Day 11. Sushi
A Sushi surprise! How’s this for a change of pace? Sushi is my first non-dessert painting of the Challenge. And it’s ironic that it’s the first time I craved what I was painting!
Perhaps you’re expecting me to say that this came from an exotic Japanese restaurant in the city or a fancy Westchester venue. I did hunt for good looking sushi in mid-town Manhattan on two separate days when I went to the United Nations and Japan Society. My photos were of packaged sushi with labels blocking the artistry of the food. I’ll have to go back another time with a shopping bag, buy the sushi, and go home so I can open it up.
Then one evening Jay recently walked through the door with this vegetable sushi (my favorite) called Naruto Maki from DeCiccos, the local Ardsley grocery store. This small tray spoke to me.
Notice how cucumber is used in Naruto Maki instead of seaweed and rice on the outside, and or a rice paper wrap. You can see the other kinds in this party platter from Laura’s welcome home celebration.
We all dug into the small tray – after I took a series of photos. It’s interesting how different angles completely changed the look, but this classic view was the image in my mind’s eye.
The palette is subtle and very limited, which made it both hard and easy to paint at the same time. The hard part was mixing those subtle greens for the avocado and the cucumber, which looked so similar but needed to be somehow differentiated. I played with the avocado color more than expected. My initial color mix had a hint more yellow in it, but it seemed to clash with the tray. The delicate colors in Sushi were challenging to photograph, which has more presence in person.
Usually I find it easier to work with a limited palette, especially in a short time frame (remember my eggs?), with fewer color decisions to make. The cleanup is much easier too.
The composition was appealing because the 10 pieces of sushi aren’t perfect. There’s a broken one and one piece is unwrapping.
I worked carefully and slowly, leaving the background white so the sushi and the tray would pop. At the end, when I went to put in the wasabi and that piece of fake greenery at the top, the painted wasabi looked like a big blob of indeterminate nature.
So I got out a box of Q-tips (my secret cure for mistakes), carefully used several to take that section out without touching the sushi, and repainted the transparent fake grass. It was tense for a half hour since I loved the painting and hated the blobby thing, which almost ruined the whole painting.
This is a subject that I know I’ll return to eventually. Just maybe not for this challenge.
Thanks for stopping by! Hope to see you tomorrow.