Rick Bennett

Rick Bennett Born and raised in Arapahoe in eastern North Carolina. I am a watercolor artist and love the outdoors. When it came to painting, Rick Bennett was a late bloomer.

His first paintings showed some promise in subject matter, but he wrestled with watercolor. With dogged determination he turned out more bad paintings than good. His neighbor, Sarah, would frequently observe that he sure was prolific. Rick’s philosophy is that if you can’t use finesse then try persistence. While painting abstracts something clicked. Freed from worrying about painting an object he

experimented with the medium and realized that watercolor will tell you how to paint if you listen. A playful and contemporary application of paint was pared with an emotional attachment to his roots in southern culture. It turns out that painting was a way for Rick to slow down and pay better attention to things that were waiting to be noticed, things that attracted his heart. His paintings can be found at his home studio and rickbennettwatercolors.com

12/13/2025

I am currently posting on RickBennettwc for Facebook

01/16/2023
07/16/2022

I taught a week of the Pullen Arts Center Teen Camp. It was one group of teens in the morning and another in the afternoon for five days. It was my first time teaching a group of teens. What a wonderful, challenging, rewarding, exhausting and puzzle solving experience. Drawing out the quiet ones, getting the loud energy ones to turn it down a notch, watch the one that wanted to invent art, while teaching adult level painting techniques with professional level materials. WOW. It actually worked. Exceptional art was made, challenging skills were learned and applied, and confidence was built. An intensely quiet group of six students started talking to each other on Thursday afternoon and were animated on Friday. One student had been painting all her life. She had painted with kids' watercolor paints and palette and didn't like it. But she liked painting in this class. Good materials are so essential. The art inventor included me in his painting. I was smiling, clueless, had coffee and was pudgy. He nailed it.

Learning from the artists who came before you -
04/30/2022

Learning from the artists who came before you -

I had been painting a series of blue crabs when I saw a watercolor painting by Russell Yerkes. This link takes you to his website. His style is different than mine but his painting of a bucket of crabs immediately grabbed me. It was a familiar scene from my childhood and I knew that I needed to pain...

09/11/2021
I am so happy to announce that I will be teaching a zombie plein air painting class through the Raleigh parks and recrea...
09/10/2021

I am so happy to announce that I will be teaching a zombie plein air painting class through the Raleigh parks and recreation department. There will be two class sessions, a planning session on the 24th and a plein air painting session with zombies on the 29th. Watch for the details.

Interesting article. I could have used this information a couple of weeks ago. I say “many . . . paintings,” for as vari...
05/31/2021

Interesting article. I could have used this information a couple of weeks ago.
I say “many . . . paintings,” for as various as were their techniques, their styles, and their careers, on at least one thing Homer, James McNeill Whistler (1834–1903), Thomas Eakins (1844–1916), and John Singer Sargent (1856–1925) could all agree: they intended their pictures to be seen from specific distances, most often farther away than most people tended to stand. To anyone who had the temerity to press a nose against the picture, to sniff at or try to smell it, Homer gave a clear message. In the lower left corner, just below his signature and the painting’s date, Homer wrote in light-colored script, as if it were flotsam from a wreck (fig. 2): “At 12 feet from this picture/you can see it.” Long before bumper stickers proclaimed, “If you can read this you are too close,” Homer set such an admonition on the face of a major painting.
click on the 2nd link to read the whole article.
http://editions.lib.umn.edu/panorama/wp-content/uploads/sites/14/2018/04/Fig.-1.jpg
https://editions.lib.umn.edu/panorama/article/if-you-can-read-this/

05/01/2021
Minnesott Beach is all about texture. The 2nd photo is a close up. Water is the boss!
03/15/2021

Minnesott Beach is all about texture. The 2nd photo is a close up. Water is the boss!

Because of slow business at my day job I am only working a 4 day week. So I have more time for art!  I had a lot of shor...
01/22/2021

Because of slow business at my day job I am only working a 4 day week. So I have more time for art! I had a lot of short pieces of reclaimed wood of various types. So I started making the largest frames I could. Most are between 5 x 7 and 4 x 4. I paint a watercolor that goes with the frame. I think half the reason I paint is so I can build frames. I sanded down a piece of driftwood that showed pinks and grays. I cut it down to size and the third photo is the frame it made. The board in side is not a finished painting. I will mount a painting on it. The sailboat is a 1" square painting. I like that the frame choice throws a random factor into choosing a subject to paint and the colors to choose.

"High Seas" 5" x 7" miniature.
12/31/2020

"High Seas" 5" x 7" miniature.

Address

Raleigh, NC
27608

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