• Exhibit and promote your art
  • Get feedback through votes and comments
46 comments, 29 votes Average Rating 5 stars       Join to vote for this picture.   « Previous    Next »
Purple Finch by Ronald H. Peat

Purple Finch

Acrylic on canvas
Painting size: 33in. X 57in.
A purple finch is about 3.5"- 4" tall
They stay all year and we feed them seed. They are beautiful little birds
simply beautiful rendering. love the background and bird. 5*****
5 months ago
Oldivad
thank you for the comment. I've been working on it off and on for several months. It wasn't the painting that took so long; it was all the interruptions that kept me from painting.

an artist freind
RH Peat
5 months
Sure is a beautiful little bird Ronald,Man! you have a lot of patience...5* warm regards.Hazel
5 months
Hazel thanx for the comment. It took some time to paint because of many interruptions to the process. I painted a large deck and barn while I was working on the painting. So it took some time because of a lot of interruptions.

an artist freind
RH Peat
5 months
Hi, I'm the administrator for the group Birds.The feathered variety.
, and I'd love you to add this picture to the group. (accepted)
5 months
Thank you for the offer.
an artist friend
RH Peat
5 months
Your purple finch painting is ful of nice details. Great work and a beautiful bird you have shown us.
5 months
Thank you Eva. They stay around all year. I don't see much of them in the winter, but during summer they are constantly at the feeder. I had a lot of interruptions on this painting so it took several months.

an artist friend
RH Peat
5 months
Superb work Man, I like your style!
Respect, M.
5 months
Michael// thanx for the comment.
5 months
The patience required to create some of your stuff is incredible. The little tonal changes in the the background are striking but subtle...good job
5 months
Rod// thanx for the comments. And a special thanx for looking at the subtleties of the work. Just like any painting it takes time: sometimes in thought, sometimes in actions. Sometimes I spend as much time looking at what I have as actually painting, trying to decide what to do next. So the layers are built up right. It took me some time to get that slight aura around the bird right in the background. It was quite troublesome to get the color just right.

an artist friend
RH Peat
5 months
Your style is truly unique, I could get lost for hours in the patterns!!! 5*****
4 months
C.S. thanx for the comments. My wife says the same thing. They even change a lot as the sun goes up and down as well. She's always talking about the effects.
An artist friend
RH Peat
4 months
I guess the picture doesn't do it proper justice, it must look really cool with some light reflecting off it!
4 months
LOve your choice of colour, and conceptual vision, to create such painting. Brilliant !
4 months
Charleen; I guess I overlooked your post. I just got back from a long vacation and started looking over my comments. Thanx a lot for the comments. I work hard on the color combinations. Sometimes the color change is very subtle but it doesn't look it at all.

an artist friend//
RH Peat
1 month
Charleen
thanx for the comments. The color is the trickiest part about what I'm doing. A lot of optical coloration is happening.

an artist friend
RH Peat
4 months
Very complex. I would 'think' the color would be the easiest part of what you're doing! LOL!
Lori
4 months
Thanx Lori
it's all fun or I wouldn't be doing it. There is always another thing to try within the mess of things. I love to paint.

an artist friend
4 months
Again a wonderful painting my friend Roland.
Great tecnic!
Fantastic Purple Finch!
I like the red bird..:-)
Excellent work .
Kind regards, Robert
4 months
Robert
thanx so much for the comments. The little red bird needs to attack my cat, who likes to hunt them.

The bird that size would be the cat's worst nightmare.

an artist friend
RH Peat
4 months
Hi, Ronald, wow this was not what I expected from what I saw of the thumbnail... I love the background and your technique with the grid is unusual but wow effective. This must have taken you a month of Sundays to do... There is just so much fine detail in it. 5huge stars from me... :)))
4 months
Kerry/ Thanx for the comments. I do have fun making dots, lines and squares all over the place. The aura gave me a bit of trouble. But I finally managed to pull it off. The painting took a long time because of a 3 months of interruptions. Every time I turned around it was something else happening. It spent more time just setting, than it did getting painted on. Maybe it paid off in the long run. I do like it a lot.

an artist friend//RH Peat
3 months
Hi Ronald still like your style. you have a lot of paitence with your work.
3 months
Thanx Mac, I do work at it. When it's appreciated it does make you feel good too. It helps keep the energy flowing. I had an open studio this last weekend and managed to sell a couple of prints and a few pieces of ceramics. It's nice to get the rewards as well.
3 months
Dear Ronald. An outstanding and very interesting piece of art. Your technique is very very special! And since you do it so well, your painting of a red parrot, becomes very interesting. SUPER.
My present prjoct is done with small, cheap, readymade canvasses of 10 cm x 10 cm. Take care and hang on.
Martin,
3 months
Thanx for the comment martin. I've been away for awhile. I just got back the other day. It takes a lot of energy when I paint. But probably not as much as some of your things. Later
An artist friend
RH Peat
1 month
wow! this is paint? I thought it looked like a complicated tapestry...great work xx
3 months
Thanx Jules
Yeah I get that a lot. fabric, wallpaper, tapestry, skin cancer, banana peels. A little of everything and ginger ale besides.
an artist friend
RH Peat
3 months
Absolutely fantastic work of art! I really admire your use of the grid system, for systematically arranging the pattern. This is really amazing work, so intricate, designed, colourful, and effective. 5***** Regards Angela
3 months
Susan
thanx for the comments. I've been experimenting with the tessellations and fractals for over 35 years now.
an artist friend
RH Peat
3 months
beautiful little bird very interesting technique
3 months
Loretta
thanx for the comments. The little bird is a purple finch, but it is very red looking. they are only about 4 inches tall. They feed on our bird feeder all year round.
an artist friend
RH Peat
3 months
5* very nice decorative work
3 months
Tedy thanx for the comments. I'm after the vibrations that patterns create. It creates an effect in the space in front of the painting which causes he image to shimmer differently in different kinds of lighting.
an artist friend
RH Peat
3 months
great style,great work on those details
3 months
Daniel
Thanx for the comments. I work at it. But it is also fun for me. I like the labor so it doesn't seem so hard. An artist friend
RH Peat
3 months
You created fantastic effects in this piece. I really like this a lot :)
3 months
thanx for the comments Chrisann
3 months
Hi, I'm the administrator for the group For the Love of Green!
, and I'd love you to add this picture to the group. (accepted)
2 months
Thank you for thinking about my purple finch at the bird feeder in the oaks.
an artist friend
RH Peat
1 month
Nice bird. How do you do all that detail. Pretty colors.
2 months
The purple finch at the feeder in the oaks. one brush stroke at a time. :-) It's built up in many layers. I've been doing so long it just starts happening. It kind of goes in busts of energy. Gradually building up the surface. The more layering the more complicated it gets. There's usually 5-6 layers of patterns.

an artist friend
RH Peat
1 month
perfect
1 month
What a unique technique - I love it. You do a great job with all of that detail. Very impressive. Blessings to you.
1 month
Add your comment    hide  formatting  help
This picture is a member of these groups and sets
514 pictures, 224 members
1483 pictures, 673 members
Related by tags
Average rating 5 stars
6 votes
4 comments
Average rating 5 stars
3 votes
3 comments
Artist Statement
for Ronald H. Peat
Ronald H. PeatARTIST’S STATEMENT

I started exploring grid-patterns about 25 years ago to regulate my interest in patterned imagery. The grids allowed shifting patterns to move through the imagery. At one time the pattern was contained by the imagery. Gradually the patterns overtook the imagery. Now the imagery is contained by the dispersion of patterns into an orchestration of color and line.

In my exploration of grids, I have experimented with three dimensional grids and images as well as the grid being used as a scaffolding for various types of integrated perceptions. I like to think of my painted patterns structured through images as perceptualism. What is my concept of perceptualism? To begin with, I see the world at large is made up of layers of patterns. The spiral, the meander, the helix, the branching, the intersecting, are forms in the natural process from which all life-patterns arise on a scaffold. It is evident within the soil, water, air, solids, liquids, and gas. These patterns are endless in variation in how they intersect, overlap, and intertwine throughout one-another.

Perceptualism is my study of overlapping, intersecting and intertwining perceptions. It is about NETWORKING: an interdependence of the total parts regardless of their particular function. It is about SYSTEM: a dependence of a group of parts upon one another to bring about a certain end or function for a greater body. My use of the grid establishes a process which climates objects to an overall pattern within an environment. It establishes multiple systems and networks that are superimposed and overlapped to create a unique image. Perceptualism is the assimilation of many types of sensations simultaneously. It is perceiving, discerning, and knowing by the power of awareness, consciousness, and acquaintance; an immediate or intuitive cognition or judgment of the existent.

Specifically, I have forced three dimensions into two at times. I have used perceptualism to disperse repeating formations by color, shape, form, line, groupings. I am particularly interested in patterns that make other patterns which make still larger patterns through the overlapping, intersecting, and entwining processes. I have explored the hypnotic effect of patterns and the way it causes REMs in the waking state, which is something that normally appears within the dream state. I have presented imagery to dream upon within the hypnotic effect of patterns. As a physicist once said; “Mass tells space how to warp, and space tells mass how to move.” There is also a shift in scale by how the image is shattered by the dispersive principles of the grid. So bigger things can seem smaller, and smaller things can look bigger, depending on the division of scale. Through the use of breakup, something might be blown-up, yet retain its natural scale.

R.H. Peat
Recent Group Activity  
was added to the group
Pin-up Girls
was added to the group
pil artists
Loading