Sublime Jazz

”Sublime

“Sublime Jazz”, 40″ x 26″, pigment print and acrylic on canvas, 2013

This painting was created as part of my creativeLIVE Intro to Photo Painting: A Creative Approach Using Corel Painter X3 workshop. My inspiration was a photograph (below) that I took of Gwenda and David dancing to the music of the Danny Brown Trio at Bruno’s Pizzeria Cucina on the Fillmore during the Fillmore Vintage Couture Ball. I love the way that Gwenda and David were lost in their own world as they moved to the sublime jazz… hence the title of the painting. Thanks to the Danny Brown Trio, Gwenda (of ArtAmbassador.net) and Dave for their unwitting inspiration!

”Jeremy
Original source photo

”Jeremy
Start of the digital painting on the set of creativeLIVE

”Jeremy
Post-print painting on the set of creativeLIVE

November 12, 2013

”Jeremy
David and Gwenda dancing in front of painting at the Verdi Club, San Francisco, March 2015

”Jeremy
David, Gwenda and I in front of painting at the Verdi Club, San Francisco, March 2015

Jazz Four

”Jazz
Series of four paintings as they were being painted in my studio, each 24″ x 36″, pigmented ink and acrylic on canvas

”Jazz
Framed and on the wall…

I call this series “Jazz Four”, even though strictly speaking it is “Jazz Two or Three + Blues One or Two”. The series of four portraits depicts legends Duke Ellington, Billie Holiday, Louis Armstrong and BB King. The series is being created for Dan, who selected the subjects and also the song themes for each subject: “It Don’t mean a Thing (If it Ain’t Got that Swing)” – Duke Ellington; “Strange Fruit” – Billie Holiday, “What a Wonderful World” – Louis Armstrong and “The Thrill is Gone” – BB King. In each case the words and sheet music for the song is woven into the composition. The portrait of Duke Ellington was inspired by a photograph taken by Reggie Jackson, the great uncle of my friend and amazing jazz singer, Kim Nalley, who kindly gave me permission for its use. Thank you Kim!

There is a story behind each portrait: the elegance and pride of Duke; the pain, pathos and beauty of Billie; the outer/inner conflict of Louis, playing a song about joy and yet looking pained and whilst being a State Department-sponsored Jazz Ambassador to the world facing such discrimination at home; and then BB’s unadulterated passion and joy as he sings the blues about the thrill being gone….Each one a complex tapestry of emotion that tugs at our own hearts.

”Jazz

October 2013

Repose: A Single Line Scribble

”Repose

19 3/4″ x 25 1/2″, brown sepia Faber-Castell pen on fine art paper

This drawing is a fifteen minute single line “scribble” life study of Daisy. For the duration of this pose I kept the pen moving on the paper in a scribble manner, adjusting the density of the scribble according to the relative lightness or darkness of the value or tone I observed. This is a great loosening up exercise both for your arm and body as well as for your line itself. I drew this standing up with the paper vertical on an easel and looking between the paper and the model, never stopping the movement of my hand on the paper.

”Repose

This drawing will be on display at my Fall Open Studios, Sunday, October 27 (11am – 6pm).

October 2013

Portrait of Joyce, for Danny

”Joyce

My good friend and super talented trombonist and singer, Danny Armstrong, asked me to create a portrait of his late wife Joyce from a photo he had. I asked him for some samples of her hand-writing to include in the painting, and he sent me images of some very touching notes she had written to him. I used all these, plus a photo I took of Danny playing at Club DeLuxe, and created this portrait. You can see Danny and I picking the framed painting up from the framers (below). Though I never got to meet Joyce in person, I felt like I got to know her a little bit during the process of painting this portrait. Danny plays with one of my favorite local swing bands, Lavay Smith and Her Red Hot Skillet Lickers. He has sat for his own portrait a couple of times. You can see one of them by clicking here.

”Joyce

October 2013

Looking Down Divis’

”Looking
Looking Down Divis’
2013, Pigment ink on canvas
40″ x 60″

This painting depicts the magnificent view looking down on the San Francisco Bay on a sunny afternoon the top of Pacific Heights. That afternoon Peggy and I drove down to the Marina to see the last race of the America’s Cup. With traffic we ended up seeing the only the top of the sails sailing away to the finish line! In the end what was most memorable was this incredible view looking back at the Bay on the way home. The painting was created freehand using Corel Painter X3 with a Wacom Intuos Pen Tablet and a couple of new custom brushes I had just made (Trail-off Bristle Brush and Camel Hair Bristle), and manifest physically as an archival pigment ink print on canvas. Having recently walked around the wonderful Diebenkorn exhibition at the de Young Museum a few times prior to painting this, plus my admiration of Matisse and the Fauves, influenced my choice of colors and composition.

I made two versions of this painting: a taller narrower version shown below and a shorter version shown above.

”Looking
Looking Down Divis’
2013, Pigment ink on canvas
44″ x 100″


This painting was displayed at my iPad painting performance at the opening of the “David Hockney: Bigger Exhibition” in the de Young Museum, October 2013

”Jeremy

”Looking

Annette & Hanson’s Wedding Day Collage

”Annette

Double Happiness

2012

Pigment ink and acrylic on canvas, 62″ x 20″

“Working with Jeremy was an absolute pleasure. His work is outstanding and his service and attention to detail was absolutely AMAZING. Hanson and Annette were blown away by the artwork that Jeremy framed and delivered to them. They said that they had never seen anything like it. We feel that working with Jeremy and gifting this to our great friend and mentor in the photography industry was the BEST gift we could ever give. If you want some thing over the top custom and fabulous Jeremy Sutton and his fabulous smile and master craftsmanship are definitely the way to go.”

Mary Fisk-Taylor, M. photog., Cr., CPP, ABI, API

Hayes & Fisk the Art of Photography

“Wow! That is very cool! That is different and unique. As a professional photographer I have seen a lot of things and I have never seen anything like that. I love the dance and the shuāngxǐ – Double Happiness. That’s absolutely gorgeous.”

Hanson Fong

I recently had the pleasure and honor of being commissioned by Mary and Jamie to create a very special wedding present, a Wedding Day Collage Painting, for their good friends, world-renowned wedding photographer and international instructor Hanson and Annette. The painting encompasses and captures the significant moments and symbols of their wedding day, including the beautiful and touching tea ceremony with their mothers, their wedding cake and flowers that Annette designed, the bamboo that Hanson arranged, the table settings of their family table no. 2, their first dance, and the Double Happiness Chinese character. It was a great joy to see the expression of surprise and pleasure on their faces when they first saw the painting! They loved it!

I shall be using this artwork as one of the examples in my new Painter Collage Techniques DVD.

”Jeremy
Jeremy, Annette and Hanson with painting just after the unveiling (photo by Peggy Gyulai)

”Hanson
Hanson and Annette enjoying the painting after hanging it on their wall

”The
The Tea Ceremony with their mothers

”Table
Table setting of the family table No. 2

”The
The shuāngxǐ or Double Happiness character symbolizes the joy and harmony of the wedding couple

Jeremy

January 25, 2013

“Endless Dance” Art Exhibition – A Tribute to the Golden Gate Bridge & The City by the Bay

Endless Dance: A Tribute to the Golden Gate Bridge & The City by the Bay is an exhibition of twenty five artworks, mostly paintings on canvas with a couple of works on paper, that are on exhibit at the Embarcadero Conference Center, on the P (Promenade) level of the Four Embarcadero Center building, San Francisco 94111 (see map). It is on the corner of Embarcadero Center and Drumm Street in the Financial District, next to the Hyatt and opposite the Ferry Building. There is a parking complex in Four Embarcadero. It is easy to get to via Muni, Bart, bus and tram. The regular Conference Center hours are from 8:00am – 5:00pm. If you’re in the area please stop by during these business hours. The Reception on March 21st went very well, with about sixty people attending and me giving a guided tour of the paintings, explaining some of the stories and background behind them. One of the special guests who attended was Elvy, the subject, with her late husband Guillermo, of the painting that lends it’s title, Endless Dance, to the show. The picture below shows Elvy and I standing in front of “Endless Dance”. Elvy is an artist herself (ElvyVera.com). The story behind Endless Dance is very special and is explained in Stephanie Wright Hession’s wonderful write up in the Chronicle.

”Elvy
Elvy and I in front of Endless Dance

”Reception

The artworks range from a 10′ x 7′ depiction of the Golden Gate Bridge created in celebration of it’s 75th birthday, to a series of portraits of Artistes who performed in the Cirque du Soleil TOTEM show, created as live performance art when I was painting in the Tapis Rouge VIP tent while they were in San Francisco. Every painting has a San Francisco connection. The title for the show, Endless Dance, reflects the diversity, artistic richness and dynamism of the city, an endless dance where iconic symbols like the Golden Gate Bridge set the backdrop for an incredible range of talented people, some who have lived here all their lives and some just passing through. This show reflects my interest in dance and you’ll find that as a recurrent theme in much of the work, spanning Lindy Hop Swing, Argentine Tango, Flamenco and Modern, all strongly represented in the city.

All the works in the exhibition are for sale. Please ask at the reception for a price list. Also don’t forget to ask to try out the 3D viewing glasses! You’ll be amazed at the 3D layering, movement and detail you’ll see in many of the artworks when viewed with the 3D glasses. Signed Gicleé fine art prints on heavy weight cotton rag paper (24″ x 20″) of any of the images you see in the show are available for $175 (plus tax and, if you wish, framing). If you are interested in purchasing any of the artworks, or a fine art print, or commissioning a painting, or would like to hire me to create live painting / portraits at a special event, then please email me.

Below are some photos of the reception and the exhibition:

”tiit
Tiit, Ingrid holding her new baby Elli, and I in front of San Francisco Heart

”Barbara,
Barbara, Elli, Ingrid and Lara in front of San Francisco Heart

”The
The Golden Gate Bridge and bridge inspired calligraphic works on paper

”tiit
Tina and friends in front of The Golden Gate Bridge

”Lights
Lights on Mid-Market and San Francisco Heart

”Looking
Looking at San Francisco Heart with 3D glasses (it is surprisingly interesting to do this!)

”Ingrid
Ingrid showing 3D details she has observed in San Francisco Heart to Jeremy

”Impassioned
Both depicting couples dancing Argentine Tango, Impassioned and Endless Dance, namesake for the exhibition

”Impassioned”
The Hyatt sign visible out of the window beyond Impassioned

”Swing
Swing Out and Cityshapes – Metal

”Swing
Yurong – Cirque du Soleil Unicyclist

”Jazz
Jazz Ambassadors and Cityshapes – Island

”Jazz
In front of a painting honoring the Jazz Ambassadors, jazz musicians sent around the world by the State Department to represent America in the ’50s and ’60s.

”Rick
Rick and His Buick Beauty and Summer Afternoon

January 24, 2013

Sketching Artworks from the Paley Collectionat the de Young Museum, San Francisco

”Sketch

This week I had the pleasure and inspiration of sketching beautiful artworks from The William S. Paley Collection: A Taste for Modernism at the de Young Museum, San Francisco. I’d like to share a few of my sketches with you, all drawn in a 9″ x 9″ Fabriano Artist’s Journal (see Studio Materials). I enjoyed sketching in the square format pages. The paper has a nice subtle grain.

I started off with a quick pencil sketch of Alberto Giacometti’s painting of his wife Annette, painted in 1950 a year after they married. I was fascinated with the way he left in all his construction lines, compresses the figure width-wise and picks away at the lines just like he does in his sculptures. The direct translation between Giacometti’s paintings and sculptures is remarkable, each seeming to echo the other, and both evoking a lot about the process. As I stood there drawing, another museum visitor was discussing the painting and used the words “struggle” and “ambiguity”. These words seemed very apt in describing the essence of the painting and what I strove to capture in my sketch.

”Sketch

The next painting that caught my eye for sketching was a colorful still life by Pierre Bonnard from 1939. At first glance it looked more like a Matisse than a Bonnard, replete with the vivid Fauvist choice of colors and color contrasts, the flattened perspective and strong pattern and abstract compositional elements. Bonnard and Matisse were close friends, both fascinating colorists. I used a limited set of Caran D’Ache Neocolor Aquarelle pastel sticks (also listed in Studio Materials) to make this sketch.

”Sketch

Turning to my left was a very different and much more muted Bonnard painting, a reclining nude from 1897. I loved the strong single contour of the figure that wound its way across the wide shallow canvas. I made a few quick pencil marks and tried to capture the quality of the lines as simply as I could.

”Sketch

As I walked into the next gallery in the exhibition right infront of me across the far wall of the gallery was a small but striking painting by Bonnard’s friend Henri Matisse, “Seated Woman with Vase of Amaryllis” (1941). I decided to start sketching this painting from half way across the gallery where I could only see the rough forms and no detail. I purposely left my glasses off so the picture was slightly out of focus. This allowed me to just work with the large abstract qualities of the composition before getting carried away with reproducing detail. After about twenty minutes I moved closer and then started working over my initial rough sketch with a little more detail.

”Sketch

Finally the guard announced the museum was closing. With just a couple of minutes left I sat myself in front of a large dramatic Pablo Picasso painting, “Boy Leading a Horse”, 1905-6. I then made a very fast two minute single line contour drawing (i.e. without lifting my pencil up). I always enjoy this exercise – a great discipline in intense observation combined with continuous movement on the paper.

”Sketch

”Sketch

I went back to the show on the last day of the exhibition and made a final sketch of André Derain’s Bridge over the Riou (1906). This magnificent Fauvist work was created just a year after the first Fauvist exhibition. Using the same Caran D’Ache crayons as earlier, I sat on the bench facing the painting and, between the crush of last-minute “catch the show just before it closes” visitors between me and the painting, I was able to catch enough glimpses of the painting to sketch. I looked at it as an abstract and didn’t worry about what the color strokes, dabs and shapes represented. I started with a bright red crayon, mapped out some basic forms and went from there. You can see in the two photos and short iPhone movie below the progression of the sketch. I found that later in the sketch I wished I’d left more empty space. It’s tough trying to add lighter color over darker when using pastels and crayons, better to recognize early on where you want the light values to stand out.

”Sketch

”Sketch

I hope you enjoy these quick sketches. Please feel free to email me a small jpg now and then of any gallery sketches you make. We can learn a lot from sketching paintings. I find sketching from an actual original artwork is a completely different quality of experience compared to sketching based on a photograph of the same artwork in a book.

Happy sketching!

Jeremy Sutton

December 28, 2012

Flamenco Fiesta at El Farol

”Flamenco

[Gallery] This painting depicts Flamenco dancers and musicians performing at the historic El Farol in Santa Fe, New Mexico. It is based on a series of photographs I took with kind permission of the fabulous performers while I was in Santa Fe teaching “Painting the Passion of Flamenco” at the Santa Fe Photographic Workshops. The colors, composition and approach used in this painting were inspired by John Singer Sargent’s magnificent El Jaleo and John Nieto’s vibrant fauvist works.

The lady dancing on the left of the painting is Giovanna Hinojosa. The dancers sitting down are Haley Licha and Rebekah Leyva. The singer is Gretchen Williams, and the guitarist is Mario Febres. They are all members of the dance company “Yjastros” which is part of the National Institute of Flamenco based in Albuquerque.

November 2012

My series of Flamenco-inspired artworks includes:
Duet in Red
Intertwined
Flamenco Flare!
Flamenco Fiesta at El Farol
Flamenco Jam