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07-04-2007, 01:24 PM
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#1
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Juried Member Portrait Painter & Firefighter
Joined: Mar 2003
Location: Seattle 98 & Paris
Posts: 206
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Hellllllllo Linda! Nice to see you too...
Loved your painting: Dusk or Dawn! Very sensual.
The story about Anna is true (except may be the cup of tea:
there was a plastic, half broken, ugly Chinese thermos instead).
The cloths of Anna, are the cloths of her grand grand grand mother,
who was the wife of a very famous Yakut poet from the 19th century: Kulakovsky. That is why the kind of strange stylistic: 150 years ago even folkloric robes were influenced by city-fashion.
The Huskies aren't exact either. Instead: there was a completely lazy and terribly slow Yakut horse, which in fact was used by Scott when he tried to reach the Pole South before Amundsen. Certainly it was the reason of his death and failure, cause the Yakut horses did not eat fish-rests (and in addition were eaten themselves by Scott).
The blue eyes of the Huskies however are definitely an important part of the story of this painting cause when we finally arrived at the Yakut camp of Anna...
(who if you understood the situation correctly was a kind of "Taiga Firefighter" in the Summer and "Survival Tourist Saver" in the winter)
...so when we arrived... I was horribly impressed with the similitude of her eyes with the eyes of the Huskies....
...and and THIS WAS THE ORIGIN of my desire to paint her portrait!
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07-04-2007, 01:47 PM
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#2
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Juried Member Portrait Painter & Firefighter
Joined: Mar 2003
Location: Seattle 98 & Paris
Posts: 206
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Great thanks Tom for your appreciation,
Still consider your Admiral as a masterpiece...
As for my French Foreign Legionnary past:
only that key ring left which you talk about...
...and that small little fresco.
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07-04-2007, 01:48 PM
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#3
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Juried Member Portrait Painter & Firefighter
Joined: Mar 2003
Location: Seattle 98 & Paris
Posts: 206
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A small sight in my art studio 
You can see a little bit the inside kitchen of how the painting was made.
I've completely forgot to say:
I did around 1300 photos of the model
before I started to paint...
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07-04-2007, 06:08 PM
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#4
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Associate Member SoCal-ASOPA Founder FT Professional
Joined: Sep 2002
Location: Laguna Hills, CA
Posts: 1,395
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Yup, I have been busy, that's for sure!
Sergio, I love the background behind your painting. I followed with great interest what you have been experiencing and how this painting came to be.
I had to laugh when I saw your computer set up. I need to show your keyboard placement to my family, so they once and for all stop complaining about my set up. I do have a question for you. I noticed you have taken close-up shots of your model with different skin tones. Can you tell me why you did that? Are you keying up different areas to get more color information out of the original?
I so have to take a tutorial by you how to paint eyes!
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07-10-2007, 01:27 PM
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#5
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Juried Member Portrait Painter & Firefighter
Joined: Mar 2003
Location: Seattle 98 & Paris
Posts: 206
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Hello Enzie,
The different prints are for playing with the cold warm contrast on the face. I think it is the most difficult part to obtain in a portrait. The computer is there, but basically I don't work from it if have enough prints... after a while my eyes just cannot apprehend a computer screen image as a source to resolve a problem on the portrait.
I would even say, sometimes, the worst is the photo the more interesting is it to work after it on a portrait... and clearly: no photo can replace the original model sitting for you hours and hours!
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07-20-2007, 10:46 AM
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#6
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Juried Member
Joined: Apr 2002
Location: Binghamton, NY
Posts: 247
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Sergio, your work and your attitude are a breath of fresh air. This is wonderful! I can tell from what you say, and from the painting, that you paint and live straight from your soul.
Amazing work.
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07-20-2007, 11:13 AM
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#7
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Juried Member Portrait Painter & Firefighter
Joined: Mar 2003
Location: Seattle 98 & Paris
Posts: 206
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Thank you Linda,
I consider that anyway it is not a matter of choice:
in order to astonish or create a feeling of "marvel" in others you have to constantly be in admiration of life yourself.
The more intensity you give to the moment, the more intense it would be your painting.
Nothing more dreadful than a boring model, with a boring attitude and an "always used" technique... 
Painting is a constant challenge before your own idea of perfection, before the expectations of your surrounding and certainly a huge dose of religious belief that one day you obtain the "ultimate emotion" and like a surfer on a wave you won't leave it again.
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07-22-2007, 10:43 AM
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#8
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Juried Member
Joined: Apr 2002
Location: Binghamton, NY
Posts: 247
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I agree completely. If one is bored with life, his paintings will show it. Whatever your personality, your paintings will show it. I have always said that one can tell more about the artist from a painting than one can about the subject.
I worked for an ambulance service as a paramedic for several years. I know how it effects ones view of life. Right now I drive a bus for the city. This job also has similiarities to the ambulance work. One is always in the midst of humanity, especially the poor and the impaired. The buses are full of the mentally ill, the retarded, the addicted, immigrants that speak no english,and the physically disabled. They can't afford cars. It gives one lots of practice in reading faces.
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