"Happy Days on the James" by Juliane Porter (48″ × 36″ Oil on Archival, Museum Grade, Belgian Linen Canvas)
(Please click image for a better, larger view)
"Happy Days on the James" is my most recent commissioned oil painting, capturing an incredibly beautiful, fun loving family. They adore spending a fine summer afternoon splashing about under the sun on the gorgeous James River, which winds about their historic city like a strand of jewels. What a treat and honor it was to capture this fond memory for them in a stately 4 foot oil painting. Thank you, my dear friends, for the opportunity to be a part of your very special love.
https://stylenectar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/stylenectar.png00Juliane Porterhttps://stylenectar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/stylenectar.pngJuliane Porter2012-06-08 16:42:082025-12-06 15:03:04Happy Days on the James
When I first began painting portraits, it was an adventurous inquisition into the human condition via a portrayal of different personalities, life-experiences, age…
What I didn’t predict discovering, fascinating as our unique traits may be, was that as I relayed these attributes to the canvas, they effectually became less and less important. Each layer of paint leading to an ever-deepening understanding, dissolving any once-perceived separation to reveal a bond, a connection, to the center of what matters;
the heart.
I spend hours upon days upon weeks with each painting, understanding more and more intimately what makes the subject who they are in order to portray and honor their essence. During this meditative process of focused concentration, thoughts subside and there remains only what is.
A vast, connecting and infinite
love.
And everything that separates us becomes everything that makes us
exactly the same.
Self Portrait by Juliane Porter, Oil on Canvas Panel
https://stylenectar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/stylenectar.png00Juliane Porterhttps://stylenectar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/stylenectar.pngJuliane Porter2012-03-03 15:29:172025-12-06 15:03:26why i do what i do
Before you read on, first click the above music link!
Autumn had just begun turning leaves copper and gold when I painted this scene of the Savage River last year. I was hypnotized by the rhythm of leaves, sunshine and water skipping along boulders then smoothing into a deep ribbon along the calm, mossy bank.
A beautiful adventure of life leading life.
Then, just last weekend, as my husband and I basked in our first indoor fire of the season, listening to Dvorak's 8th Symphony, I was instantly transported back to the scene of my painting.
Take a listen to Dvorak's gorgeous symphony singing the emotion and adventure of life that so spoke to me when I painted "Prelude to Fall on the Savage River".
What pieces of music do you associate with Autumn?
https://stylenectar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/stylenectar.png00Juliane Porterhttps://stylenectar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/stylenectar.pngJuliane Porter2011-09-24 17:32:202025-12-06 15:03:56In Celebration of Autumn
Fourth Prize Winner Kyu Yeon Kim; Third Prize Winner Eric Zuber; Second Prize Winner Alexey Chernov; First Prize Winner Alexander Schimpf, Photo by Roger Mastroianni
The Cleveland International Piano Competition is a ten-day marathon of musical performances in which 30 of the world’s greatest, young, concert pianists compete all day in front of live audiences and an international jury. Held each year at Severance Hall, one of the world’s most beautiful concert halls and home of the world renowned Cleveland Orchestra, the competition is the epitome of extreme challenge and competition. At the end of each round the jury votes, advancing a number of pianists until the final round of four competitors. The final four then perform with the Cleveland Orchestra, after which the $50,000 Grand Prize winner is announced. The Winner’s Recital, which I had the pleasure of attending with my family, is held the following day.
Watching the brilliant performances alongside my family, for whom music is a deeply woven bond, was an emotionally charged experience to say the least! I’d have equipped myself with a smart supply of tissues had I known each and every pianist would take me to the point of fighting back tears. However, it was the passion of Eric Zuber’s performance of Chopin’s Etudes, Op. 10 Nos. 1, 3, 5, 8 & 12 that had the power to bring those tears down my cheeks and seemed to suspend time itself.
I’m from a family of musicians. My parents are both amateur pianists. Both my grandmothers were also. Back in the late 1940’s you would have found my Grandma Hazel accompanying the Cleveland youth ballet at the piano in their studios at the top floor of the IBM building downtown. Meanwhile, halfway across the country, Grandma Orene, a third grade teacher, was teaching children piano lessons after school in her home.
It’s no surprise, decades later, the music of my parents playing the baby grand Steinway overflowed every room of my childhood home on a daily basis, reaching the far corners of the basement to the highest rooms in the attic. Mom, a highly disciplined person, (and phenomenal visual artist), practiced two hours each morning, while our father accompanied family sing-a-longs and joined in duets with my sister (violin) and me (flute). When he played alone, he often favored Chopin; and as an adult I’d never found anyone who came close to capturing the passion of Chopin like my father does. Until that is, I heard Mr. Eric Zuber’s performance…
My heart broke open, magically suspended on a wrinkle in time between those childhood memories, of listening to my father perform the very same pieces, and the present, seated beside him decades latter, that Sunday afternoon of the International Piano Competition Finale.
Please share with me, a taste of Eric Zuber performing Chopin below…
Summary of Top Award Winners First Prize: Mr. Alexander Schimpf of Germany $50,000 Second Prize: Mr. Alexey Chernov of Russia $25,000 Third Prize: Mr. Eric Zuber of the United States $15,000 Fourth Prize: Ms. Kyu Yeon Kim of South Korea $10,000
Severance Hall, Gestural Pen & Ink on Lanaquarelle Paper by Juliane Porter
https://stylenectar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/stylenectar.png00Juliane Porterhttps://stylenectar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/stylenectar.pngJuliane Porter2011-09-14 11:23:002025-12-06 15:04:01A Wrinkle in Time, Magic at the World Class Cleveland International Piano Competition
Daddy (Oil on Canvas Portrait by Juliane Porter) Click Image for a Better, Larger View
He’s my hero. And an award winning NASA physicist. A phenomenal pianist AND clarinetist. He did handsprings in the backyard with me when I was a teenager. He knows how to ballroom dance. He’s elegant & graceful. Kind and philosophical. He’s even more handsome than I’ve been able to capture- (as a young man, a spitting image of Penn Badgley). He’s incredibly witty and fun.
And I love him with all my heart.
This painting is about mood. About the love and energy my father exudes. It's a quick gestural piece. I'll be doing a large head-to-toe portrait of him next.
Before you read on, first click on the above link! Vivaldi's Le Quattro Stagioni is one of the most brilliant pieces ever written in celebration of this magnificent season of Summer! My painting, Vivaldi Summer, speaks to the soul of this piece; the vibrant, childlike freedom and passion of Summer…
When life reminds us to let go, to be free and be loved.
Nasturtiums have a lovely minty flavor Nasturtiums and Pansies are wonderful additions to your veggie garden! They'll add hits of gorgeous color to your plots and Nasturtiums will even ward off many pests. Best of all…
They're also edible!
Flowers in the Viola Family, such as Pansies (and Violets) have a faint minty flavor. The flowers and leaves of Nasturtiums have a peppery watercress tinge. Toss their brightly hued flowers on top of a salad or include as a pretty touch on an al fresco dinner plate.
Two simple ways to Live Beautifully!
Pot of Pansies, Quick, gestural watercolor on Winsor Newton Paper (Click image for better, larger view)
First, via the gorgeous voices of Il Volo, a young trio with voices of gold who've already gone platinum in Italy. Their name, “Il Volo,” meaning “flight,” was chosen to signify the feeling that these three young tenors were about to spread their wings and fly. And indeed they have! You will be blown away! (Thank you, Kaye Cloutman, for introducing me to Il Volo. Visit her lovely website, Clout&About)
And my second tribute to Italy, a painting of a peaceful olive grove in Umbria. Umbria is the region of Italy often compared to Tuscany, without the touristy aspects. Jim and I picnicked beneath these beautiful, old trees enjoying wine, salami and cheese. It was a blustery day, like today, sunny one moment, cloudy the next.
"In the Umbrian Olive Grove" by Juliane Porter (Oil on 18"x14" canvas ~ Click for a better, larger view)
Last Saturday, Jim treated me to Puccini's Madama Butterfly at the Kennedy Center Opera House. The sold-out performance was absolutely magnificent, closing to a standing ovation, bravos galore and me (and a whole lot of other people) in tears.
Set in Japan, depicting the love affair between the 15-year-old Japanese geisha, Butterfly, and a young American naval officer, Madama Butterfly is beloved by music lovers everywhere for its wealth of melody and poignant, heart-on-the-sleeve emotionality. Take a peek at the opera through its spellbinding aria Un Bel Di Vedremo (note; same opera, different production than one we saw).
Perhaps the roots of my love for opera go back to my maternal grandmother who was a trained opera singer. My parents, avid opera patrons, first exposed me to performances via the Metropolitan Opera Saturday matinee broadcasts, aired each weekend, spicing up our family's weekend chores. However, it wasn't until my late twenties, during a performance by Placido Domingo, that I became permanently transfixed, on a whole new level, by the passion and power of opera.
It delights me to see the appreciation of opera on the incline, perhaps due in part, to the Met's high definition simulcasts, making first-rate opera available in theaters around the world. Have you been to any of these fabulously up-close productions? If so, which opera did you see?
For an extra treat, here is footage into scenes and music from a very old production of Madama Butterfly, featuring the glamorous Maria Callas, one of the most renowned opera singers of the 20th century.
Oil on Archival Linen Covered Board (Click Image for better, larger view)
Country Road, 12″x16″ Oil on Windsor Newton Paper (Click image for better, larger view)
This painting of sunny pastures is from a sketch I did last year. I enjoy its simple, warm and breezy feel.
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https://stylenectar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/stylenectar.png00Juliane Porterhttps://stylenectar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/stylenectar.pngJuliane Porter2011-03-15 15:44:032025-09-29 19:45:58Take Me Home, Country Road