Landscape Paintings

How A House Portrait Can Be a Portrait of Who Lives There, Too

A House Portrait With Heart & Soul

In pandemic times , all my portrait commissions are from photos supplied to me from the client. Although I work directly from these photos, I always strive to make the portrait more than that image sent me, that the spirit and character of the subject shines through brighter. 

Recently, I was commissioned to paint a portrait of a house as a surprise Christmas gift for the client’s spouse. The house was the spouse’s childhood home in the UK.   The client wondered if there was a way to show that the spouse’s father, who had recently passed, was at home, and working in his second floor office. 

I was moved by this thoughtful, loving idea of a portrait. 

The reference photo (i.e. the photo I was to work from) was in focus. I could clearly see the shape and colour of the brickwork and roof. 

But it taken on a very grey day, which subdued all colour and contrast. The windows and doorway were dark.

A garage and car that did not belong to the homeowners was predominant in the lower left of the photo. The planters were empty. 

It was a snapshot of a house but not the story of the home.

So how to make the painting more than simply a copy of the photo supplied? 

Portrait of a House ©Christine Montague 16” x 20” oil painting. House portrait from a supplied photograph

Creating a Mood

I have not lived near any of my family since my youth. I understand the emotion of returning home, what it is like to pull into the driveway of a well lit home, the knowledge of the people you love and who you know love you excitedly waiting inside. 

So how to insert this emotion into the painting? 

Plus also place emphasis on the centre window on the second floor which was the Father’s office? 

The simple solution to bring attention to the study window was to make the scene a night painting, and “turn on” the light in the room. 

I personally enjoy looking at night scenes paintings, but I was sensitive to the fact that the loss of the parent was too recent, and a dark scene , even in beautiful blues, could be perceived as too mournful. 

But by creating a sunset painting , I could still the house with lights on.

A sunset painting is overflowing with the symbolism of beauty, life, reflection, the end of the day, and the promise of tomorrow. 

What better sky for this portrait painting?! 

Introducing Colour 

Now that the scene was to be a sunset painting,  I could introduce a new warm palette of pinks, gold, and mauve to the image. Warm colours are inviting, appealing and bring energy to an artwork.

The bricks of the house, although in a brown considered on the warm side, were actually glazed over in a cool blue as the front of the house was basically backlit and in shadow. 

This  contrast of warm sky and cool house front added dimension to the painting and added emphasis to the lit up window.

Drawing You Eye to the Office Window


I used the brightest colours on the office window. The white was clean and bright and so was the yellow.

The bricks around the office window are lighter than elsewhere, the illusion light was escaping from the space.

On the left of the painting, I toned down the attached garage of the neighbour and and omitted their car.

I set the house a bit further back than it was in the photo so that the viewer could follow the path up to the house. 

The other windows of the house reflect the sky and  create a frame for the office window.

The darkness on the pathway rail takes the viewer’s eye to the hanging flowers on the right of the door and jump up the line of the darkest bricks up to the office windows.

Portraits are about Likeness, Love, Memory and Tribute

And I think this portrait of a house fits these parameters. But much more importantly, the recipient did, too. 

The British philosopher Sir Bernard Williams said  “It is almost impossible to watch a sunset and not dream”. 

How true for us all. I am very grateful to the clients that they entrusted me with this poignant portrait .

Polar Bear Rock

Polar bears rock ! Yes, polar bears are awesome, but there's another way they "rock", too.

In the fall , the polar bear finds its way to the sea’s shore to wait for the ice to form. It has been months since it has feasted on it vital source of nutrition - the ringed seal. And it needs the frozen sea in order to catch this seal, travel, mate, and shelter.

Polar bears are excellent at conserving their energy. They enjoy a nap amongst, (or on) the rocks and willows. It is easy from afar to mistake a still, motley white and cream polar bear for one of the big rocks in the landscape.

In my latest polar bear painting, A Polar Rock Waiting Beneath the Northern Lights, a graphically painted landscape, I strive to bring you into the magic and otherworldliness of the north. It is a world as filled with wonder and danger, beauty and vulnerability, found in any storybook tale.

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30" x 40"x 1.5" oil painting. Edges are black. Wired, ready to hang.

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Regular price is $2500 CAD. However, until Feb 28th, 2021 enter POLARBEAR21 to receive 10% discount in celebration of International Polar Bear Day. Free shipping in Canada

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10 Canadian Landscape Artists

I was a guest artist for a beginner's class where the students were learning landscape painting in acrylics and water-soluble oils.  I thought they would enjoy a quick look at some of our present day Canadian landscape painters and at the variety of landscape painting available.  I thought you might enjoy these artists and their work, too. Do you have a landscape artist you love? Let me know and I will create a new list withe the results.

Centre of Attention. Scottsdale Farm, Halton Hill, Ontario, Canada. Private collection. Oil painting copyright Christine Montague

Centre of Attention. Scottsdale Farm, Halton Hill, Ontario, Canada. Private collection. Oil painting copyright Christine Montague

  1. KIm Dorland Toronto, Ontario. Canadian Art writes "Synonymous in Canada with the idea of “extreme painting,” Kim Dorland rose to the forefront of the contemporary painting scene with his sculptural approach to impasto painting and his art is very much in demand.
  2. David LidbetterOttawa, Ontario.  "Contemporary feeling Group of Seven scenes pared down to their essentials. [Where] mood seems more important than the actual details of forests, rivers and skies." - Algonquin Art Centre
  3. John HartmanPenetanguishene, Ontario. Vivid, large-scale landscapes "straddle the line between abstraction and representation" -Studio 21
  4. Gregory HardySaskatoonSaskatchewan. Landscapes abstracted. Strong colour, bold, painterly. One of Canada's top landscape artists.
  5. Rebecca LastRice Lake, Ontario.  Of interest, Rebacca paints the same view of Rice Lake exploring its "turbulent chaotic swings of nature".
  6. Cesan d'Ornellas LevineRichmond Hill, Ontario. Cesan is an abstract expressionist painter who uses brilliant colour and thick impasto of acrylic gels, mediums, pastes etc. for her trees and topography on panel. Landscape painting is not Cesan's only subject matter.
  7. Georgina HuntCrescent Beach, B.C. Canadian wilderness, particularly the Rockies
  8. Gerald SquiresSt. John's,Newfoundland. A member of the Order of Canada for his contribution to the Arts
  9. Doug PurdonToronto, Ontario.Proficient in watercolour, acrylic and oil painting, and a Winsor & Newton rep for many years, this artist is a fountain of information.
  10. Robert GennVancouver, B.C. A prolific and popular painter who travelled the world painting en plein air (as well as the studio) and writing about the experience for Painters Keys. Painters Keys is a website Robert created to offer information, inspiration, advice, friendship and connectivity for artists worldwide. Robert Genn passed away in May 2014. His art and free Painters Key Newletter continues to managed by his daughter, Sara Genn.