Welcome to Pastel Explorations

Painting in pastel is an ever evolving process that involves a great deal of learning. For me the process starts with one emotion, amazement. The french word for this emotion is émerveillement. It represents that first emotional response to a situation. Being a child of the northern forests of Ontario, in Kapuskasing that sense of amazement is most often triggered by nature. I am transported by landscapes of all types.

Nature in all of it`s aspects allows me to remember, how we represent such a tiny part of the whole of creation. Insignificant really. Nothing is as awe inspiring as the vastness of the Rocky`s mountain peaks, or the raging waters of the ocean swelling against the chore. It is against the backdrop of these wonders that I can lose my own self-centeredness and reclaim a sense of being connected to a wider circle of life.

You will find some of my explorations in painting the landscape in pastel.
Claude J. Millette

Winter Landscape Northern Ontario

Winter Landscape Northern Ontario
oil on linen on board 9X 12

Rushing Water - a work in progress and a shift from previous styles...

Rushing Water     - a work in progress and a shift from previous styles...
leave a comment... if you like the new approach

Rushing Water - a work in progress and a shift in styles

Well I am back and it has been a long time since I have posted.
A busy Christmas season paired with connectivity problems with my internet connection has slowed me down.

Rushing water is based on a picture that I took on a trip to Quebec city with my brother in 2010. I wanted to capture the forcefullness of the river with a slightly more impressionistic view than I am used too.

I still have to work out a few of the details. Would appreciate commments and suggestions.

Rock Resting in the Stream

Rock Resting in the Stream
pastel on Sennelier paper

Rock Resting in the Stream

This pastel painting was painted during the week after one of my best friends sudden death of a heart attack. During the week of the funeral preparation, I would retire away from people at the end of the evening to collect my thoughts in preparation for the eulogy. Painting this provided a moment of reflection and a respite from the shared grief that pervaded the group I was living with at the time.

Birch Basking in the Sun

Birch Basking in the Sun
Pastel on Sennelier La Carte sanded paper November 2010

Birch Basking in the Sun

This painting is one of my favorites. At 24 X 18 inches on Ampersand pastel board, it gives the feeling of being there peering into the underbrush when you stand 6 feet away from it.

Snowy Sunshine in the Bush

Snowy Sunshine in the Bush
Snowshoeing at Christmas at 40 degrees celsius below zero

Snowy Sunshine in the Bush

Painted from a photograph taken on a showshoeing trip with my sister in Kapuskasing over Christmas. Under the evening light, the glowing snow just pops right out.

Sunlit Trail

Sunlit Trail
Bruce Trail in Ontario Pastel on Sennelier La Carte sanded paper

Sunlit Trail

Peaceful, meditative path on the Bruce Trail

Sunlit Forest Pastel on Sennelier Paper

Sunlit Forest     Pastel on Sennelier Paper
Bruce Trail near Hilton Falls

Sunlit Forest

My all time favorite...gives meaning to the idea that the sun paints the forest with rays of sunlight. Darkness is pushed aside by the color of the planet.

Calm Amidst the Storm

Calm Amidst the Storm
Contrasts in nature involve contrasts in light and dark, and colors contrasts but sometimes it includes subtle contrasts such as the gentle pool of water framed by the raging stream

Sunny Day in Dingle Park - Oakville

Sunny Day in Dingle Park - Oakville
Pastel on Ampersand Board 16 X 20

Cedar Fence 2

Cedar Fence 2
On the Road to Brooks Hollow... Pastel on Sennelier La Carte sanded paper

Walk Through Dingle Park

Walk Through Dingle Park
What a Sunny Day

Dusk by the Dock

Dusk by the Dock
Norhern Ontario offers wonderful views just before night fall.

Cedar Springs near Lowville

Cedar Springs near Lowville
Pre fall river around the time the fish come up river to die... Some of the trees have lost their leaves but the background has not really changed colors yet.

Cloudy Sunshine Day by the Lake

Cloudy Sunshine Day by the Lake
Love that water

The Lantern

The Lantern
Oakville is distinctive by the many homes with older style home and gates that still exist.

Northern Treeline

Northern Treeline
Love that sky ... Northern Ontario near Kapuskasing in December sometimes goes down to 40 below with a windchill of minus 20

Ferns Basking in the Sun 2

Ferns Basking in the Sun 2
Wonderful shimmering sunshine on the floor of the forest. Bruce Trail extending from Crawford Lake to Rattlesnake Point

Midday on the Pond

Midday on the Pond
not quite finished but almost there

Ferns Basking in the Sun

Ferns Basking in the Sun
On the trail at Rattlesnake Point - Pastel on Sennelier

Autumn Fence Pastel on Sennelier La Carte paper

Autumn Fence  Pastel on Sennelier La Carte paper
On the road to Ottawa

Big Puddle of Water

Big Puddle of Water
A river near Quebec city

Puddle of Water

Puddle of Water
Capturing the flow of water is an interesting challenge. Some people think of water as blue. Water is clear and it takes on the color of whatever surrounds it. Now it is blue, now it is green or brown or yellow. Water takes on the color of whatever is behind it or whatever is in front of it.

Lawn Birch

Lawn Birch

Yukon Stream

Yukon Stream
Many people comment that this painting has a Groups of Seven feel to it. I can't say that I understand that statement but as long as people seem to enjoy it.

Autumn Colors Pastel on Sennelier La Carte

Autumn Colors     Pastel on Sennelier La Carte

Fiery Bush

Fiery Bush
sometimes called Two Birch standing...

Open Gate 1

Open Gate 1
One of those idyllic Oakville scenes that will disappear with the new monstrosities being built

Open Gate 2

Open Gate 2
The same gate - a different perspective - a different season

Yukon Wonders

Yukon Wonders

Fishing Pond

Fishing Pond
Plein air Pastel on Sennelier La Carte paper

Big Icicles Create Rivers

Big Icicles Create Rivers
Northern river

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Well a year has gone by and the time has flown away. In summary, I spent the early part of 2012 exploring painting in watercolour. Then after a visit with Joyce Fournier at Studio Vogue Gallery on Avenue Road in Toronto, I decided to change direction as a result of the feedback she provided. I shifted to painting in oils and worked on developping a style of painting in oils that allowed me to express the same issues as my work in pastel. I spent the summer months painting as many small paintings as I could and found myself just experimenting with various styles of paint application. Over time, I discovered an approach that allows me to translate my encounter with nature. Here are a few of the latest examples of this work.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

My only talent is being stubborn

I often the perennial remark: "my you have got talent, I could never do that". When I reply my only talent is stubborness supported by interest, I get these incredulous looks. The truth is that when I was 15 unlike many kids who could draw I could not draw a straight line. But I wanted to reproduce some of my favorite comic book characters. My favorites came from the french tradition of comic books that are hard cover. I was raised with Tintin and Asterix and Obelix. I wanted to be able to draw them.

In the high school library, I found a book that promised to teach you to draw through guided practice. If you did the assignments, you could learn to draw in a progressive way. I drew pages and pages of straight lines, vertically and horizontally. Then I learned to put them together to create boxes. I learned to find the midpoint and to practice estimating it by sight and draw it in. Triangle were the product of connecting the corners of those drawn boxes with new lines. I stubbornly did those exercises that many others would have scoffed at and gradually built up skill. What I did not realize was that I was training my eyes and my hands simultaneously. Through continued practice through the years I finally learned to draw. I sketch on vacation, on the subway, on planes, in parks. I consider that doodling is good practice. Sketching has been a part of my life since I was a teenager, even when I was too busy with my work and my family to find the time to paint. Over time I have grown better than I was at drawing, but nowhere near where I would like to be. I am always amazed at the skill level of many draughtman.

A stubborn interest in art has always been a part of my character. At 17, while attending university in Ottawa, I made it a habit to visit the National Art Gallery every two weeks. For a few years I would just amble around in the collections, learning to see and think from the perspective of various artists. I learned to appreciate different styles and approaches.

I am aware that many people who have heard this story directly from me do not believe me. They believe that I surely must have had talent. But my talent is the gift of stubborness.

I am stubborn in that I will redo something over and over till I feel satisfied with the result. In fact, the fun part is the learning that painting and drawing provides. Each picture provides a puzzle that requires a new solution. Many of the paintings that provided the most learning are never sold because they would not find an audience. The children of these paintings are easier to produce... they are more appealing to people... because they are more captivating than their parents...

Once the problem has been resolved it is time to stubbornly move on to another picture puzzle to further the learning.