Thursday, November 29, 2018

Tired of Painting Apples

I have no one to blame but myself. When I got back from vacation, I didn’t have a plan about what I wanted to paint, so I grabbed an apple. Between the lack of focus, jet-lag, work, and laundry, I found a few pockets of time here and there to work on this. That means it took me 3 days to finish a small, simply apple painting.

#287 - Another Apple - 5" x 5" - paper

In other news, I have been sketching a bit and I stopped at the Como Zoo on my way home and worked on sketching the giraffe. Since I’m working close by the Zoo and Bell Natural History Museum tomorrow and most of next week, I might try to do a little more sketching. I am excitied about trying to sketch from animals in the dioramas at the Bell which do not move!

Monday, November 26, 2018

Pleased To Be Jet-Lagged

Yesterday afternoon, I returned from a 12-day vacation in London. It was a very, very good idea to take today off, as well, to unpack, do laundry, and generally recover from jet lag.

It was a fabulous vacation. I was with my hubby and 4 other friends. It was a good thing that I took notes each day of the things we did. Otherwise, I am not sure that I would remember it all. If time permits, I might do a few blog posts. Most likely, I will get busy with other things now that I'm back home, including getting back to drawing and painting and wanting to document that! However, I want to mention one of the most amazing exhibits from this trip.

The Tate Britain currently has an exhibit of Edward Burne-Jones which continues until February 2019. Wow, wow, wow, wow, wowwy, wow, wow.  One of my friends is a big fan of the Pre-Raphaelites. I am a fan of William Morris and the Arts and Crafts era, so this was right up my alley. I haven't studied up on Morris' contemporaries, so I didn't realize the connection until the night before we went.

I enjoyed the exhibit so much that I purchased the book about the exhibit in the gift shop. It was an extensive exhibit with more than 150 pieces. There were early pen and inks. There were unfinished paintings and studies. As beautiful as all of the finished work was, I especially enjoyed the studies.There were paintings in watercolor, gouache, and oil. There were tapestries and other forms of art, including jewelry.

There was something so spiritual and sensual about his work. It just drew me in and took my breath away.

I don't think it's legal for me to post copies of the pictures that I took, so I won't.  If you are interested, go look to the link above, since it shows two of my favorite works. You could also look at this wikiart link, search online, or borrow my book.

Monday, November 19, 2018

Many, Many, Many Layers Of Paint

After class on 11/08, I came home and painted another apple.  I wasn’t concerned about the shape. Was trying to get the feel for the paint and medium. It was amazing watching how Carl could change things so easily.

I started to play with my apple and tried to do the same by deliberately making a hard edge and going back later to try and soften it. I picked up wet paint and tried to fix the spot later.  I played with the apple color going from predominately greens and yellow to adding a lot of blue, magenta, brown, purple and back again. While I tried to stay true to the values, I never got the whole apple to work at the same time.  Sometimes the top worked, Sometimes the dark side worked.  Sometimes the light side worked.  The apple shape got distorted.  It didn't matter.  I would paint it all over and over and over again.   It was practicing.  It was play.  It was fun.  I stopped when it was time to feed the cats and go to bed and it didn't matter what point I stopped at. Yup, it looks like a cross between an apple and a pear. Plus, there's a hard edge and a splotchy part. Still, it just doesn't matter.

#286 - Layered Apple - 5" x 5" - paper

Sunday, November 18, 2018

The Next Classroom Painting

This painting is from last week's class on 11/08, so I am still behind on my blogging. In last week's class, we painting on white canvas panel that we tinted with color before we started.  The first layer of tinting I did was a muddy color.  I think it was burnt umber. The next layer was mostly Pyroll Red Light with a little Titanate Yellow.  Both layers were really diluted with thinned down matte medium.

I'm still not getting how to work in this diluted, layered way, but by the end of class I was getting a tiny bit of insight.  It helped that Carl come over to help.  I also watched him paint when he helped the person sitting next to me.  When he demonstrated things, it was amazing how much he could change the character of an area with a few brush strokes.

#285 - Classroom Still Life - 11" x 14" - canvas panel
While he uses some of the same colors I use, I played with new paint colors.  Also, we used gloss medium (ick, ick, ick) rather than matte medium with the paint.  It was good to try, yet, another new thing.  I found the gloss medium to be too glossy, plus it makes it harder to figure otu when your paint is dry.

Thursday, November 15, 2018

A Trio Of Apples

For class on 11/08, I knew we were going to start working with color.  We were going to be painting on different color backgrounds.  I've tried this several times in Kat's classes.  The different this time was that the color was going to be more translucent.  Additionally, we weren’t going to try to paint the actual colors of the actual objects.  That meant it was time to practice using a simple object.

First up, I went crazy with the colors and put no thought into creating anything cohesive.  You can see the tinted color that I used for the ground.  That is because I keep trying to add a layer of paint in an area where the previous layer is not dry. I do this over and over again in class and outside of class.  This is a perfect example of what happens.  You end up picking up a lot of the previous paint, rather than laying down the additional paint. I could have tried to fix it, but I decided to memorialize this, as a reminder to stop doing this.

#282 - Apple - 5" x 5" paper
The next time I went to painting, I worked on two paintings at the same time and used two different ground colors.


This is the painting done on the orange background.  You can see how it really dulls down the purple colors. 

#283 - Apple - 5" x 5" - paper
This is the painting on the purple background. I like how this apple turned out better. 

#284 - Apple - 5" x 5" - paper. 


Monday, November 12, 2018

Another Painting From Class

I am a little behind on blog posts. We have been working on a complicated still life in class.  First we painted it in black and white and for class on 11/08, we painted it in color (any color - - - not the actual color of the objects - - - there will be a post about that later).

Carl has the class working in a different way than I usually work. It's been good for me to stretch and try new things!  While I'm used to using a view finder, I'm using one without my handy-dandy grid lines. We draw on paper and might do several studies to get a composition to explore.  The drawing is used to transfer the outline of the drawing to the painting surface. The lines on the painting surface are sealed with the matte medium and left to dry for several minutes and then you are good to start painting.

I decided that I was mostly in class to learn skills, so I didn't agonize over my drawing. I also edited out several elements.  In last night's class, Carl was saying that sometimes you are making an artistic decision, since the point is not to just reproduce what you see.  While that is a good out, at this point, any goofiness is due to my drawing skills (or lack thereof), not artistic license.

This painting is from the 11/01 class.  Working in gray scale has been good practice.  I can't say that I feel very successful working with the medium and the paint.  I feel like I use way too much medium and my paint strokes just feel big and sloppy. I hope I don't sound too negative.  In actuality, I am enjoying learning a new way to paint and think it's going to help quite a bit overall.

#281 - Classroom Still Life - 11 x 14 - canvas panel
Carl helped me with the painting.  My vase looked really flat and he added the extremely light part on the side.  At first, it looked too harsh to me, which means I must be back to not making my lights light enough.

Friday, November 9, 2018

Perspective

Yesterday, I had a lot of art thoughts rumbling around in my head. There was painting class, plus I came home and painted more after class. When I was out and about during the day, I was keenly aware of buildings.  Mostly, it was noticing their tilt given my point of perspective.

There are several blogs of Urban Sketchers that I will look at from time to time.  In Stephanie Bower’s blog, she did 10 posts with sketching tips this summer.  In the past two weeks, I’ve been reading one or two of them when I have time.  The ones herehere, and here sort of blew my mind.  For the most part, I don’t get perspective in drawing.  On a macro level, I’m still lost, but on a micro level there are certain concepts starting to make a bit more sense.  I need to keep working through these blog posts, take a break, and work through them again.  At some point, I might even try to read about perspective in drawing.  When I’ve tried before, the information got too advanced too quickly and I got lost and frustrated.

Yesterday, something clicked.  When I looked at buildings, I could see the different corners reaching up to the sky and how they tilted at angles that went from less extreme to more.  It’s subtle, but it’s there and I thought about and imagined lines going up and meeting in the great vanishing point in the sky.

Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Evolution Of A Drawing

I'm not drawing as much as I would like.  Here is the evolution of Sunday's drawing.  I started with trying to block in the shapes.  The attempt on the top was not close enough to help, so I started over lower on the page.

I got a little lost with shading, but I think 3 of the eggs "read" as eggs.





Monday, November 5, 2018

Another Look Back

Back in June, I did a long post in "honor" of using up one of my first spiral-bound Bee Paper books with paintings. It was the first 9" x  9" book and I started painting in it, not long after I started painting.  Prepping pages with gesso is easier with multiple books, so I purchased a second book in June 2016.  I finished this book several weeks ago.

This is the last page.  It was one of my earlier, practice apples. I like that it shows that I am trying to expand how I paint, so I can learn more. This was painted on 10/21/18.

#269 - Practice Apple - 8" x 8" - paper

Here is the first page. I still remember being excited having the highlights in the water turn out.

Water Lily from October 2016

This painting goes to October 2016 when I was taking the second set of classes from Kat.  At the second class, I was struggling with seeing values.  The white powdered sugar on the donut was throwing me off in class and I declared the powdered donut to be my frenemy.

Break Time from October 2016

Here is my favorite painting from this book and, perhaps, from all time. I think that's because it was such a powerful learning experience about values. It's from Thanksgiving last year and I wrote about it here.

Hammet Value Painting from November 2017

There are a number of other cat paintings in this book and here is a sample.

Ella from February 2017

Hammett from February 2018

Chandler from August 2018

While I painted some dogs. None of them turned out very well. I also painted some birds, including these two. 

Chicken from January 2017
Hummingbird from August 2018

I did timed painting exercises in this book, including this one I did as an exercise while I was taking my third set of painting classes from Kat this spring.

Timed Painting Exercise - May 2018

When painting club was operating one of the homework assignments was to paint a sink.  This particular assignment made me nuts.  While I still struggle with composition, today, I feel like I have a tiny bit of knowledge.  With this assignment, I didn't have a clue.  I tried and tried and tried to paint my downstairs bathroom sink and each one was a disaster in so many ways, including this one.

Wretched Bathroom Sink Painting from May 2017

I wanted at least one decent sink painting when painting club met the next time, so I added a cat.  Fortunately, one of the professional cat models in my home used to like hanging out in the sink.

Chandler In Sink from May 2017

Last, but not least, when I was in the last 25% of the pages in this book, I went on a spree of painting landscapes or outdoor scenes.

Farm Buildings from June 2018

Minnehaha Park Umbrellas from June 2018
Since I bounce around painting in different spiral books, on loose paper, and on hardboard, it takes a long time to fill up a book, so it feels like a milestone to do so.  It's a good excuse to look back!!