Aloha! Today I picked up two paintings from the framer. You’ve seen them before in previous posts, but now the canvases are dry and the frames finish them off nicely. I chose a classic linen liner and koa for “The Rope Swing” and a simple antique silver-colored frame for “View of the Koolau Mountains.” If you wish to invest in any of my paintings—these are originals—I can work out a payment schedule with you. Please click on PAINTINGS tab in the menu bar. I would love for you to see them in person. Just contact me for an appointment. Thank you for visiting my gallery and studio! Rebekah
Ready for buyers
18 03 2010Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: art, Fine Art, Kaaawa, Koolau Mountains, oil painting, painting
Categories : Fine Art, Hawaiian
Good fortune gathers at our door
18 02 2010The Lunar New Year of the Tiger began on Valentine’s Day. That Sunday I spent a joyful time with some girl friends — eating Chinese jai, noodles, and dim sum from the cart; and exchanging Valentine surprises.
During the lunch my Reiki teacher Lori placed her hand on my back for the most awesome Reiki healing I have ever experienced — a strong warm vibrating energy. When the vibration stopped, the channeling ended, it was enough.
I feel well! Pretty amazing.
It was opening day for the sailing season at the yacht club, so afterward I went down to watch the festivities. The race had started, by handicap rating, and DH was crewing on the yacht Mariah. When I got to the starting line at the bulkhead, the boat had not yet cast off, and lucky me, I was invited to climb aboard for a ride. It was a beautiful afternoon on Kaneohe Bay, and owner Ken skippered Mariah to a first-place win!
Then DH and I drove over the pali to share dinner with our extended family, including David and Cherie from Anchorage, Alaska. David, retired and my contemporary, and his wife Cherie, who still works but apparently can do it from anywhere as long as she has her computer and her cell phone, are crisscrossing the country to check in on their adult kids, grandkids, and help their aging parents. As experienced travelers, they planned to drive through the winter snow and not hassle with airlines for their next travel leg on the continent. (Visions of our December travel delays!)
A cute card arrived in the mail from Seattle — an original brush painting of a smiling tiger’s face by artist-poet Alan Chong Lau with a wish from him and his wife Kazuko for a Happy New Year of the Tiger! Since becoming China travel mates in 2005 we’ve received a drawing of the zodiac animal each new year. Every time I look at this year’s smiling tiger, I smile back!
My neighbor across the street and up the hill, Thomas, teaches kung fu. Yesterday while I was watering the orchids, he stopped in his truck and asked how my tai chi practice was going. Obviously passionate about tai chi, he got out of the truck in the middle of the road to explain the whys and to show the hows of some postures. I was so grateful to learn a bit more about the life energy.
I feel I’ve had such good fortune these first few days of the new year. May all good fortune gather at your front door too.
Copyright 2010 Rebekah Luke
To read more about Reiki, click on Reiki Healing by Oelen in the menu bar.
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Tags: art, Chinese fortune, energy work, new year, Reiki, tai chi, thankfulness
Categories : Friends & Family, Reiki Healing
Vog: an art lesson
29 10 2009It’s voggy in the landscape today. I saw it when I drove from Kaaawa to Kaneohe.

The Koolau Mountains in vog, about 10:15 a.m. today. Notice the ridges appear in three tints of gray.
What’s vog? Vog is the less-than-clear air that we have when the kona winds from the southeast blow the emissions from the volcano up the island chain toward the northwest. It’s like the words fog and smog. It hangs around until the regular trade winds return.
Vog is worst on Hawaii island, a.k.a the Big Island, home of the eruption. The falling ash deteriorates homes and crops, and the smokey air makes it hard to breathe. It reminds me of when I arrived at art school in Pasadena (Los Angeles) one August and was told as I gazed out the floor-to-ceiling windows, “The mountains are right there in our backyard, and they’re beautiful, but it’s so smoggy, we can’t see them.”
One good thing about the atmosphere as today’s vog, though, is that it serves to explain how to paint distance. Generally, objects in the foreground have the darkest value, and as objects recede into the middle-ground and background, they become lighter in value. As one’s eye moves back into space, the values become lighter.
On an ordinary sunny day, the kind that prompts us to say, “It’s just another beautiful day in Hawaii!” the Koolau Mountains are clear and colorful enough to see the individual trees on them. To represent such a scene with paint and for it to “read” properly, we consider the logic of light and either lighten and/or mute the colors in the background, even though we don’t see them that way with our eyes. But on a day like today, you absolutely can see it.
If you have ever seen the Blue Ridge Mountains in Appalachia, or photos of them, it’s the same thing.

Nuuanu Pali Lookout (center of photo) viewed from Luluku, about 10:30 a.m. today
This morning my destination was Hoomaluhia Botanical Garden at Luluku at the foot of the mountains where I go to paint. Here is a photo of the Nuuanu Pali pass viewed from Luluku. Ordinarily the cars on the highway and the people at the lookout are visible.
Notice that both photos appear blue, or blue-gray. My own eyes did not see the scene this way because I am used to seeing the scene in full color (the whole spectrum), and my brain translated it into full color. But, as the saying goes, the camera doesn’t lie. Blue is the color of atmosphere.
Now, knowing about values (shades of gray) as they relate to distance, and knowing about the color of atmosphere, you can represent distance in a painting by muting and lightening the colors of objects as they recede.
If you forget to do this initially in an oil painting, there is a glazing technique you can use, but only after the paint is dry. Take a dollop of painting medium with your palette knife and mix it with a tint of blue pigment (e.g., white + ultramarine + cobalt). Have a clean, soft cloth handy. Brush the glaze over the part of the painting that you want to lighten. Then, working quickly (because glaze dries fast), wipe off with the cloth little by little, if you wish, to get the effect you want. Ta-dah!
The values underneath that you painted originally will stay the same, that is, the relationships among the values will remain. You are simply putting in the atmosphere with your tinted glaze.
Don’t worry if the glaze gets beyond the area you want. Just go back and paint over it. (We call that “destroy and recover.”)
Copyright 2009 Rebekah Luke
Thanks to Gloria Foss who taught me how to do this. To see my oils, click on PAINTINGS in the menu bar.
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Tags: art, art lesson, Big Island, Hawaii, Koolau Mountains, oil painting, painting, vog, volcano
Categories : Fine Art, Hawaiian, Travel
Why write? why paint? why heal?
15 10 2009Rebekah’s Studio features old-fashioned letters, paintings and healing. Why write? Why paint? Why heal?
In the current 42-day world gratitude experiment shepherded by Stacey Robyn, the meditation for Day 27 is “Writes of Passage.” The suggestion is to ponder, “Who am I grateful for?” and write a letter to thank this person without the pressure that it needs to be delivered (because it doesn’t).
Stacey Robyn notes that psychology professor Peterson of the University of Michigan gives students a homework assignment now and then of writing such a gratitude letter, a belated thank you note, if you will. The letter writing “provides long-lasting mood boosts to the writers.” The professor says his students feel happier one hundred percent of the time.
Lately I have been trying to locate a certain Alan who was a fan of my oil paintings when I first started exhibiting my work. He would see the announcements in the paper and show up at the openings. Passing by one day he saw me painting on location at Kaaawa Stream and pulled up along the side of the highway. He cheerfully called out the window, “Let me know when you’re finished with that one, I’d like to see it.”

The painting he admired
As it turns out, this was quite some years ago, and after a long pause in painting I pulled out the canvas just this spring and completed it. I remembered Alan and set out to contact him. It’s a wonder to me how I remembered his name—his first name, and then after a couple of days, his last name. No luck in the printed phone directory, and initially nothing familiar in various searches on the internet.
My research brought me to a blurb and photo from Hawaii Fishing News, reporting and depicting a fisherman with the same last name and looks who had caught a 100-plus-pound ulua fish in the summer of 1999 and who thanked Alan for his help. Being tenacious in my research, I contacted HFN who kindly gave me the fisherman’s phone number. I left call back messages twice, but no one rang back.
Still wanting to reach Alan, I took to searching the internet again. Last night I came across an esoteric article by T. Castanha, “Aia Na Ha’ina I Loko o Kakou (The Answers Lie Within Us),” concerning the “Boricua Migration to Hawai‘i and Meaning of Caribbean Indigenous Resistance, Survival and Presence on the Island of Boriken (Puerto Rico).”
The article is interesting to me for its insight on the situation of the indigenous peoples of Boriken and the Hawaiian Islands both. The paper was presented in Hilo at the 1999 World Indigenous Peoples’ Conference on Education.
More intriguing to me was that the author dedicated his presentation to his friend, brother and roommate, who recently passed on, the article stated, his friend who had the same name of the Alan I was looking for.
There, then, was the answer for me.
And here, now, is my gratitude letter to a faithful fan: Mahalo, Alan, for encouraging my art. Perhaps our paths will cross again.
Copyright 2009 Rebekah Luke
In a Reiki healing session, we thank our Reiki masters in spirit from the heart. Like writing a gratitude letter, Reiki can help one feel happier. For more information, click on Reiki Healing by Oelen in the menu bar.
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Tags: art, gratitude, Hawaiian, indigenous people, oil painting, painting, Reiki, thank you note, thankfulness, world gratitude
Categories : About me, Fine Art, Reiki Healing
Hokusai at the Honolulu Academy of Arts
24 09 2009
Honolulu Academy of Arts
It felt like all of Honolulu came to see the 36-plus views of Mount Fuji at the Honolulu Academy of Arts last night. More than 900 people stood in line to enter the opening of “Hokusai’s Summit: Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji” at our city’s art museum.
I skipped my tai chi class to meet my friend Becky at the corner of Victoria and Beretania, and at 7 o’clock the line extended around the block. Neither of us had eaten dinner, but it was so crowded that we opted to bypass the refreshments and headed for the gallery.

This special exhibition that will extend for several months from now and into 2010 offers the opportunity to study the work of Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849), who lived during the Edo period when a new art called ukiyo-e emerged. It is believed that he made 30,000 works of art and published more than 270 books. His life was dedicated to drawing.
The Honolulu Academy of Arts is known for its fine Asian collection, within which there are more than 10,000 Japanese woodblock prints. The collection includes a rare complete set of the famous Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji series by Hokusai. This is what the Academy of Arts has put on public display.
The exhibit is rounded out by items about the woodblock printing process, about Hokusai’s stylistic development, of Mount Fuji by the artist Hiroshige, and of Mount Fuji by other painters. Reading the “Visitors’ Guide” handout and the labels next to each piece of art when I have more time will give me a working knowledge of the subject for sure.
What impressed me last night was how woodblock printing lends itself to simplicity and a limited color ink palette, something I can try in my own work. Hokusai was so skilled in drawing, he could incorporate the detail of human activity that I found delightful and often amusing. And, of course, it was fun to see all the different treatments of Mount Fuji.
I also was very impressed by the turnout! In the crowd I bumped into my high school journalism teacher, former work associates, other artists and writers, my cousin, “the ants” (like ants at a picnic), and many whose faces I’ve seen around town but couldn’t place because of the different venue. When Becky and I were tired of rubbing shoulders, literally, we decided it was refreshment time: sake-tasting, fruity punch, cubed cheddar, cubed pepper jack, lavosh, and sweet gingery senbei crackers. Becky, who is a member of the Academy of Arts, said there are three or four major exhibitions a year and that the openings are popular events. You can say that again. Long live the arts!
Copyright 2009 Rebekah Luke
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Tags: art, Hokusai, Honolulu Academy of Arts, Mount Fuji, ukiyo-e
Categories : Fine Art, Travel
I wasn’t always a painter
26 08 2009First I threw up. Every week on the way home from class. I had to stop the car. Was it the paint thinner, not eating properly, or my nerves? Who knows?
I was enrolled in the Gloria Foss Color Course and was taking one vacation day per week from my university relations job because the class ran from 9 to 3 at Vicky Kula’s. Since coming home homesick from the rigorous Art Center College of Design photography program the second time I went to college (the first time was for journalism and music at UH), I vowed to keep my eye trained with continuing studio courses.
For starters, I picked Gloria’s. Gloria and I were both members of the National League of American Pen Women, Honolulu Branch. When I first met her, I was about 25 and working as a reporter. Her hair was already silver, and she was studying for her Master in Fine Arts degree so she could teach. She said she studied with a lot of art teachers and that if they had taught certain basic things in the beginning, it would have been a lot easier. So she designed her own course. I remembered that.
These were lessons in oil painting. Enrolling was a commitment. A luxury. Something I’d wished for. In elementary school and high school, back in the day, a choice had to be made between art and music. I always picked music. My mother was a piano teacher and my father was a truck driver. Art lessons weren’t cheap, and neither were art supplies.
Vicky Kula taught the basics in the studio, like values (the shades of gray from light to dark), how to turn the form based on the logic of light (light, middle tone, dark, reflective light) starting with the ball, cube, cylinder and cone while slowly introducing color. After awhile all of it will come together, she promised. Then Gloria took students into the landscape. Her mantra was: “Warm it in the light. Cool it in the shade.” I learned about “Tomato Theory” and “Umbrella Theory” and how to apply the “Grapes and Drapes” lesson in the studio to painting the forest and the Koolau Mountains.
One day Gloria announced she was cutting us loose. Peggy Chun in her crazy fearless way organized an exhibit and opening reception for us classmates at The Croissanterie on Merchant Street. And that was the first time I put it all out there.
Then came showing on the Honolulu Zoo Fence, and invitations from galleries to exhibit. Encouraged by customers liking my work enough to buy it, I kept at it. It’s the process of making art that’s important. You do have to keep at it, and every once in a while something wonderful happens. The trick is to remember the feeling to be able to do it again.
One morning I went over to Kaaawa Valley to paint Puu Ohulehule, a mountain so sacred that Hawaiians in ancient times did not say her name out loud. I did everything I was taught: “Paint what you see; paint what you know; paint what you feel.” After the last stroke, I was sure it was the last, I put my brush down and looked at my watch. It was only 8:15 a.m.
And I wasn’t throwing up any more.

Copyright 2009 Rebekah Luke
I’m fond of painting scenes of Kaaawa. To see more, click on PAINTINGS in the menu bar.
This photo juxtaposes the canvas “Kamehameha Highway and Kaaawa Place” on my easel with the actual landscape.
~ Rebekah
Thanks to my teachers Gloria and Vicky, to Peggy, and to my “Easel.”
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Tags: art, art lesson, art teacher, Fine Art, oil painting
Categories : Fine Art



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