BLUEBELLS LADY BAGGOTS DRIVE.

BLUEBELLS LADY BAGGOTS DRIVE.
Comments

Love the Tree shapes, Sylvia, and Monet feel! You can have the joy of Bluebells all year to look at this. Thank you.

This is really lovely, almost abstract yet full of warm sun and bright spring days. I really like it. Do you mean it was one of those canvases that didn't want to take the paint? I've had a few of those or was it just that you couldn't get inspired to use it? I have two really big canvases just waiting for ideas.

Hi Diana, it is a canvas that had been painted over many times. I had never been happy with what went before, so overpainted it was. Then, what I find is that I get lovely textures to work over and into. In fact the tree bark on this works because of the textures from previous work.

Another lovely painting, love the combination of blues with hints of that lovely brick red showing through, and great idea for the old canvas - have few like that and was going to sand them but will use as is, thanks for the idea

Thank you for all of the lovely comments.

Great painting ! love your style.

Love the colours in this and the semi abstract feel it has. Like Beatrice says, I like your style. Thanks also for your comments on my pastel.. Decided against putting it in the auction and have donated an acrylic/oil one instead. Easier to post !! Lets hope they all bring in lots of cash especially after Beatrices hard work.

I can almost smell the bluebells a lovely colourful painting.

Beautiful Sylvia...I missed this one...this view brings back many memories for me in my hey day...glad the canvas found a painting

Hang on Studio Wall
31/03/2015
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696 views

I had a canvas that did not want to be painted... so I eventually managed this bluebell wood, it is taken from a water colour painting I did in situ last April, I sat in the woods and just so enjoyed that miraculous perfume. This is an acrylic.

About the Artist
Sylvia Evans

Sylvia Evans. I am mainly a self taught artist, though I did spend a year at Rochdale School of Art in the late 1950’s. I was then made to get a “Proper Job” by my father, so I spent the next few years in a nursing career. I married and had a family, just picking up a pencil to amuse my…

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