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
Peace begins with me
14 03 2010Already the middle of March and approaching the equinox! Good fortune has indeed gathered at the front door since the lunar year began.
My fortunes include a potential gallery venue to show my paintings this year, freelance copy editing and proofreading income, and an extra green trash can from a neighbor for our garden trimmings, just when I wished for them!
I checked in with Oprah and enjoyed a couple of her interviews with Thich Nhat Hanh that you might like too. Here are the links:
oprah.com/spirit/Oprah-Talks-To-Thich-Nhat-Hanh
oprah.com/spirit/A-Conversation-with-Thich-Nhat-Hanh-About-Savor
What else is new in this light?
I am reading Jamling Tenzing Norgay’s book Touching My Father’s Soul, on loan from another good neighbor who has trekked in Nepal. He promises I’ll like it — the book (agreed) and the trekking (if only . . . now that’s what I call a goal!). You may click on the title to read some reviews.
Our granddaughter, who comes to the studio several times a week now when her parents are away at work, turned 10 months, and she’s so tickled to walk on her own. Look out, world! I find myself reflecting on my toddlerhood — yes, I can remember all they way back to then — and appreciate all the more the extended family, uncle, aunt, and neighbors, who took care of me.
Which brings to mind a new meditation I’m doing. It’s called “Installing Inner Game” by Devon White. You may check it out at this website: www.gogratitude.org/devon. It requires T-O-T, time on task. So far I have listened to the 70-minute audio message and read the manual one time each. Although I’ve just started this program, my guess is that it helps take you all the way back to who you were in the beginning, as well as all the way forward in terms of becoming and being at your best to fulfill your life’s purpose. How cool is that?! We all need healing every day.
So not only good fortune, but peace at the front door as well. Thank you!
Here’s a painting of tropical Hawaiian ti plants I finished on location this week, just as a sudden downpour drenched everything and left me in a puddle.
Copyright 2010 Rebekah Luke
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Tags: Koolau, Koolau Mountains, meditation, painting, peace, spiritual journey, ti, ti leaves
Categories : About me, Fine Art, Hawaiian
Flying moths over Kaneohe Bay
28 02 2010winds meet odd-looking sailboats
Kaneohe Bay Up on hydrofoils
small fast single-handed craft
skate on calm water Iridescent wings
of high-tech mylar sailcloth
look and fly like moths
Stressed out? Take a few moments to view, hear, and feel what it’s like on Kaneohe Bay in the shadow of the Ko‘olau mountain range on a partly cloudy afternoon.
Taking time to relax and being mindful of the present is healing. Though some moments are anxious, as when awaiting a tsunami (yesterday) or faced with other disaster, it does a body good to rest and renew one’s spirit. Paint a canvas. Give and receive Reiki. Or go sailing! Last Saturday Ken and Georgia called with a kind invitation to see the moths on the bay, so we abandoned other plans and went!
We had fun making the movie. Turn up the speaker volume of your computer and enjoy!
Copyright 2010 Rebekah Luke
Comments : 4 Comments »
Tags: Hawaiian, healing, Kaneohe Bay, Koolau Mountains, Koolau Range, Moth sailboat, Oahu, sailing in Hawaii
Categories : Friends & Family, Hawaiian, Poem
View of the Koolau Range and the sea
23 11 2009
Another view of the gorgeous mountains of the Koolau Range on Oahu is off my easel and waiting for its protective varnish coat and frame. I’m so thrilled that it’s finished, I want to show it to you.
On Sunday we found some time to relax. Here’s a familiar scene of repose at the beach: DH and Alice Brown by the sea.
Copyright 2009 Rebekah Luke
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Tags: beach, Fine Art, Hawaiian, Koolau Mountains, Koolau Range, Oahu, oil painting, seaside
Categories : About me, Fine Art, Friends & Family, Hawaiian
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.
Comments : 2 Comments »
Tags: art, art lesson, Big Island, Hawaii, Koolau Mountains, oil painting, painting, vog, volcano
Categories : Fine Art, Hawaiian, Travel
Artist sketches in oil
30 09 2009
Looking Down Upon the Path - 5"x7" oil on canvas

Blue Koolau Mountains - 5"x7" Oil on Canvas
Copyright 2009 Rebekah Luke
Comments : 1 Comment »
Tags: Fine Art, Hoomaluhia, Koolau Mountains, Luluku, oil painting, Travel
Categories : Fine Art, Hawaiian, Travel





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