Interiors

  • My paintings and drawings are the result of a wrestling match between me and the canvas. During this process I rework, erase, and even turn everything upside down to correct things, repaint and retry. One of the unexpected things that happens is that the lines and layers of the final image give it a history.…

    Okay, so here’s the Truth
  • A luminous figure appears — just in time for Valentine’s day! — and she reads a short, sweet poem to you as you watch her disappear

    Valentine’s Day House Ghost
  • Francesca

    A painting of a young woman, standing barefoot in an open doorway, offering a cup of coffee.

    Francesca
  • Cara

    Cara is Italian for beloved. What do you say to your beloved when you see her pausing in the doorway, her cup poised just above the saucer midway to her lips, barefoot, and enchanting? Do you say, “Hey!” Or do you just stand there, gaping, speechless, arrested by her charm? I’m more of the “Hey!”…

    Cara
  • Peering Out

    A young woman in a vast castle peers out of an open doorway

    Peering Out
  • Bonnard’s Ghost

    A figure flits from room to room.

    Bonnard’s Ghost
  • The Art of Happiness

    One of the quintessential tools for the visual artist is the easel. It is the structure that holds up the canvas while it morphs from stark and blank to refulgent with symbolism, meaning, technique, content, emotion, and — sometimes — healing. The light of inspiration floods the studio. The colors interact and “speak” to one…

    The Art of Happiness
  • This is what Henri Matisse might say.

    Today’s a good day for painting: Matisse’s Uptown Studio
  • What better way to tell you about Richard Diebenkorn than telling you a story through a painting? Diebenkorn’s “Ocean Park” series was completed during the 60s, 70s and 80s by this most illustrious artist. Composition is (arguably) everything in a two dimensional work of art and he demonstrated his mastery of it by arranging shapes,…

    Composition is everything: Ocean Park Studio
  • Red Door

    A red paneled door is shown slightly ajar in a blue and green casing with a decorative rounded header. The floor is impossibly vertical, but leads to the threshold. Enter if you want, but you may want to pause and consider. Or reconsider, as the case may be.  

    Red Door
  • The Tiny Door

    An open door can represent a new opportunity, a choice, a chance for a new beginning, or a passage to something different. When we “open the door” to new possibilities, we make a conscious decision to move from where we are to a different place. Sometimes we weigh the risk and decide not to go…

    The Tiny Door
  • A doorway opens into a room at odds with its own perspective. This is either A) a mystic portal to a magical new reality, B) a symbolic reference to the one of the first films ever made, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari or C) one of those times where the Laws of Nature are suspended…

    Portal to the 4th Dimension
  • Which do you choose today — Door Number One or Door Number Two? What would Zuzu do?

    The Legend of Zuzu’s Doors
  • The Muse’s Doors

    Two French doors are side by side in a mysterious room. One set of doors open into a room with a mysterious light. The other set of doors is closed. Through the windows of the closed doors the checkerboard pattern on the tiled floor continues into the background.   PURCHASE ON REDBUBBLE

    The Muse’s Doors
  • The Door to Venice

    The real entrance to Venice is, as you might have guessed, under water in the Adriatic Sea. Somehow you can see it clearly in spite of the murky ocean that surrounds the city. You just have to open your eyes. It’s one of those things where you just need to be in the right place…

    The Door to Venice
  • Two sets of French doors face you in the room. Which door will you choose? Take your time. There’s no rush.

    Dante’s Doors of Paradise
  • After crossing the river Styx, you’ll pay Charon, the ferryman, with the coin you hid under your tongue. You’ll pass the gates of the underworld, pat Cerberus on his massive head (you always had a way with dogs), and now you face the choice between Tartarus on the left and the Elysian Fields on the…

    Tartarus or Elysian Fields?
  • Franklin Street Studio

    An artist’s studio is rarely tidy. Usually it’s filled with paintings (and paint!) all over the walls, discarded sketches and paint brushes on the floor, color swatches, inspiration in the form of images ripped from magazines, anatomy books opened to the pages of those hard to draw body parts (like ears), cigarette butts, candy wrappers,…

    Franklin Street Studio
  • Valentine’s Studio

    This room where Valentine lived in the French Quarter was decadent with color. Having pinks, purples, and blues as your favorites, it was perhaps easier to just say, “My favorite color is stripes.” The doorway to the balcony offers a momentary respite from the sensory overload. But, to the room you will inevitably return. Also,…

    Valentine’s  Studio
  • A Glimpse of Hope

    You might think that a solitary chair in a corner of an otherwise empty room would be a symbol of loneliness. But it ain’t necessarily so! We can learn to treasure those quiet moments, enjoy solitude, dwell on a joyful thought, or just find a moment to draw a deep breath and release it slowly.…

    A Glimpse of Hope

Angels on Bikes is an online magazine featuring my art, some very unscientific experiments and a few stories that’ll make you go hmm?

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