I’ve got so many things going on it’s not even funny.  It’s almost scary and overwhelming.  So I must refrain from beginning anything else until I can mark something off the list.

Most of these will eventually be turned into step-by-step demo blogs soon, so I’ve been taking photos along the way of everything I’ve done.

Here’s what I’m working on today:


Shell Inlay Box

Today, I’m hot-glueing the shell mosaic onto the box.  This is a photo of me testing out different designs.

Shell Inlay Box
Shell Inlay Box

Shadowbox:  Rose Tints My World

I got this box on clearance at Michael’s for 99¢.  Now it’s very hot pink.  Well, the front half is.  So today I’ll be painting the back half.  Then I can proceed with the decorating.

Shadowbox Front Painted
The front half of the shadowbox is very pink.

Sunflowers on my Easel

The other major thing I’ll show you is the sunflower I’ve been painting. The reference photo is one I took last summer of a rogue sunflower that grew under one of the bird feeders in the backyard.

Sunflower WIP
The Sunflower on my Easel

Medium:  Oil Pastel
Paper:  Portofino Acquerello, 140 lb, Hot Pressed, 20″ x 14″
Primer:  Colourfix
Image size:  18″ x 12″

I just put in the background colors yesterday.  I’m not quite happy with them yet… I can’t decide if they’re too blue-ish, or not blue enough.  What do you think?

Written on February 18th, 2012 , Art Tags: , ,

Today I’m going to spotlight three of my favorite artists.  I chose each one because I like his or her life story and I’m attracted to, inspired by, and influenced by his or her art.

Self-Portrait with MonkeysFrida Kahlo (1907-1954).  A Mexicana who taught herself to paint and whose work reflects all aspects of her life, from her long-term physical disabilities, to her difficult marriage to artist Diego Rivera, to her love of Mexico.

 

 

 

 

George O'KeeffeGeorgia O’Keeffe (1887-1976).  An American woman whose independence and big bold paintings are a constant source of wonder to me.

 

 

 

Vincent Van GoghVincent Van Gogh (1853-1890). He was born in Holland but most well-known for the paintings he did while living in France.  His use of color, line, and texture are amazing.

 

 

 

Who are your favorite artists?

Written on February 17th, 2012 , Art Tags: , , , , , ,

Always in a rush?  Never have time for your art, whatever form your art takes?

It’s try that the creative person needs long stretches of isolation to do his or her best work, but that doesn’t mean you that can’t do anything at all with just five minutes.  And it doesn’t have to be your best work.  Just do something.  Anything.  Or not.

Here’s a list of possiblities:

  1. Write something:  a quick blog, a status update, a shopping list, a journal entry, a list of random ideas, a poem, a postcard to a friend, a love letter.  If it’s Tuesday, try Five Minute Fiction.
  2. Sketch something: your pet, child, or spouse, a book on the table, your own hand or foot, the view from the window.  Read Robert Sloan’s advice on creating five-minute art.  Or this article by Courtney Jordan.
  3. Sing something:  sing along with your favorite CD, or sing a capella a beloved song from childood, or a silly song, or a love song.  Can’t sing?  Hum,then.  Or drum your hands on everything around you and listen to the different sounds.  And maybe dance.
  4. Got a bucket list (which you might share here or here)? Or a list of impossible things you’d like to do?  Use 5 minutes to research information about one of the activities on your list.  That’s the first step to getting it done.
  5. Take a photograph of something: your pet, child, or spouse, a row of books, DVDs, brushes, or drawing implements, your cup of tea or coffee, your work in progress, the dead bug on your desk.

    Dead Bug

    One of my Dead Bugs

  6. Read something: a news article, the sports page, the comics, a couple poems or pages of a novel, a blog, a new recipe, an instruction manual.
  7. Drink a glass of water.  Staying hydrated is important.
  8. Tidy your office or studio.  This is something we all put off, since we’d much rather be in the process of creating something rather than putting away our toys.  But it does need to be done sometimes, and it can prove cleansing or meditative.  And I almost always find something I thought I’d lost (or forgot I had) when I tidy up.  So it’s all good.
  9. Stretch.  Look out the window.  Stand outside, if the weather is suitable.  Take a deep breath.  Stretch again in a different direction.  Or two.  Look around from that stretch position and see the world from a different angle.
  10. Meditate.  Sometimes the best action is no action.

Don’t like any of my ideas?  Try these:

Things to do when you’re bored.

Five minutes in the kitchen.

 

Written on February 14th, 2012 , Art, Goals, How-To, Philosophy Tags: , , , ,

Last Tuesday, I posted a review of Blue and Yellow Don’t Make Green, by Michael Wilcox.  I’d like to share a few more resources on color today.

Yurmby Wheel

Yurmby Wheel

I’d heard of the Munsell Color System before, but never found it helpful. But until yesterday, I’d never heard of the Gurney Journey or the Yurmby Wheel (although the advice in the Wilcox book is similar to the Yurmby Wheel).   The Yurmby Wheel is also used on this Gamut Mask site.

Also, I wanted to include the Color Scheme Designer Website last week, but it was down for some reason.  Now it’s back.

I can only guess that as I continue to have more experience as a painter, I’ll develop a deeper, more intuitive understanding of color.  I’ll eventually remember which mixes work together and which result in mud.

In the meantime, I’ll keep using my swatches and wheels and any other crutches that help me make beautiful paintings.

Written on February 13th, 2012 , Art Tags: , , , ,

This new background photo was taken at Occoquan Bay NWR.  I actually take a lot of photos of tree branches against the blue sky.  I think it’s one of the prettiest combinations of colors there is.  Just like I love when the bright white moon is up during the day in front of a clear cerulean sky.  Gorgeous.

Bald Eagle in Tree

Sometime taking photos of tree branches includes Bald Eagles at Pohick Regional Park.

To me, beauty is meaningful.  As is the grotesque.  As is oddness.  And living things of all species.  So I am easily motivated to take photographs of things I find beautiful, grotesque, odd, or alive.  (Which encompasses almost everything, which accounts for the outrageous number of photos I take.)

Dead Fish

And the grotesque includes the dead fish that eagles leave uneaten on the shore.

Humans are hard-wired to find meaning.  It’s part of our nature to puzzle out why things are, to learn about them, to find (or invent) meaning for them.  This is part of the intelligence that evolved along with creativity, language, art- and tool-making, and everything else that sets up apart from other animals.  Our curiosity about the world, our ability to figure out patterns, discover their meaning, and plan for the future – all this has made extremely adaptable and therefore successful.

I don’t believe that the universe as a whole has any meaning.  There is no absolute, over-riding purpose to anything… at least, not one we can be privy to.  (Although that doesn’t stop people from inventing them and trying to impose their invented meanings on others.)  But we each have the ability to decide or discover for ourselves what is meaningful to us, and to pursue that meaning.

And it is pursuing what is meaning to us that keeps us motivated to get up in the morning, to go out in the cold or the heat or the rain or the snow, to take photos, or make art, or plan for the future.  If you don’t find what you’re doing meaningful, then why bother?  Why are you doing it?  What is motivating you?

When we lose sight of what is meaningful in our own lives, though, we lose motivation.  We’re simply going through the motions.  And sometimes that’s unavoidable.  We all have to do things from time to time that seem pointless, but are required to get to some other goal we’re trying to achieve. But no one should live their whole life in pointlessness.

It is your responsibility – your duty to yourself – to find something that gives your life meaning.  What motivates you?  What makes you feel good about yourself and the work you’re doing?  What are you holding on to?  What are you protecting?  What are you creating?

Written on February 9th, 2012 , Art, Goals, Nature, Philosophy, Photography Tags: , , , , , ,

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