Painting

Home is where the heart is.

Mahina Rising | Prints Available

Home is where the heart is in my island seascapes

I love including a simple Hawaiian hut as an emblem of old Hawaii. For me the huts create an atmosphere of a time that has passed, or perhaps the viewer has stumbled onto a beach cove with a Hawaiian hale that has been untouched by Modern society.

My huts attempt to embody the harmonious natural lifestyle of the Hawaiian culture, highlighting well-used canoes, surf boards, or colorful funky bicycles. Sometimes I even put a table setting for two in the foreground, creating a romantic evening dinner. I always have the glowing yellow orange light coming from the hut, showing the warmth of the Island homestead. While dwarfed by the mountains, sky and sea, the hut is a reminder that we are part of nature. We are at home.

Wind & Waves | Prints Available

Night Shift | Prints Available

Paradise Island | Prints Available

Kimo's Ding Repair | Prints Available

Blue Moon | Prints Available

 

Mahalo๐ŸŒธCall Kim to select your hut painting live and in person.

Call for a gallery appointment, 808-757-8211.

The top-secrets of my painting process!

Lighting the spark

I usually get inspired by a trip, a place, a photo, or some sort of vision from another source. This particular painting was a commission for a dear collector who bought a new home on Hanalei Beach - Kauai.

After I choose my image (from my imagination or another source). Then I do a series of pencil thumbnail sketches. I work out the composition and simplify the shapes of my subject matter.

The next thing I do is pick out a white stretched canvas suitable for my subject matter. This particular moonrise over Bali Hai painting, is on a LARGE format canvas, 3 feet by 6 feet.

Using my thumbnail sketch as a guide, I create the image on a white canvas with vine (drawing charcoal).

After Iโ€™m happy with the sketch, I wipe it off with a rag, down to a simple ghost image of the drawing.

So after I have a successful composition and ghost image of my subject matter, I begin painting with my rich, pigmented oil paint brand called Sennelier (One of the best oil paints in the world, in my opinion).

Learn more about Sennelier paints here.

I usually start with a thin underlayer of the lighter, colored tones, I then outline some of the images to create a post-impressionist, feeling of blocking out the colors from one another

I work from top to bottom on most paintings, creating the atmospheric sky with the moon and the stars moving throughout the skyโ€™s heavens. I have developed a special technique to capture the unique experience of the lustrous night skies in Hawaii.

On this particular piece, I moved down to the mountains and put highlights on the ridges of the peaks

Then I embarked on the serene ocean with the moonlit water. I am excited because I just created a new technique for myself on this particular piece using a white layer of paint as the underpainting, the results were a more flowing comprehensive sense of water moving.

Last, but not least, I kept putting highlights and low lights throughout the painting, softening the stars and creating a glowing moonlit beach that would highlight the shoreline water.

Voila!! The painting is completed!

How do I know a painting is finished?

You just know. I can feel that it has captured what was in my imagination and hopefully evoking a lasting impression on the viewers.

Where is Bali Hai located?

Mount Makana served as Bali Hai in the movie "South Pacific." Tunnels Beach on Kauai's north shore is one of the island's finest beaches. It is the perfect setting for Mount Makena. It is one of the most scenic places in Hawaii, and has a special place in my heart.

I hope you enjoyed learning about my process and that it enhanced your appreciation of this beautiful iconic mountain range and gorgeous beach in my painting. ๐ŸŒธ

Good news for those of you who love this image! Limited edition prints will be available this summer 2024!

First Completed Painting from New Series Released

Kim is back from her whirlwind trip to Egypt (for fun!) and Paris (for work!) and hit the ground running upon touchdown back on Maui.  She's been painting non-stop for days, only taking breaks to eat, and occasionally get out of the home studio and remember why she lives in Hawaii! While in Paris, Kim visited many art galleries, including her favorite Museum d'Orsay, with her beloved Gauguin, Van Gogh, and Cezanne, but she was newly inspired by the lesser-known Emile Bernard, a contemporary of the above artists.

Here's what Kim had to say about Bernard's direct influence on her current series, entitled "Polynesian Tranquility".  "Bernard has pronounced use of blues and especially greens, there was so many varying shades of green!  My life right now is more organized and harmonious, with a nice, easy rhythm to it. I'm surrounded by a strong team of female employees, and I feel all of this is reflected in my new paintings.  Most of the paintings I'm working on have women lounging or casually talking, surrounded by gently flowing water, verdant hills, fruit and foliage, and all their basic needs are taken care of. Its kind of primal in that way.  It reflects a day in the life, for these Polynesian women."

Help Kim out by naming this first painting, and get a chance to win an artist's proof!  For details, visit Kim's Facebook page- Kim McDonald Art

'Polynesian Tranquility- Untitled #1' is currently available as an original oil on canvas, its 30" x 40" and $14,000.  Please call for inquiries.

Polynesian-Tranquility-Original-Kim-McDonald-30x40-1
Polynesian-Tranquility-Original-Kim-McDonald-30x40-1