Tom Semmes

Artist

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Semmes to Exhibit at New Masters Art Gallery in Rockville, MD

August 26, 2017

Recent artwork by Tom Semmes is on view at the New Masters Art Gallery. Also included in the exhibit   “Points of View” are artists  Ruth Marcus, Katherine R. Richards, and Karash Payne.
The exhibit runs from September 6 to September 23, 2017. The artists will be on hand at the opening reception on Friday, September 8, 6:00 – 9:00 pm. The gallery is located at in Artists & Makers II, 12276 Wilkins Ave, Rockville, MD 20852

Tom Semmes’ work is grounded in the traditions of representational painting but with a fresh awareness of the abstract qualities of shape and color. This current show features oil landscape paintings inspired by the rich culture and history of his current home of Frederick, MD. 

“The Visit”, 36″ x 12″, oil on canvas

Painting with Steven Assael

May 27, 2016

I recently took a workshop with Steven Assael, the renowned figure painter from New York City. The weekend program was offered at The Compass Atelier, an art instruction facility in Rockville, MD.

Steven Assael, a New York City native, is recognized nationally as one of the leading representational figurative artists of his generation. His portrayal of the human image is inspired by the classical tradition of painting and is based on a deep knowledge of anatomy and craft. His work is often compared to that of Rembrandt—empathic, ennobling, and psychologically penetrating.

The workshop started with a lecture and demo. While he showed images of his work, describing the sources and inspiration for the paintings, Mr. Assael spoke freely of what art means to him. I wish I had taken better notes, because most of it was quite interesting, quoting mythology and philosophy. The one quote I remember is “Art is Passion in the Service of Reason.” or words to that effect.

Steven Assael doing a demo portrait drawing.

Steven Assael doing a demo portrait drawing.

He followed the lecture with a portrait drawing demo. While one of the participants volunteered to sit for him. Mr. Assael proceeded to slowly work up the form using a variety of pencils, starting with marking light marks with a very hard pencil and moving to soft lead for the darker areas. It was quite mesmerizing to watch and the drawing slowly evolve. One thing I learned from watching was that the likeness is the last thing to appear. It was only until the last ten minutes of a drawing that took over an hour that it looked at all like its subject matter. He focused a long time on developing the shadow under the jaw and secondly the shadow of the nose.  Which makes sense since those are the largest shapes but my first instinct would have been to start with the eyes. The eyes however were last thing he worked on. He drew on a smooth bristol board which allowed for a very delicate touch. He often smoothed out areas by rubbing his thumb on it. Finally he used some oily pencil marker that created an intense flat black that was useful for hair and created a  striking contrast with the white paper.

I wondered afterwards what happens to the finished drawing. Would he give it to  the volunteer model if she asked for it? Given that his drawings sell in the thousands of dollars, it didn’t seem likely,  nor did it make sense that he would sell it along with his other work without the model’s permission. Since these questions were never asked we may never know.

The next day, the actual workshop, he started with a  painting demo, which I missed part of arriving late. There were two models hired for the two days. Each of them were lit with a colored light. Mr. Assael artwork often features figures that are  lit dramatically. One model dressed in a colorful outfit, sat by the window with a bright orange light grazing the side of her face. The other model, who did a standing nude pose, was lit by a green light.

My attempt at capturing a model lit by a green light

My attempt at capturing a model lit by a green light

We were asked to choose a model and start painting. I decided to start with the nude model. I recognized that to make the green light work, the shadows would contain its complement, red. I strived to find all the variations of green and red I could find. But after a while of staring at the model it was hard to figure out what color I was looking at. Was the brown backdrop lit by a green light, green or brown? And how was it different than skin tone that was lit by the same  green? After a while it all become blurry.

Steven Assael teaches mostly by example. He may give a few reminders that he addressed in his demo but soon after he grabs your paint brushes and goes to work, showing not telling. He went around in an orderly fashion and spent at least a quarter with each student in most cases reworking the canvas so much that the original painting was hardly recognizable.

Assael's revised version of my painting

Assael’s revised version of my painting

After working several hours on my painting, Mr. Assael stopped by my easel. He intensified the contrast between shadow and light, slapping a big hunk of burnt sienna on the shadow areas to darken them, and white and yellow on the highlights. He works incredible fast and fearlessly at first, throwing paint on with abandon but then delicately moving the paint around, usually with the tip of a fan brush or a mop brush. I was amazed with his accuracy too. He quickly corrected some slight errors in my anatomy; this comes I’m sure from a lifetime of drawing the figure. With a few deft strokes he hit all the right highlights on the figure making it look fully dimensional and actually lit from a green light.

At the end of the workshop, scores of Steven Assael’s reworked canvases graced our easels. But what to do with them? They are neither officially his or the student’s. How could they be displayed or ever offered for sale? I suppose mine will have to grace a corner of my studio, a reminder of a valuable workshop forever.

Now Teaching at Compass Atelier

February 27, 2016

At the beginning of this year, I started teaching art courses at The Compass Atelier in Rockville, MD. I have been studying at the Atelier in the Master Artists Program under the tutelage of Glen Kessler. It seems a logical next step in my artistic path to start teaching as well.

My focus in these courses is to first build the basic techniques that can work with any medium and style and then working from direct perception, being able to see colors and shapes accurately and learning how to represent these on the canvas. This instruction is  balanced with an understanding that there is no fixed way to see reality. Not only do lighting conditions change and subject matter moves, our eyes are constantly adjusting and even our moods can affect what we see. So it is finally up to the artist and his or her imagination to choose what they see. I hope is that these courses build the confidence for artists to make those choices.

Teaching art class at The Compass Atelier in Rockville, MD

In my recent class, Mastering Color, we worked with simple, brightly colored objects to understand how shifts in hue and value can create realistic form.

This spring I am offering three courses. I am continuing my Mastering Color course as well as the Introduction to Painting, and adding Still Life, Landscape, Figure. Click on the links below to find out more about each course and to register:

  • Mastering Color Saturdays, April 9–June 1, 10:30 am–1:00 pm
  • Still Life, Figure, Landscape Saturdays. April 9–June 1, 1:30 pm–4:00 pm
  • Introduction to Oil Painting Thursdays, April 14–June 9, 3:30 pm–6:00 pm

Corner Store

February 22, 2016

oil painting of urban landscape

A recent oil painting, 10″ x 10″ of the entrance to a shuttered store. I find the glimpses of the sunlit interior through the fading yellow paper fascinating, as if there is some secret world within.

Selected as New Member of The Artist’s Gallery in Frederick

February 12, 2016

exterior of TAG, Frederick, MDI recently applied for membership at TAG: The Artist’s Gallery in Frederick, MD. My application was unanimously accepted! TAG is an artist-owned organization established in 1990. It features high quality original art for sale in its monthly solo exhibitions by its 24 members, as well as ongoing group exhibitions.  This is an exciting step for me as an artist, allowing me both to exhibit my work and get to know the inner workings of an art gallery. I will always have at least one work on display. I will be scheduling a one-man show in a few months. The dates for that are to be determined.

Stop on by the gallery at 216 N. Market St, Frederick, MD, It is open Fridays and Saturdays, from 12:00–9:00 pm and Sundays, 12 :00–5:00 pm.

And don’t miss the March show called “Boxology”. The show is an annual tradition. Each member is given a small box and asked to “do something with it”. Some artists paint it, some deconstruct it into sculpture…the results are only limited by the artists’ imaginations. I will have a box in that show so stop by at the opening on First Saturday, March 5, 5:00 to 9:00 pm.

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Copyright © 2025 · Original Fine Art by Tom Semmes