Over a year ago January, Bonnie and I went to Ridgewood, NJ for a used book fair, and had to stop by Carlo’s Bake Shop after watching the Grand Opening on Cake Boss.
And there it was – this pristine, luscious Oreo Cookie cake just crying out to be painted. And so I did today.
This Cake Boss Oreo Cookie Cake looked much neater and artistic than similar cakes I had seen, which tended to be too crumbly looking to paint (not in a positive way).
One of the reasons it took so long to paint was that this cake needed a square format canvas (not a typical shape), which I didn’t have and rarely used until this year. I was trying to make a square subject work on a horizontal canvas, and it never did quite look right. The preliminary sketches were so unsatisfactory that I put this Oreo cake back on the shelf.
Now that I am using square 6 x 6 wood panels, I thought I would try again. I’m glad I did.
Here’s what the painting looked like when I first started. It was slow going, but I made steady progress all day. I had to be patient as I painted in the details, and was rewarded when the painting gradually came to life. I focused on the interplay of light and shadows, the contrast of black and white, and the addition subtle color tones to liven things up a bit. Not surprisingly, the most difficult part was the whipped cream.
Cake Boss Oreo Cookie Cake is deceptively complex. Like many paintings, the devil is in the details. Only during a Challenge, there comes a time when you have to stop. I already spent a day and a half painting this, and have to put my brushes down. When you’re a perfectionist as I am, some days this is incredibly difficult, and has resulted in overworked paintings. This won’t be one of them – a good thing.
While Bonnie and I never did meet any of the Valastro family in Ridgewood that day, Day 4 of the Challenge brought me back to to the time we did Buddy “Cake Boss” Valastro at the local Dobbs Ferry train station. We raced over after Bonnie read a Facebook post saying Buddy was filming a show featuring Lidia’s Bakeshop & Cafe for a new TLC series, where The Cake Boss came to the rescue of floundering bakeries and resuscited them.
I remember what Buddy said when I showed him postcards of my cake paintings. He was thrown for a minute since he thought I was a baker, not a painter, but then he looked me straight in the eye and said: “You and me, we’re both artists. We just do it differently.” What a complement! Maybe I should send an image of the Cake Boss Oreo Cookie Cake painting to him. (Note: After seeing Buddy’s puzzled look, I made new postcards that clearly say paintings under the images.)
Time to switch gears and start planning for tomorrow. Who knows what it will bring? As always, suggestions and photos are welcome.