Karen McCool | fine art
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I'm now partnering with

NAZBI

Go to my Nazbi Shop
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Don't see what you're looking for below? You can now find even more of my paintings of Film/TV Characters in my Nazbi shop.

Display your passions.

My paintings celebrate the things you love, like the movies and television shows you grew up watching. Did you watch Saturday morning cartoons? Were you Team Looney Tunes or Team Hanna Barbara? Which toys did you play with as a kid, Star Wars, or Superheroes? Or maybe you were a Muppets fan? Celebrate your fandom with a unique original oil painting that helps you to revere and display your passions. When you hang my paintings, you might find your tribe is a lot closer than you think.​​

I Love Lucy

$400.00

Sold out

10x10 Oil on Panel. Black floater frame. I Love Lucy

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Downton Abbey, The Hunt

$1,000.00

12x24 Oil on panel. Black frame. Downton Abbey, The Hunt.

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Downton Abbey, Morning

$1,000.00

12x24 Oil on panel. Black frame. Downton Abbey, Morning.

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Lily Tomlin, as Frankie

$720.00

20x16 Oil on panel. Black frame. Lily Tomlin as Frankie.


From the Netflix Series: Grace & Frankie.


Do you have a favorite character from a TV show you'd like painted? Contact me here: Contact

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Gandalf the White

$1,000.00

12x24 Oil on panel. Black frame. Gandalf the White.


Gandalf is possibly my favorite J.R.R. Tolkien character. I first read The Hobbit in middle school and quickly fell in love with Tolkien's Middle-earth. To this day, The Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings trilogy are on my top ten books list.


Naturally, I loved Peter Jackson's screen adaptations of these books as well. This was painted from a screenshot of the movie: The Two Towers.


Do you have a favorite character from Middle-earth you'd like painted? Contact me here: Contact

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Wall-e

$0.00

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5x7 Oil on panel. Black Frame.

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Eve

$0.00

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5x7 Oil on panel, black frame. Eve (Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator) From the movie Wall-e.

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Gossamer & Bugs Bunny

$225.00

5x7 Oil on panel, black frame. Looney Tunes: Gossamer and Bugs Bunny. Hallmark ornament.

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Saturday Morning Cartoons

$0.00

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6x6 Oil on panel, black floater frame. Bugs Bunny and Tweety Bird.


This painting perfectly captures childhood Saturday mornings for me, eating cereal in front of the TV. Probably too close to the old cathode ray tube TV, which may, in part, explain why I never had kids? But it was the 70s. We didn’t even wear seat-belts, and we’re all just fine. :-/


Our television was actually a very large piece of furniture, with a radio on one side of the cabinet and record player on the other. That's right kids. Our TV's were FURNITURE. And our telephones? You could hit an intruder over the head with one (assuming you had a long enough chord), and then take your sweet-assed time rotary-dialing the police. Try sitting on your fancy flat screen TV, or knocking out an assailant with an iPhone. Pfft.


Saturday morning cartoons consisted of classic Looney Tunes, Hanna Barbara and characters like Hong Kong Phoey and Marvin the Martian. All in color, I hasten to add. I’m not THAT old … jeez.


About my Hallmark Ornaments Series

This oil painting was done from a Hallmark Christmas ornament. My entire Christmas tree is cartoon ornaments. I’m not immature, YOU’RE immature.

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Conjunction Junction

$0.00

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6x6 Oil on panel, black floater frame.


Conjunction Junction was one of the animated shorts, in the "Schoolhouse Rock!" series of educational musicals. It’s also how I learned the words “and, but and or” were conjunctions. This show also had episodes on American government, science, and math. I should probably watch the math series again. I’ve completely forgotten how to math.


Frankly, someone should revive "Schoolhouse Rock!" and offer educational segments for older folks. Like features on where you may have left your car keys, or how to remember what it was you just walked into the kitchen for ... Never stop learning, is all I'm sayin'. 


About my Hallmark Ornaments Series

This oil painting was done from a Hallmark Christmas ornament. My entire Christmas tree is cartoon ornaments. I’m not immature, YOU’RE immature.

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Piglet, Pooh's Best Friend

$0.00

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6x6 Encaustic on panel, black floater frame. Piglet from Winnie the Pooh.


From my original Instagram post:


6x6 encaustic on encausticbord


further adventures in @ceracolors #encausticpaint


For this toy painting, I was really thinking about "less". By less, i mean, saying just enough, for the painting to still read well, without having to describe every detail.


The encaustic paint I'm using dries really fast, so it's hard to get color puddles mixed that will stay workable for long. You can reactivate them, but it seems like the color isn't as highly pigmented when you add lots of water after they have completely dried. With this constraint, I thought I'd try keeping just one color puddle wet, that I could then shift into warmer or cooler variations. This is a bit different from how I work with oils, where i create a few color mixes, which, opens up my palette (and I can dip into different, cleaner mixtures).


I ended up enjoying this way of working, and may try the same technique on an oil painting. It creates a nice tonalist (in this case, mid-tone heavy) painting, and the sense of atmosphere works well when painting toys, I think. It better represents a memory of the toy, as opposed to the actual toy itself. I like that quality, and the resulting subtly. Boiling a subject down to it's essence is friggin hard.


#winniethepooh #pooh #eeyore #piglet

#art #encuastic #womenartists #encausticpainting #painting #ceracolor


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Eeyore

$0.00

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6x6 Encaustic on panel, black floater frame.


From my original Instagram Post:


karenmccoolart

6x6 #encausticpainting on ampersand encausticbord (using #ceracolors)


Eeyore broods a lot. Me too. (Especially since Nov 2016). I placed Eeyore in the center of the panel, as the shape of his body follows the classic triangle used in some compositions. Also, placing a subject in the center creates a more calm composition, and as dejected as he often is, Eeyore strikes me as a super chill dude. Yeah, his tail keeps falling off, but he's resigned to it. His kind of worry is about acceptance. He's prepared for things to not go well. As opposed to piglet, who often frets, and is more likely to work himself into a dither. I'm more like piglet that way.



#eeyore #pooh #painting #encaustic #art

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All images and content © 2021 Karen McCool. No reproducing any images without written consent.  All rights reserved.
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