Pure Oil Gas Pump

Copyright Larry Johnston
Copyright Larry Johnston

Pure Oil Gas Pumps

The Whistle Stop Café

Juliette, Georgia

The Movie “Fried Green Tomatoes” became a classic and was filmed during a time when I lived in Georgia. I’m showing you the painting I did of the Whistle Stop Cafe, in Juliette, Georgia, the location where the movie, “Fried Green Tomatoes” was filmed. You can see the painting at the Café’.

The painting is acrylic on stretched canvas.  The owner of the restaurant purchased the panting and then had me paint another one without the gas pumps. The Pure Oil pumps were movie props and went back to the movie lot, when the film was completed. If you visit the Whistle stop cafe, you get fried green tomatoes with every meal.  They’re pretty good too. I painted four paintings related to the movies, then put prints of them in a frame as a set of 4 matted and framed prints. The print sets were very popular, especially in the Atlanta area. One of my favorite shows was just east of Atlanta at Stone Mountain, called the “Yellow Daisy Festival”. It ranked in the top for shows in the country and several times #1.

Copyright Larry Johnston
Copyright Larry Johnston

Gas Pumps are pretty popular! Here are the ones I have painted so far…

Exxon Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Shell Gas Pump

Gulf Gas Pump

Marathon Gas Pump

Mobile Gas Pump

Sinclair Gas Pump

Pure Gas Pump

 

Marathon Gas Pump

Copyright Larry Johnston
Copyright Larry Johnston

Marathon Gas Pump

Central Indiana

During my years of painting and selling, I had many requests for prints.  The subjects ranged from outhouses to Fancy Theatres.  As I collected my subjects and painted them, I started painting them in sets of four.  One of those sets included Gas Pumps. They included Texaco, Shell, Gulf, American, Sinclair and Marathon.  As you can see, my sets of four grew as more requests came in.

One of those pumps I found, was in central Indiana, north of Indianapolis.  Many farmers had their own pumps for the farm equipment.  This one was behind the farm-house, out by the barn.  The old pump up gas pump, with the glass top was still in pretty-good condition, however you can tell they no longer use it, since the rubber filler hose was missing. It was called a “Gravity Pump”.  You pumped the gas into the glass top, for the amount you wanted and then when you were ready, you opened the valve and the gravity forced the gas through the hose into the equipment. Several of my paintings included gravity pumps.

The Marathon pump was conveniently located, right by the entrance to the fields.  With Winter at hand, there was not much activity.

Copyright Larry Johnston
Copyright Larry Johnston

Gas Pumps are pretty popular! Here are the ones I have painted so far…

Exxon Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Shell Gas Pump

Gulf Gas Pump

Marathon Gas Pump

Mobile Gas Pump

Sinclair Gas Pump

Pure Gas Pump

 

During my years of painting and selling, I had many requests for prints. The subjects ranged from outhouses to Fancy Theatres. As I collected my subjects and painted them, I started painting them in sets of four. One of those sets included Gas Pumps. They included Texaco, Shell, Gulf, American, Sinclair and Marathon. As you can see, my sets of four grew as more requests came in.

One of those pumps I found, was in central Indiana, north of Indianapolis. Many farmers had their own pumps for the farm equipment. This one was behind the farm house, out by the barn. The old pump up gas pump, with the glass top was still in pretty good condition, however you can tell they no longer use it, since the rubber filler hose was missing. It was called a “Gravity Pump”. You pumped the gas into the glass top, for the amount you wanted and then when you were ready, you opened the valve and the gravity forced the gas through the hose into the equipment. Several of my paintings included gravity pumps.

The Marathon pump was conveniently located, right by the entrance to the fields. With Winter at hand, there was not much activity.

Shell Gas Pump

Copyright Larry Johnston
Copyright Larry Johnston

Shell Gas Pump

Lula, Georgia

When you look at the gas stations of today, with their fancy buildings, and huge canopies over the pumps, you forget what it was like, less than 30 years ago.  While driving down the back roads of north Georgia, we went through the community of Lula.

In my early years of painting nostalgia, while gathering information on future paintings, I came upon a Shell station, that was located in Lula.  It had the old-fashioned look of years gone by, so I stopped and took a few photos of the gas pumps.

I eventually painted a painting of those pumps, which also became part of my gas pump set of 4 different brands.  Some of the others were, Gulf, Texaco, Marathon and Sinclair.

 

Copyright Larry Johnston
Copyright Larry Johnston

Gas Pumps are pretty popular! Here are the ones I have painted so far…

Exxon Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Shell Gas Pump

Gulf Gas Pump

Marathon Gas Pump

Mobile Gas Pump

Sinclair Gas Pump

Pure Gas Pump

 

Gulf Gas Pump

Copyright Larry Johnston
Copyright Larry Johnston

Gulf Gas Pump

Somewhere in rural Georgia

There was a period, when I was taking photos of old gas pumps to use in paintings. The Gas station here was somewhere in Georgia, but the pumps were missing, so I put the pump in my painting and restored the building to match the era.

This was one of the first paintings, where I started adding things, to match the time period.  Many of my paintings have cars and trucks added to the landscape, such as many of my 1950 type Diners and Restaurants. This was a 9″ x 12″ acrylic painting on canvas.

I used to also sell photo prints of the paintings, as well as framed sets at many of the shows I attended.

Copyright Larry Johnston
Copyright Larry Johnston

Gas Pumps are pretty popular! Here are the ones I have painted so far…

Exxon Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Texaco Gas Pump

Shell Gas Pump

Gulf Gas Pump

Marathon Gas Pump

Mobile Gas Pump

Sinclair Gas Pump

Pure Gas Pump

 

 

Brown Barn Texaco

Copyright Larry Johnston
Copyright Larry Johnston

Brown Barn Texaco

Cartersville, Georgia

There was a time when I enjoyed painting pictures of old fallen down barns. While living in Cartersville, Georgia, I was driving down Sugar Valley Road, when I saw a farm-house, with a barn and a gas pump near it, so I took some photographs of it.  I eventually painted the picture and found that people wanted more pictures of gas pumps, so I eventually painted other pumps, like Shell, Gulf, Sinclair, American, Marathon and of course several Texaco pumps. We called this one “Brown Barn Texaco” since I later painted one with a red barn in the paining.  We called it “Red Barn Texaco”, of course.

During one of the art festivals, a young couple purchased the painting, which was a 9″ x 12″ canvas acrylic painting.  They had a pick-up truck that they had restored and wanted me to paint the truck in this painting.  Instead of adding to the painting, we agreed that a second painting would be done as a continuation of this painting, to hang next to this one. (Restored Truck painting)

Copyright Larry Johnston

Copyright Larry Johnston

    Copyright Larry Johnston

Red Barn Texaco

Copyright Larry Johnston
Copyright Larry Johnston

Red Barn, Texaco

Cartersville, Georgia

After I had painted the Texaco pump with the brown barn in the background, I called it brown Barn Texaco.  This painting was similar, but needed some more color to the painting, so I added the Red barn.  It was one of several different brands that I eventually painted.  Gas pumps became quite a collection subject, for people that made a habit of buying my work.

My prints were available to buy in a 5″ x 7″ and 11″ x 14″, including a mat around the print. I even made barn-wood frames for a while, then switched to a variety of frame colors: black, Burgundy, forest green and colonial blue. .Now I offer the prints on stretched canvas, to make it look like the original.

Lost Mountain Store

Copyright Larry Johnston
Copyright Larry Johnston

The Lost Mountain Store

Hwy 176 and Dallas Highway, Georgia

Located west of Marietta, Georgia there is a mountain that is called “Lost Mountain”, because you can see it in the distance, but when you get there, it’s gone. There is an old general store that has been there since about 1900.  I have heard all kinds of tails about the store and its owner, but like many stories from the past, I am not sure how many are true, or how many were made up.

Some of those stories include, that he claimed to have fresh vegetables, which he grew in his own fields, but actually the truck came in late at night with deliveries, so nobody could see.  Another story was told about photographers were run off by the owner with a shotgun, or he wanted to charge them for taking photos of his store.  I was able to photograph the store without incident.

The painting that I did of the store, was quite popular in the area, as was other paintings from artists who lived nearby. The store was too close to the road when they were widening it and were planning to demolish the store.  With a lot of input from the community, the building was moved back far enough to save it from being destroyed.  The store now sits at the edge of a shopping center for all to see.

Prints:
ALL PRINTS are printed on canvas and stretched on wooden stretcher bars and prices vary according to size ordered. Most are 2:3 proportion
Options:
wrapped print- part of the image is wrapped
around the sides of the wood.
Non-wrapped print- The full image is on the face, with white or black edges
(frames and hardware are not included)

11″ x 14″Black Edge………. $148.82

11″ x 14″ White Edge………. $148.82

11″ x 14″ Wrapped Edge………. $148.82

16″ x 20″ Black Edge ………. $204.72

16″ x 20″  White Edge………. $204.72

16″ x 20″ Wrapped Edge………. $204.72

16″ x 20″ ………. $375.00 original painting on stretched canvas not available.

 

Sinclair Gas Pump

Copyright Larry Johnston
Copyright Larry Johnston

Sinclair Gas Pump

North Georgia

After painting a few different gas pump paintings, I started getting requests for different brands. One of those brands was Sinclair, as many people worked for Sinclair during their youth, pumping gas, some being their first job.  I sold 5 x 7 prints of my paintings, so there were many gas pumps that were just the right size.

The painting was a typical setting for the era of that style pump.  The surroundings I chose, was in north Georgia at a typical general store.  After painting four or more different pumps, I started selling a four-print set of gas pumps. Other paintings of gas pumps I have painted are:  Shell, Texaco, Mobile, Marathon and Gulf.