Friday, April 07, 2006


Luxembourg Gardens early April 2006 Laurie Fox PESSEMIER acrylic on linen painted en plein air 25.5 x 23.5 inches SOLD
copyright Pessemier 2006

Camelias on a yellow background Laurie Fox PESSEMIER 16 x 16 inches SOLD
copyright Pessemier 2006

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

In the cold in-and-out sunshine, I painted en plein air in the Luxembourg Gardens. I was trying to paint from the same spot as John Singer Sargent, but a cherry tree at the end of the alley caught my eye.

Cherry Tree in the Luxembourg Gardens Laurie Fox PESSEMIER acrylic on lnen 8.5 x 13.5 $100.00
copyright Pessemier 2006

Monday, April 03, 2006


Bridge house in Vernon, France M. Blair PESSEMIER oil on linen 18.5 x 15 inches $250.00
copyright Pessemier 2006

Bridge house in Vernon, France Laurie Fox PESSEMIER Acrylic on canvas 8.5 x 13 inches $150.00
copyright Pessemier 2006

Red faced goose Laurie Fox PESSEMIER acrylic on wood 9 x 12 inches $75.00
copyright Pessemier 2006
Blair and I have the use of a car this week, so this morning we hopped into the Ford KA and took off to paint. We'd been north of Paris this weekend, but didn't make it as far as the bridge at Vernon. Today we made that our destination.
After one false stop (things look mighty good from the highway), we made it to the Seine at Vernon. It was rather brisk out, with intermittent sun. We found a picnic table to paint from, this being a destination scene. A half a dozen ducks waddled over to check our basket (empty). There was an unusual goose sort of bird sitting in the grass, so I warmed up with a sketch on winebox. Blair jumped right in on the house on the bridge, and after 20 minutes with the bird, so did I.
Artnotes: This or THIS?

"Why does everyone in Paris have such a sour expression?" a friend, visiting from America asks. On the way to the airport to meet my friend, I had been thinking exactly the same thing. So, I put a pleasant thought in my head and a pleasant expression on my face. The man sitting across from me on the train thought the smile was for him, and tried to seduce me, with his eyes, for the rest of the voyage. I laughed right out loud after he left the train.

No matter how long I stay in France, there is always something new to learn, to discover. A new word or expression pops up every other day.

We took our friends, S and K, for a mini-tour of Northwestern France. Normandy D-day beaches and cemeteries, Mont St Michel and in Brittany, Pont-Aven. We splashed in the icy waves of the Atlantic and visited the 800 megaliths from Druid times. Somehow the weather cooperated, or at least we didn't notice the rain.

This took our mind off a failed plan to interview for a job in Hong Kong. The last minute our prospective boss reneged on his offer to pay our passage; then he diminished the salary for the job. "He was just bottom fishing," a friend tells us. I withdrew to my octopus's garden.

We covered hundreds of highway miles on the trip, the French countryside unrolling in green sheets to the left and right of us. I prefer the highway to the secondary roads, where every other village has a commercial center, a study in ugly architecture, punctuated by advertising. This is a new, and continuing development, undoubtedly part of the recreational shopping craze that is sweeping the western world.

I set aside my worries this trip, and take heart in a number of painting sales of late (thank you!). I only start one painting on this trip, a view from the hotel window to the Virgin Mary beacon at Port-en-Bessin. The maid interrupts my devotion, and I finish the painting at home. I painted today's painting from memory.

Out the car window, I love the look of spring, before the trees have their leaves. The round clumps of mistletoe provide a polka dot background to forsythia and green fields. At Christmastime, enterprising individuals shoot the mistletoe from the trees and sell it at the markets. Today, daffodils burst from the earth. Horses run in their fields.

The north is never touted as the most beautiful part of France, but I beg to differ. Big waves crash onto the sandy Brittany beaches, unpeopled except for the high rise haven of La Baule, easily avoided. We go out to Port Maneche, where the oysters are gathered, and continue to the "big ocean". Scrambling along the rocks, the surf splashes up a good twelve feet, trying to douse us. The light peeks in and out, and I feel as if I am at the optometrist: "which looks better, this or THIS?"