Archive for Art

Busy in July 2009

Corn God Study #1

Corn God Study #1

Some days I feel like in order to be satisfied in thinking I’ve created “something” I have to post an image of it every day.  Lately I haven’t posted much. You know, It isn’t like I haven’t been drawing and painting, but given how I’ve do my watercolors, and since that has been the majority of my work the past few weeks – I don’t feel like I’ve had much to show.  The reality is that I have a bunch of projects rotating at once – but none completed.

Jack-o-lantern Ideas

Jack-o-lantern Ideas

Mostly, I like to put down a layer of color, and then add another once it dries. This could mean, five minutes of painting and an hour or more waiting. Hey that kind of rhymes.

Sketch Ideas for Icons nestled in branches

Sketch Ideas for Icons nestled in branches

So the truth of it all, is that I do like to be able to make something, and then post it, and then have feedback. That is one reason I got such a kick out of my 30 day sketch project on facebook.  I was just inspired by feedback. Unfortunately, Most of the feedback I get on the art-blog is spam. Ads for online pharmacy schemes and drugs I don’t need. I take great satisfaction in using the SPAM and DELETE buttons.

Epcots Living Seas Icon in Oak Branch

Epcot's Living Seas Icon in Oak Branch

I don’t let it get to me because I know that I’m not really advertising my little blog and it’s not something that you would run into on google or some other big search engine.  That’s okay with me I guess. It’s my little online piece of self which I can log into from time to time. I can even log into it from my phone and feel all cool and trendy.

Cinderella with Pumpkin Sketch

Cinderella with Pumpkin Sketch

Seriously, I do get into the whole online thing. I’ve kept a written journal online since 2002. Before that I kept a hand written journal for major parts of my life. It’s just who I am.

As I mentioned before, I’m on a “Let’s draw and paint pumkins” kick. I don’t know why – maybe I’m wishing for a cool and dry autumn (my favorite and most productive time of year). It’s closer than you think you know.  I did a page of studies with various results. The best one I’ve done rates a solid “eh” on my scale, but I’m rarely blown away by my own stuff. I find it frustrating to see so clearly in my head what something should look like, only to have my result to not even come close.

Pumpkin Studies - Not drawn from life.

Pumpkin Studies - Not drawn from life.

Perhaps I’m being negative and I shouldn’t do that – there is no room for that here. Practice and Progress. Practice and Progress.

The projects in current rotation have been the studies of pumpkins, two separate works about jack-o-lanterns, an attempt at lily flowers and two versions of a funky sketch I did that I refer to as the corn god. Some of my art is a clear reaction from being isnpired by others, some of it is me trying to find my style and still some is just practice as in “I’m going to try to paint this”.

Corn God initial idea/sketch

Corn God initial idea/sketch

I can see improvements in some areas so all is not a loss. I’ve realized that certain paper responds well to what I’m doing, while others don’t. For practice I’ve gathered up all the odds & ends and pads around the house and I’ve just been blowing through them. So while some aren’t up to snuff, I would guess they are teaching me how to solve a problem or two. 

 

I still feel that I’m stronger in drawing but I’m drawn to improving my watercolors right now.  Perhaps watercolor feels more valid to me at this juncture.

I will continue to practice and to see what I can do with the watercolors and in the meantime I’ll continue to sketch out ideas. It’s fun and I feel happier than I have in a long time.

Sleeping Dragon - with pumpkins of course.

Sleeping Dragon - with pumpkins of course.

Cleaning Up

The early part of this month has been a mixed bag in regards to art. On one hand, I’m quite satisfied to find that drawing & painting is becoming more of a routine for me and that I’ve been able to fit it into my schedule. On the other hand, my results this week have not been what I had wished.

There are some basic truths about me. One is that I have a very real art supply addiction. Seriously I never met a tube of paint I didn’t fall in love with. Paper? I’ve got to have stacks hanging around. Pencils? What brand, I’ll ask you. That strange once in a lifetime French curve? Don’t worry I got it somewhere.

I suppose that harboring supplies in itself isn’t exactly bad, but most of the time it works against me. There was a time when I could put all of my supplies in a single cardboard box and everything I could create was created from them. I imagine there was a sufficient use of the things I did have that kept things at bay. When I gave up being consciously active in my art, I didn’t use as much of my supplies and then things piled up. I put them in bags and boxes and under tables and in drawers. They lined closet shelves, some got lost in the garage. I may not have created as much as I wished, but shopped way more than I could have imagined.

Recently, while initiating one of what I hope will be many purges of the excess that I’m surrounded with, I realized that the bulk of my supplies were one factor that prevented me from creating anything. Honestly, it’s tough to create a painting when you can’t even find your supplies that are scattered all over the house. Once you have spent all your time looking for everything you need, your inspirations and energy pretty much dissipate.

Recently I took some time just to locate like objects and put them together. Doing this the true shopping madness was apparent and I wondered why I purchased so much stuff.

Well, that answer came easy. For me each Supply holds within it the promise of the key that unlocks your imagination. Subconsciously every time I went shopping, I found some object or supply that would be that magic answer to getting me kick started again. Unfortunately the object would come in the house and be eaten by all the other stuff looming around it. The very objects of inspiration formed a wall I could not get around.

The sheer foolishness of some of it was incredible. During the process it was common to hear me remark “Hey, it’s a number 2 brush!” followed soon after with “Hey, it’s another number 2 brush!” and another and another. Repeat the process with “pad of paper”, “eraser”, “pencil” or “paint tube” and you would get the idea.

Even worse, some of these objects were not even up to the standards of what I would want to work with. For example, while getting back into things, I decided that I didn’t want to work with any watercolors that were not lightfast. This gave me a baseline to weed out stuff I didn’t want. On a side note: Unfortunately there was one or two purchases following the process, but it was directed with what I needed to round out my palette of colors.

Another sad thing to note was all the materials I purchased that were either very sub-standard or had crossed the line into unusable. Time will do that to things. Considering everything, I suppose it just made them easier to get rid of. The student colors and supplies I wouldn’t use went into the “tag sale box” or to some child I knew will use them up. Kids are a great source for stuff like that.

On a positive note, the act of organizing these materials, and weeding out what was no longer usable is actually leaving me more motivated and able to create. Now that my brushes and my paints are in one place, I find it easier to sit down for ten minutes and play around with them. I keep a “kit” of my most likely to use by the kitchen table. Also – getting organized lets me use the kitchen table as an area to paint because my “stuff” is manageable and portable just like the old days.

I still have too much stuff, but that is me after all – always the pack-rat. At least I’m getting things down to levels where I’m in control. Don’t get me wrong – I still WANT every different color of every different brand of paint I can find, but I’m finding it easier not to impulse buy them all. I’m not expecting to have all my problems solved in one day (It did take years to build up the clutter) but little by little, I’m making progress.

In regards to what I have been drawing and painting:

 

Dragon Head Sketches

Dragon Head Sketches

I decided a couple of weeks ago that I had wanted to do something more than just some random sketching and playing with supplies and I had decided that I wanted to do it with watercolors. My ambition will be the death of me I think. Oh the fabulous idea I had of an underwater dragon guarding a treasure in a clam shell. Sure it was a cliché but I did some sketching and then happily went on to draw this dragon. Then, as I usually do, I inked the whole thing and then started to paint. Well, it wasn’t what I wanted exactly and it reminded me more of a comic book page.

Practice makes perfect - much practice is in order here.

Practice makes perfect - much practice is in order here.

 I wanted to change the drawing too. So I started again, and this time I tried the old method of doing a drawing on tracing paper and transferring it. I read about it in a book about Tasha Tudor. It’s also a method that my friends from way back had taught me. It also allowed me to trace off the predecessor.

Once again I dove in and laid down some color. It looked like a much better start but I soon remembered why we stretch watercolor paper. Buckle-City! Unfortunately I lost interest here.

Nice try but no cigar.

Nice try but no cigar.

I chose to ignore the paper issues for sake of practice and while I can’t say I like anything this project is producing, I keep reminding myself that it’s the learning from the practice that is the goal here. The output is secondary right now. Who knows, maybe I’ll produce something I’m happy with next time.

I’m not sure if I want to work on this exact piece at the moment but maybe he will come back into my orbit again.

Looking at the Past

The last time I was active with my art was probably the early 90’s. It’s been a long time.  Somewhere along the line I lost my will and my ambition and closed that part of myself off.

While I may have abandoned drawing & painting for the past couple of decades, I didn’t throw away the old stuff, and I had not looked at it in years. Today in a crazy burst of house cleaning, I came across the large brown envelope of a portfolio that I stored them in and took some time to browse them.

It was a rediscovery of sorts. My perception of what I did had been clouded over time. While I wouldn’t say most of them were up to my adult standards of what I would consider finished pieces today, there were some interesting things to see in there.

The first thing I discovered is that what I like to draw, and my “motifs” haven’t changed. Flowers, mushrooms, general design concepts – all remain fairly unchanged through today and I see them in my random mindless doodles that cover most of my agenda papers and meeting notes from various meetings I’m required to attend. I realized I fall on some of the same conventions after all these years as well. I draw my stylized leaves the same, my sunflowers are the same, numbers show up as decorative accents. 

Next, I discovered that right before I abandoned everything my skills had made a good jump, especially my line work. I didn’t see it at the time. Today, I think some of it is quite good even if sadly, the skill has not remained. This is mostly due to a long history of working with heavy machinery and keyboards which causes my fingers to go numb, especially if I draw without a break for 10 minutes. I suppose modern medicine will have to cure that one.

But I digress…

I get a little mad at myself when I see now, quite clearly, what I couldn’t then. If I could have spent the past 15 years cultivating that skill, I’d love to see what I’d be able to do now. I suppose there is not use crying over spilt milk as they say. In the past I was occupied with being someone else and my eyes were “on the prize”. I like it better now that I’m old enough to know I’m just who I am and that I will have to be happy with what my are says and how it says it.

Dogwoods Unfinished

Dogwoods Unfinished

I am intregued with a particular drawing of dogwood flowers. I started it but never finished. Something about the piece feels right to me. The way the leaves are completed, but the flowers remain blank. Iwonder if it had been the other way around, with only the flowers finished would it would be more accepted because the they should be the main focus, correct? Still, I’d never try to go back to it now – it tells me its story is finished.

Sunflower Portrait

Sunflower Portrait

Another unfinished piece is particularly motivating. It’s a bust or cameo style portrait of no-one in particular, but the background of marble tiles, was coming out great using nothing but dots. I know I need to address that method and look again.

Sad Kitty

Sad Kitty

Lastly, I think the picture I did of a sad cat was the one that “broke” me. I remember working and reworking that picture and it never satisfied me. It was the one drawing that said – you can’t do this – you are not good enough. I suppose I look at it today and I don’t see as much wrong with it as I once did, my frustrations were in play way back when. Even though I did other things after I know my spirit wasn’t the same then. I became a more “practical” person after that and much of the playful aspects like the border of caterpillars in the mushroom drawing dissapeared.

Mushrooms

Mushrooms

It’s a learning process and I don’t thing I’d want to go back to those times even if I wished I had traveled a different path. I had a conversation with my brother today about how sometimes, you need to mature in order to produce what you wanted and to go where you were ment to go. I realize this is contrary to what many people think, that youth holds all the cards in the creative universe, but maybe some of us need to be forced to learn some of life’s lessons before we can let go.

I’ve long wondered if my voice was still there, or if I even had one, but it’s there all right. I may not know what it is saying right now, but it won’t be denied. It is consistent.

The 30 Day Sketch Project

I’ve been asked to explain what “the point” was with the 30 Day Sketch Project. You might ask me  if I identify as a creative person and an artist shouldn’t I sketch everyday anyway?

Wobbly Waitress

Wobbly Waitress

When I was a teen, sketching & drawing was done without much thought, that is to say – if the mood struck me, I would sit down and draw something. Sometimes these worked out great, sometimes they did not. To me it didn’t really matter as my enjoyment was derived from the process of drawing or painting, not the finished project. I scribbled on a piece of paper once to test out some new art sticks I purchased and those random lines inspired a pile of finished drawings and a dozen metal sculptures.

Over time, however, you begin to focus more on the finished product and it becomes more difficult to live up to your previous work. Many people speak of having a fear of the white page. I’m no different. I purchased better quality supplies and didn’t want to waste them on a mistake or a test. Also, more practical concerns took over my life and before I knew it I found I had not completed a finished piece in over a decade.

(well maybe one or two)

This isn’t to say I did not create during this time, but my focus was definitely not on my drawing. Still the creative spark finds a way. I have a box filled with old work notebooks and school pages which contain doodles up down every page. They inspired a project too, but I’ll cover that some other time.

After a year of volunteer work which took up most of my free time, I found I was finally able to focus on my own interests again.  Art was a natural choice. I was always talking about “doing art” again  and over the years I had aquired quite a stack of supplies. Finding some free time I grabbed some paper and a few supplies and there is was FEAR! Feel free to insert ominous music and thunder effects here.

I thought to myself how ridiculous the reaction was, but it was there anyway and would not go away. I knew I should make sketching a daily part of my life, I knew the creative wells were rusted from being abandoned and I knew that I didn’t have the confidence to make a mark in all those pretty sketchbooks I’ve purchased. But what could I do to get the machine going again?

Woman With Wrap

Woman With Wrap

I decided that I would make myself draw something everyday and that what I drew it on would not matter – notepads, gum wrappers old cereal boxes, all were fair game. While I can’t say I resorted to cereal boxes (not yet anyway), I did quickly find that this process started to help me overcome the white page fear. In addition I decided to post this stuff on my facebook account because sharing is way more fun then just saving it for myself. I also believed that if I shared the bad stuff along with the good stuff it might also start to chip away at the fears.

Sharing it turned out to be so much better than I expected. I actually got some positive feedback and it inspired me to keep going and to have fun with what I’m doing. While I know I have a very long road ahead of me, in terms of skill development, I already feel that the wheels of creativity have started to turn and it’s a good place to be in.

Mt Fuji Mushroom

Mt Fuji Mushroom