My love of watercolor makes me love to teach its secrets. It can flow freely wet in wet or be controlled wet on dry.
And because patience is essential when the paint layers are drying, we worked on two pieces at once, a little radish bunch and a landscape.
Gyotaku
Back when there were no cameras for fishermen to record their trophy catches, the Japanese came up with a unique printing method called Gyotaku. Gyo means fish, and Taku means impression, and the technique involved just that – using freshly caught fish to make inky impressions on paper.
Pop-Up Art Exhibit
w.e. McMillin was a professional ice skater before she switched to reverse glass painting. She was tired of the grueling hours on the ice and the travel; she wanted to set her own schedule, be home long enough to keep a plant alive.
Her work requires her to think in reverse; she has to begin with the last strokes on her piece. Besides paint, she uses whatever tape she has on hand, glue of every kind and woodstain to create her abstracts. Her inspiration comes from geometric shapes, especially lines.
Desiring to stand out from the usual canvas and paper paintings she chose glass for her surface. But the real reason she chose glass is that it offered her the look she loves of a clear coat of varnish. Perhaps it’s a nod to the ice she skated on for so many years.
I first saw her work when I was curating art for a winery. I loved everything about it, the colors, the sharp abstraction, the glass. At the end of that show, I snagged the price tag from one and took it home. We later met up in a parking lot to exchange the piece of art for money. McMillin told me the safest way to transport the piece was standing up, you know, the way the glass companies do it.
Months later the winery called me to say a piece of her art had not been picked up from the previous show so Andrew and I went to retrieve it. I fell in love with it too.
And I hung it on my newly finished wall of my newly finished house. Even though the reverse side clearly state, “NFS.” Not. For. Sale. I reluctantly called McMillin to tell her the piece had been retrieved and was in my house. She couldn’t have it back, but I would pay her for it. Deal.
So now to help out a fellow artist, I’m having a pop-up show for her in my home. Okay, I’m stealthily planning to plant a few teensy little pieces of my own around the room as well.
Aoife's Little Book
I absolutely love, love, love when my grandchildren gift me their tiny creations. (See Atlas’s origami box, Anwyn’s miniscule origami birds, Rhys’s pottery bird all in dark green and black.)
So when Aoife slipped this onto the dinner table for me, I was overjoyed! A tiny book of her rhyming words.
I did not want to lose it so I put it in my coat and zipped the pocket closed. My phone was in there too. On the way home I pulled out my phone, then slipped it back in the pocket and zipped it up.
Sitting in bed, I remembered the tiny book and went to check the pocket; the tiny book was gone! I asked Andrew to please go out in the foot deep snow and look in the car to see if the tiny book had fallen onto my seat when I pulled out my phone.
He came back in, set the book down on his bedside table and I was thrilled. It was lost but now it was found!
Illuminated Letter
A little history about illuminated letters and then on to the project.
For this project the students were asked to pick a letter and then pick out things that begin with that letter to embellish it. For example, “F” for fox and forest. “O” for ocean. I stressed that the pieces are generally chock full of detail.
We used colored pencil and marker for the color and then used a gold acrylic paint for the illuminated part.
I sampled a bunch of gold paints and in the end I wasn’t thrilled with any of them. They tend to go on thin and need extra coats. But the up side of that is that we discovered the paint can be applied over the colored pencil or marker for a colorful shimmery finish.
One little girl did an homage to the recently deceased Eddie Van Halen.
Virginia McCracken
I’ve followed/stalked/loved these little creations by Virginia McCracken for years. This Christmas my ship came in when Erin gifted me a bespoke box. I had loved McCracken’s “The Artist in His Study.” She created for me, “Terri in Her Study.” The books are superb, the trinkets are a perfect touch and the critters expression is wonderful.
Origami Box
Atlas was taught to make these origami boxes at Christmas time for an advent calendar. He whipped up one for me out of paper of my choosing.
Women in the Arts
National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington D.C. Sometimes I wonder why we have to reduce artists to certain categories; can’t an artist be amazing without the reduction? I mean, can’t some of these pieces hold up to anyone else’s art? Or do we have to reduce the comparison to other women in art? We hit the last day before a Covid shutdown. The city was in eerie lockdown. Andrew and I with our grandson, were able to see the whole museum in under 2 hours. Some art is uninspired but there were some clever pieces and some well executed pieces.
There was also an extremely vigilant guard who felt it his bounden duty to make sure Andrew’s bandana never slipped beneath his nose. Very tiresome.
Jerome, AZ
We went to see what we could see and stumbled upon Jerome, AZ. It looks like an old town created for a movie. The windy road up the hill has houses whose front doors hug the road; the back door sits high above the cliff it’s settled on, precariously perched on stilts.
We pulled into the Jerome HighSchool parking lot to discover that long ago, over 40 years ago, it became art studios. Robin John Anderson was having a one man show in this town with a population of 474.
“Proclaimed the “Wickedest Town in the West” in 1905, Jerome earned its notorious reputation because of bordellos, saloons, gambling and gunfights.“ It is a ghost town now with tons of character.
Robin Anderson and his wife have owned the high school for 41 years. Just six weeks prior to our visit, his wife had died. He was 21; she was 34 when they married. When she died, he’d discovered she was older than she’d ever let on. The age difference was more than the 13 years he’d been told.
As we walked through his exhibit, he explained his mathematical way of dividing the canvas. Once upon a time he painted en plain air, but now with his formula, all his paintings come from his imagination.
I liked the ease of them and the brightness.
Nana/Granddaughter Class
This was the sweetest painting class. The grandma arranged for her and her granddaughter to share a painting lesson.
I also had an art class paint the lemons.
Here is the church, here is the steeple...
I was honored to be able to teach a few fundamentals of acrylic painting to this group of women. We are in a “pandemic” and sometimes it’s just a relief to do something normal, something creative. Everyone chose their own sky color; did they want evergreen swags in the window or no?, snow on the peak of the steeple or no?
I was focused on teaching, refilling paint requests, offering perspective, when suddenly I discovered that the hostess of the evening had provided artichoke dip with bagel chips. I am such a sucker for a creamy dip with chips. Excuse me just a minute while I stuff my face.
Anyway, yes, the painting. Acrylic on an 11” X 14” canvas. The only “cheat” I offered was a template of the church.
Let it Snowman
The last hurrah before we break for Christmas. Snowman in acrylic on canvas. Oh my gosh, I always love seeing the personality of each artist.
Pears
I am in love with the rendition of each pear.
I did a step-by-step demo and the unique personality of each artist shines.
Pushing the Abilities of Colored Pencils
I wanted my students to realize some of the possibilities with colored pencils. If you are patient, it is possible to get deeper darker color. Patience also allows you to layer the colors for a more vibrant color. Leaves this time of year are too beautiful not to use.
Botanical Art
I wanted my art students to know that good art can be used for science. I gathered plant specimens from the Columbia River area to copy in detail.
I introduced them to vellum. Vellum comes from calves, goats or deer. Today vellum is still used by both miniaturists and botanical artists who are painting in a very precise way - typically working with 'dry' watercolour using a stippling technique or very small strokes. We used man-made vellum and I opted for colored pencils not wanting to deal with the crinkling, wrinkling of the paper when watercolor goes on too wet.
Honey and The Bees
Is gathering honey an art? I don’t know but those bees create a masterpiece of honey comb perfectly shaped, perfectly filled.
The fact that bees all have a ready personal weapon makes you want to be sure you’re well covered and know what the heck you’re doing.
We didn’t so we proceeded with caution and amazement. In the end we had 20 pints.
ArtSquared
Who even knows in “These Trying Times” if ArtSquared will even happen come the end of September. ArtSquared is an annual event in Walla Walla, Washington. It is so popular with artists that even though signup is available for a week, the available slots are full the first part of the first day. Months before the event each artist is given (8) 6”X6” wooden panels; what the artist creates on this small panel is up to them. Every panel bought costs a mere $36. I decided to do a little bit of everything.
After Joseph Cornell
I was thrilled to discover Joseph Cornell’s clever boxes in the Chicago Art Institute. I’d poured over pages in books with his clever work and suddenly there it really was!
With a cue from him, my art students created their own whimsical boxes.
Gerbera Daisies in acrylic
I bought a big pot of Gerbera daisies for my art class to paint on canvas in acrylic. I actually think the class never even looked at the flowers. A class of girls, they had already perfected their own floral style long before this class and cavalierly set about penciling in their design. No glance at the leaf shape, no interest in the leaf veining, the tiny hairlike flower filaments in the center, just full speed ahead.
I insisted that the whole canvas needed to be filled.
I’ve started painting in watercolor again so I did a quick one.
Art for the soul during Covid
It was just good to have an art class with some creative people. The assignment was hills painted in strips and shapes and not realistically. They could use bold colors or mimic the colors of a real mountain.