In an Oregon Public Broadcasting (OPB) segment, the reporter talked with Paul Missal about his life story, including the process of the Hallie Ford painting. In the first sketch of the portrait, Mrs. Ford wore a bright blue floral jacket and rests her hands on a wooden chair. His sketches eventually evolved into a more formal approach, as Missal alters the chair to an elegant cushion chair, maintaining the same hand placement as in his initial sketch. He then decided to modify her jacket to pink and removed the chair. Instead, her hands clasp a pen. As his ideas evolved, he eventually produced Hallie Ford’s hand sprawled on a desk, and in her other hand, she holds a book. This piece of artwork not only brings life to the building it was named after, but it shows his revolution of style compared to when he completed the portrait of Oregon governor Robert Straub
In an Oregon Public Broadcasting (OPB) segment, the reporter talked with Paul Missal about his life story, including the process of the Hallie Ford painting. In the first sketch of the portrait, Mrs. Ford wore a bright blue floral jacket and rests her hands on a wooden chair. His sketches eventually evolved into a more formal approach, as Missal alters the chair to an elegant cushion chair, maintaining the same hand placement as in his initial sketch. He then decided to modify her jacket to pink and removed the chair. Instead, her hands clasp a pen. As his ideas evolved, he eventually produced Hallie Ford’s hand sprawled on a desk, and in her other hand, she holds a book. This piece of artwork not only brings life to the building it was named after, but it shows his revolution of style compared to when he completed the portrait of Oregon governor Robert Straub