. The song has a nice rhythm which you can check at
http://www.geocities.com/holidaysfun/ribbon.html
The first time I saw a yellow ribbon round a tree was when I came to the US for the first time after the Iran hostage crisis (1979-1981.) I learned it served as a symbol of welcome for the hostages who were held at the embassy in Tehran. Then I learned more about it: there was a popular song called “Tie a Yellow Ribbon ‘Round the Ole Oak Tree”, written by Irwin Levine and L. Russell Brown and recorded by Tony Orlando and Dawn. The song has a nice rhythm which you can check at
http://www.geocities.com/holidaysfun/ribbon.html
(copy and paste, please)
The story is about a man who leaves prison and who requested his wife or girlfriend to indicate that she wanted him back by tying a yellow ribbon round the old oak tree in front of her home. If he could see the ribbon from the bus in which he would be traveling he would know she still wanted him.
This painting was based on the above but also on the pictures I see of troops coming back home from Iraq in the last years. The yellow ribbon is not only a sign of welcome for the one who’s returning but also a sign of loyalty of the one who waited.
The story is about a man who leaves prison and who requested his wife or girlfriend to indicate that she wanted him back by tying a yellow ribbon round the old oak tree in front of her home. If he could see the ribbon from the bus in which he would be traveling he would know she still wanted him.
This painting was based on the above but also on the pictures I see of troops coming back home from Iraq in the last years. The yellow ribbon is not only a sign of welcome for the one who’s returning but also a sign of loyalty of the one who waited.
Saturday, March 8, 2008
When the sun rises in Key Biscayne...
In a Science fair project, we have the constant and variables. The same happens when the sun rises on Crandon Beach. The constant elements are the beach - shore and ocean- and the sun, which no matter what, always rises. The variables are the weather - wind, clouds, rain, which either let the sun light out totally or partially or completely hide it from view. Enough about this. As they say, a picture is worth a thousand words, here you have seventeen thousand words that humbly quiet me, each one a perfect gift from above...
- click on image to see it larger -



Saturday, February 23, 2008
PEOPLE'S FACES
Painting faces has always been a daring experience for me. So far I have chosen people who are either close to me or whose faces are a challenge to my skill. Some times I don't reach my goal, but in the process I learn many things, patience and frustration management among them. I am pleased to introduce "my people" to you.

Unknown mouth and nose
Sometimes details tells more than the whole face
A famous look - who knows him? Disguised by himself
Michael in New York enjoying a happy free ride
Atsuko, Michael's high school friend
A New England lady's profile
Michael and mother sleeping peacefully
Virgen de la Esperanza, copy
This is part of a painting by Belgium painter Rogier van der Weyden. The folds in Magdalena's head covering intrigued me (copy)
Native Brazilian
Julie, Michael's high school friend
The tenderness of the moment made me copy this painting by a British artist
My very first attempt, also and, most important, a great friend, Patricia
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