Dog Portrait Painter Also a Talented Dancer

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What makes animal portrait painting different from human portraiture is that animals don't like to pose. Keeping the animal's attention from wavering is a total workout for an artist. One female artist from Wilmington specializes in this particular field. She is a descendant of the Delaware family so well known locally. She has a grandfather who is a painter famous for his collection of sea and landscape paintings. At the young age of 3, this female artist began painting as well.

Animals became the most frequent subjects she liked to draw. She displayed her work at her own one man show at the local library at age 12 and started illustrating books at age 12. She became acquainted with the different kinds of known through the help of famous Philadelphia teachers. She was an incredible dancer and danced solo performances, including one convincing death scene, for many years.

Painting portraits of dogs is what interests her most out of all the other animals she has made portraits of. The way she starts working on a dog's portrait sparks interest. As the dog's owner makes an effort to keep the dog from moving, she makes as many sketches as she possibly can.


The pencil seems to jump as she makes sketches on her sketchpad in an effort to find a pose that would best suit the dog. While she is doing this, she is talking to the dog, telling him he is beautiful and that he is a good dog. She uses props of all shapes and sizes to maintain the animal's interest. She gathers photos of the dog from the owner, and also asks the owner if it is possible to duplicate the pictures for her collection. She determines the colors to use by collecting snips of hair from the dog, one each from its tail, ears and tummy. She labels the snips with the dog's name.

She decides on a pose and a composition with the perfect background to use for the photograph. The type of dog or animal determines the latter. She stayed in a duck blind and made sketches just for the portrait of one Chesapeake Bay retriever.

She believes that animals have viewpoints regarding something, just like humans. Being a professional, one American pointer actually snuck up behind one painter and ripped apart her worst painting with his teeth. His reaction cost him a heavy dosage of medication, so it's justifiable if the painting was really bad.


On the back of the portraits of beagles of bassets, she puts the kennel club's identifying symbols, and for the scenery in the picture, she includes a paw print. She created backgrounds that were abstract with the help of her dog. Most of the time, animals don't agree. Portrait painting ended on one particular day when a model decided to run off with a female dog. It's normal, but it always seems something unusual happens during a portrait painting of an animal.

This site teaches you about cat portraits acrylic. A deeper insight relating to custom watercolor paintings from photos is found there.

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