This digital illustration was inspired by the coolest ladybug ever. Brent captured this image of a mammoth ladybug (biggest I'd ever seen) that was brick-red and spotless and resembled a V.W. Bug... Inspired, I added spots, a 7 then tossed in a winding country road for Lucky No. 7 to race down. He makes his own luck. A print is available on etsy, here.
Here's a before and after.
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Sorry, Buddy - New Painting by Derek Cadena
Last week I had another sleepless night. I was lying in bed thinking about driving around taking pictures of people doing what they do. Soon, I was up and dressed and driving by the corner gas station, the Bradley at 50th and Federal. It was around 5:50 A.M., and I knew that I could always count on a rich display of sketchy peeps on this block. I quickly took a few photos and went home to start painting. The painting is a familiar scene of a beggar and a rich man. If I have money in my pocket I usually hand it to people who ask for it. The "rich" man (who looks a lot like Ed McMahon) is obviously in a hurry and can't be bothered by the guy with the cart, which I have to say is the best shopping cart I've ever painted.
Sorry, Buddy and a few other new paintings will hang at The Market on Larimer Square for the month of September. If you're in Denver, go check it out, eat a sandwich, have a latte and enjoy some killer desserts while you decide which painting to buy. Make sure to have plenty of coin in your pocket for meters and nice people who need a little help.
Sorry, Buddy and a few other new paintings will hang at The Market on Larimer Square for the month of September. If you're in Denver, go check it out, eat a sandwich, have a latte and enjoy some killer desserts while you decide which painting to buy. Make sure to have plenty of coin in your pocket for meters and nice people who need a little help.
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Waiting For The 6 - by Cadena
Tuesday, around noon, I grabbed the Nikon and jumped in the car following an impulse to capture an anonymous figure to paint. Within 10 minutes I was back home drawing an image of a girl I had just photographed. It was a drive-by shot at the corner of 48th and Pecos. The startled girl glanced apprehensively at me as I "clicked" and drove on. She really had a Kung Fu grip on that bag, either she thought I wanted it or the number 6 bus is super shady.
That was SO much damn fun!
Waiting For The 6
That was SO much damn fun!
Waiting For The 6
Labels:
bus stop,
Denver,
denver artist,
derek cadena,
female figure,
oil painting
Monday, August 8, 2011
Sandbox Brigade and Race Day - by Derek Cadena
Here are two new pieces from my toy series. I love the green toy soldiers! I want to paint more of them... I sold the original Sandbox Brigade, along with Race Day, to a fantastic collector in Washington D.C. Thanks, Christopher!
Although these two originals have sold, prints are available in our Etsy store!
Although these two originals have sold, prints are available in our Etsy store!
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Roll Cap Cowboy - by Cadena
I've started a new series based on nostalgic toys and their packaging. Roll Cap Cowboy is the first finished piece.
I had one of these smelly snappy cap guns when I was a kid. I definitely remember the painful sparks shot into my eyes from way-too-close face to face duels with neighborhood kids. It's a wonder that we even survived, especially during the roman candle fights! Where the hell were our parents?
The original and mounted prints of Roll Cap Cowboy and others in this series are available in the 2LF Etsy store.
I had one of these smelly snappy cap guns when I was a kid. I definitely remember the painful sparks shot into my eyes from way-too-close face to face duels with neighborhood kids. It's a wonder that we even survived, especially during the roman candle fights! Where the hell were our parents?
The original and mounted prints of Roll Cap Cowboy and others in this series are available in the 2LF Etsy store.
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
2 Nude Back Studies by Cadena
Here are two new little 5x7 studies that I painted last week for a friend. Both figures ready to greet the day, the man sleepily pausing just before getting off the bed, and the women about to step into the shower, once the temperature is agreeable.
Thank you, Kari!!
Thank you, Kari!!
Labels:
denver artist,
derek cadena,
female nude,
male nude,
morning,
new paintings,
oil painting
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Grandpa Harold - by Derek
My Grandfather passed away this week. He was so adorable, always joking and laughing with a jolly twinkle in his eye. He will be missed very much.
Love ya Grandpa.
"Harold"
Love ya Grandpa.
"Harold"
Friday, May 27, 2011
Merge Left - New Painting by Derek Cadena
I painted these cars yesterday from a photo of Matchbox, Hot Wheels and other old toy cars that fill a shelf at a nearby antique shop. I'm pretty sure that little Derek had that black Trans-Am with orange and yellow stripes and maybe the pimp-y green Lincoln, too.
"Merge Left" is a 8x10 oil on panel available in our Etsy shop.
"Merge Left" is a 8x10 oil on panel available in our Etsy shop.
Labels:
8x10,
cars,
denver artist,
derek cadena,
hot wheels,
matchbox,
oil painting,
vintage toy art
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Jiu Jitsu Love Story - Derek Cadena
My working title for this painting has been Matt's Practice, although a more appropriate title like "Jiu Jitsu Love Story" or "Couples Therapy" may be in order, since I ended up painting two sparring figures, Matt and his wife Rachel. I painted this for Nordstrom's consideration, they passed on this one and choose the boxer, "Ramon". I love this painting and I am glad to still have it, although I should be polite and give Matt and Rachel a chance to buy it before I decide to keep it or sell it to someone else.
I painted this image from a still video on YouTube. In the video the couple is demonstrating Brazilian Jiu Jitsu defense techniques to a crowded room. I heavily edited the scene, getting rid of people and other distracting elements that took away from the focus on the couple's practice. The light filters into this space beautifully, enveloping the figure by the window. The painting, in person, looks and feels as if I was actually in the room painting this scene.
I painted this image from a still video on YouTube. In the video the couple is demonstrating Brazilian Jiu Jitsu defense techniques to a crowded room. I heavily edited the scene, getting rid of people and other distracting elements that took away from the focus on the couple's practice. The light filters into this space beautifully, enveloping the figure by the window. The painting, in person, looks and feels as if I was actually in the room painting this scene.
Labels:
art,
brazilian,
colorado,
denver artist,
derek cadena,
figure painting,
Jiu Jitsu,
Ju Jitsu,
new painting,
oil painting
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
The Howards for Nordstrom
I'm packing and getting ready to ship the paintings off to Nordstrom's Seattle office. I thought I would show off the three 16x20 Howard paintings. The original 8x10 Howard was the first painting they bought from me two years ago, they really love him...
I also painted a boxer "Ramon", which they are still considering on purchasing. I hope they do!
I also painted a boxer "Ramon", which they are still considering on purchasing. I hope they do!
Labels:
art,
artist,
boxer,
Cadena,
derek cadena,
male portrait,
nordstrom,
oil painting,
sports,
vintage
Friday, March 25, 2011
Beefing Up Nordstrom's Walls!
I've been so busy that I haven't posted in a month! I've finished most of the work I'm doing for Nordstrom. Their store planning and architecture department purchased a painting from me two years ago, which I was very excited about at the time! Then, just a couple months ago they got back with me and commissioned 7 paintings for a few of their remodeled stores. My paintings will hang with a collection of other work, mostly vintage male portraits and landscapes completing a wall collage in each men's sportswear department. Shown here is an example of a wall they had previously done sans Cadena...
The designer wanted a more youthful and cheery wall layout and liked my cheesy beach boys pumping iron by the sea and said that these paintings would be perfect for some of their beach town stores, one of the stores being Westside Pavilion in LA. So, I painted two of Beach Flex and two of Beach Pump, all 18x24 oil paintings. The two Beach Flex are the first image.
I gotta get back to work, I'll show the rest in my next post.
The designer wanted a more youthful and cheery wall layout and liked my cheesy beach boys pumping iron by the sea and said that these paintings would be perfect for some of their beach town stores, one of the stores being Westside Pavilion in LA. So, I painted two of Beach Flex and two of Beach Pump, all 18x24 oil paintings. The two Beach Flex are the first image.
I gotta get back to work, I'll show the rest in my next post.
Labels:
art,
artist,
arts and culture,
beach,
Cadena,
derek cadena,
nordstrom,
oil painting
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Goy Paints Jewish Calendar
This is the second part of my two-part post on working with Scott Lyon on the permanent exhibit recently installed at the Mizel Museum in Denver.
This past Spring I was invited by Scott to help paint, fabricate and install pieces of the exhibit titled 4,000 Year Road Trip: Gathering Sparks. I was given the task and huge privilege of illustrating the large Jewish Calendar that hangs in the Synagogue. I had some concerns when I started, one being that I am not Jewish! I didn't know bubbe from bupkes... Although, now I know not to get the two confused.
The Jewish calendar is only similar to the Gregorian calendar in that it has twelve months. The months are lunar, which I painted a band of moon phases corresponding with observed religious holidays and their months. Each month starts with a new moon, the first month is Nisan. Passover is celebrated in Nisan. Pictured here is a detail of the months with moons and seasons of the calendar.
My favorite symbol that I painted here of the holidays is the Sukkah in the upper right corner of the banner, which is the wooden structure with twigs and fruit hanging from it. Sukkot is the harvest holiday celebrated in the middle of the month Tishre or Tisheri (roughly October). Many Hebrew words have different spellings, which I was often told to change... I'm just the goy with a brush. Like the rest of the exhibit, I painted this banner in a colorful whimsical style. Here is a detail of the top half of the banner with the Sukkah.
You'll have to go the Mizel Museum if want to see the full calendar and all the other wonderful exhibit pieces. I had a blast working with Scott and the Mizel folks for those last six months, but the project is done and it's time to move on. Now, I have seven paintings (possibly more) commissioned by Nordstrom to complete in the next six weeks. The paintings are for several store remodels. I'll be painting vintage looking mid-century styled athletic male portraits in oil for Nordstrom's menswear/sportswear department. I'm VERY excited, it's my biggest client ever! I'll keep you posted.
Derek
This past Spring I was invited by Scott to help paint, fabricate and install pieces of the exhibit titled 4,000 Year Road Trip: Gathering Sparks. I was given the task and huge privilege of illustrating the large Jewish Calendar that hangs in the Synagogue. I had some concerns when I started, one being that I am not Jewish! I didn't know bubbe from bupkes... Although, now I know not to get the two confused.
The Jewish calendar is only similar to the Gregorian calendar in that it has twelve months. The months are lunar, which I painted a band of moon phases corresponding with observed religious holidays and their months. Each month starts with a new moon, the first month is Nisan. Passover is celebrated in Nisan. Pictured here is a detail of the months with moons and seasons of the calendar.
My favorite symbol that I painted here of the holidays is the Sukkah in the upper right corner of the banner, which is the wooden structure with twigs and fruit hanging from it. Sukkot is the harvest holiday celebrated in the middle of the month Tishre or Tisheri (roughly October). Many Hebrew words have different spellings, which I was often told to change... I'm just the goy with a brush. Like the rest of the exhibit, I painted this banner in a colorful whimsical style. Here is a detail of the top half of the banner with the Sukkah.
You'll have to go the Mizel Museum if want to see the full calendar and all the other wonderful exhibit pieces. I had a blast working with Scott and the Mizel folks for those last six months, but the project is done and it's time to move on. Now, I have seven paintings (possibly more) commissioned by Nordstrom to complete in the next six weeks. The paintings are for several store remodels. I'll be painting vintage looking mid-century styled athletic male portraits in oil for Nordstrom's menswear/sportswear department. I'm VERY excited, it's my biggest client ever! I'll keep you posted.
Derek
Labels:
artist,
artwork,
Denver,
denver artist,
derek cadena,
exhibit,
hebrew calendar,
jewish,
mizel museum,
painting,
Scott Lyon
Monday, February 14, 2011
Sparking It Up At The Mizel Museum
This is the first post of the two-part blog about working on the permanent exhibit recently installed at the Mizel Museum in Denver.
This past Spring I was invited by Scott Lyon to help paint, fabricate and install pieces of the exhibit. There are too many projects to talk about, so I'll talk about one design of Scott's that I worked on in this post, and then I'll write about painting the Jewish Calendar that I designed and worked on in my next post.
Almost two years ago my friend and fellow Denver artist, Scott Lyon, was approached by the Mizel Museum to give the museum walls and the display cases that house the artifacts a makeover. Scott began working with the museum's curator, Georgina Kolber, on the exhibit's theme, which is a 4,000 year journey of Jewish life, culture, art and stories. The curator talks more about this in her interview with Ryan Warner on Colorado Public Radio. 4,000 Year Road Trip: Gathering Sparks is the educational, historic and whimsical exhibit that has been brought to life by Scott and his team that I was honored to be apart of.
I worked on several exciting projects, however, one of the more memorable projects I worked on was the notorious "spark" emitting disco ball, which was the most terrifying piece to fabricate and install! Scott began this project by designing and building a rocket fin shaped wooden support covered with foam and electrical bits that would be covered by a mosaic of mirror glass. The shape of this sculpture was designed in mind with the building's mid-century modern architecture and fun funky presentation of the exhibit's theme. I remember being a little intimidated by this skeletal structure, but I couldn't wait to begin covering it. This structure was heavy and awkward, it would rock back and forth, and needed to have a separate structure built to keep it upright. Mostly there was a lot of gluing shards of glass, which one of the shards left a V-shaped scar on my wrist after I carelessly plunged my arm into one of those pointy corners... ouch! It took several days for Scott and I to finish, working in shifts artfully cutting glass and arranging pieces to perfectly cover the structure. After the last piece of glass was placed and the finished sculpture was cleaned we stood back in awe of it's shimmering beauty! Now all we had to do was figure out how to hang it, which we did quite gracefully with the help of pulleys and a very tall ladder. When you walk up to the front of the museum you can't help notice the large atomic disco ball hanging in the lime green entrance. Guests who visit the Mizel Museum before dusk are really in for a sparkly treat!
Pictured here is Scott, the disco ball and a few bits of other exhibit pieces I put in to collage.
This past Spring I was invited by Scott Lyon to help paint, fabricate and install pieces of the exhibit. There are too many projects to talk about, so I'll talk about one design of Scott's that I worked on in this post, and then I'll write about painting the Jewish Calendar that I designed and worked on in my next post.
Almost two years ago my friend and fellow Denver artist, Scott Lyon, was approached by the Mizel Museum to give the museum walls and the display cases that house the artifacts a makeover. Scott began working with the museum's curator, Georgina Kolber, on the exhibit's theme, which is a 4,000 year journey of Jewish life, culture, art and stories. The curator talks more about this in her interview with Ryan Warner on Colorado Public Radio. 4,000 Year Road Trip: Gathering Sparks is the educational, historic and whimsical exhibit that has been brought to life by Scott and his team that I was honored to be apart of.
I worked on several exciting projects, however, one of the more memorable projects I worked on was the notorious "spark" emitting disco ball, which was the most terrifying piece to fabricate and install! Scott began this project by designing and building a rocket fin shaped wooden support covered with foam and electrical bits that would be covered by a mosaic of mirror glass. The shape of this sculpture was designed in mind with the building's mid-century modern architecture and fun funky presentation of the exhibit's theme. I remember being a little intimidated by this skeletal structure, but I couldn't wait to begin covering it. This structure was heavy and awkward, it would rock back and forth, and needed to have a separate structure built to keep it upright. Mostly there was a lot of gluing shards of glass, which one of the shards left a V-shaped scar on my wrist after I carelessly plunged my arm into one of those pointy corners... ouch! It took several days for Scott and I to finish, working in shifts artfully cutting glass and arranging pieces to perfectly cover the structure. After the last piece of glass was placed and the finished sculpture was cleaned we stood back in awe of it's shimmering beauty! Now all we had to do was figure out how to hang it, which we did quite gracefully with the help of pulleys and a very tall ladder. When you walk up to the front of the museum you can't help notice the large atomic disco ball hanging in the lime green entrance. Guests who visit the Mizel Museum before dusk are really in for a sparkly treat!
Pictured here is Scott, the disco ball and a few bits of other exhibit pieces I put in to collage.
Friday, February 11, 2011
jane sloss, watercolor paintings: Featured Artist
jane sloss, watercolor paintings: Featured Artist: "Brent Rodgers Two Little Fruits Art Studio This is the second installment in a two-part series featuring the Two Little Fruits Art Stud..."
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Tuff the Dog - Pet Portrait by Cadena
For the last 8 or 9 years, usually starting in October, I get calls for people wanting pet portraits by Christmas. I painted one for a friend long ago, and her friends called me, and their friends called me, and on and on. Some years I paint several, however, this season I only painted one. This is Tuff the Dog, an adventurous black lab who resides in Summit County because he loves the mountain life.
If you love your pet, and need a cool portrait to show just how much you love your pet, then contact me. I'll be happy to paint for you!
If you love your pet, and need a cool portrait to show just how much you love your pet, then contact me. I'll be happy to paint for you!
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