Join me....

I believe that art enriches and informs our lives everyday in many positive ways. Sharing those experiences, whether as an artist or as an appreciator, is part of the pleasure. I welcome your comments and hope you find something of value: a laugh, an insight, a new idea or just a happy moment. Enjoy art!
Showing posts with label turquoise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label turquoise. Show all posts

Friday, March 23, 2018

An Abstract Challenge

It was at the Brandywine Museum of Art
that I saw interesting hocus-pocus done
on some of N.C. Wyeth's work.  To show how he saved canvas
by painting on top of a finished piece they used
 an ultra-violet light or x-ray photo to strip away the top piece.
I was fascinated.

As I left the studio today, exhausted, I thought it might be fun to reveal the under-layers of a recently completed abstract piece.  As you know, I struggle with abstract...especially when it is totally
non-representational.  If you ever gaze at an abstract and think "my five year old could do that," I beg you: have him do it!  Hang it on the wall and enjoy it...it is not an easy task.

This is a huge, for me, canvas: 3 feet high by 4 feet wide, with an inch or more of depth on the sides.  It is "couch size."  I could literally feel what I wanted, I knew the emotion, I just did not know how to make it happen.

Here it is, hopefully complete:


36 x 48, oil, Flow

Calm and almost soothing, it does present the possibility of being different things to different viewers, and I like the 3 tiny orange marks, almost not visible but interesting enough to notice.

So let's magically peel back the layers of paint and look below the surface.  Here is what it looked like the week prior:


the randomness of tonal patches and the color grey still bothered me, and I couldn't really justify any reason for so much orange (headed nowhere) ; still, the above was an improvement in progress over the prior iteration below:



there is a huge light glare on this photo but you can see where the orange came from, I was trying to draw a map of parts I liked and did not like, after trying unsuccessfully to make the darks more cohesive; truly at this stage I was one step away from trashing the whole experiment.
Compare it to the layer of paint below this one:


What is jarring about this, to me, is that there is only light and dark...no middle tones that are convincing enough to be a transition and I think the tentativeness to the shape looks very, well...tentative.  It was time to get more serious about real estate for darks and midtones.


OK, notice here that when I started out I had the canvas reversed.  I had placed the lighter side of the canvas on the left and had lots of (harsh) yellow in it as well as a lot of grey.  Wasn't working for me.
And you can see that before I painted them out and drew a "map" I had some squiggles of orange already cropping out ...


this is a layer beneath the one above, lighter but the dark hatch marks left me jittery, like a painting on too much caffeine.  This layer is actually where most of the interesting texture came from, and that texture does add some exciting light play in the final version.  But this beginning is a long way from my finished piece shown at the top.

Why do I share this?  It would be much smarter to work silently on this abstract puzzle and then share my successes once they begin to happen.  But I think that the general public fails to give credit to the difficulty of non-representational art.  You do not have to like it but you should know that it does not "just happen."  And, I share because I think many of us expect all our first (and second and third) attempts to turn out satisfactorily.  Ain't gonna happen and this is just proof of that.

So go struggle.  Cause something to evolve.  Change it up and push your envelop.  
I learned enough with this piece to justify all the paint it took.  Perhaps the next will unfold more promptly.

COLORFULLY ABSTRACT,
Cindy


Saturday, January 25, 2014

#25 Uncapped the Paint

I think the muse was not finished with the fountain in Eola Park yet...because when I discovered I could get some of the tops off the acrylic paints it was the park I rushed in to paint.  With palette knife!

 You may not recognize this if you are not an artist...it is a palette knife and comes in many shapes and sizes and is used in place of a brush.  Why I thought it would be easier to work with than a brush is beyond me...it is sort of like icing a cake with the paint being the frosting; only you are going to use several colors of frosting and attempt to get a recognizable subject onto the canvas.


Eola Park Part II
8" x 10" acrylic on canvas
It began as a very high key painting (meaning the darkest darks were relatively light) but I kept feeling at loose ends without some grounding deep colors...I think I am discovering that I really enjoy the lower keyed work where the lush darkcolors guide you around the composition.  It was not full sun when I did the photo so I will try another and see if the colors emerge better.  This 30 in 30 challenge makes for tight deadlines and the light outside doesn't hang around to help me out.  Oh, and yes, for this month I will include the 8 x 10 canvas in my $30.00 special.  It is a standard size so it should be a cinch to find a ready-made frame for it.

Here are a couple more shots of the work in progress.  It was wonderful to be back in touch with the paint and I didn't even mind the fact that when finished I was wearing quite a bit of it!


my set up as I begin to work...I took my composition from several different photos of the park


detail of the fountain; palette knife usually results in quite a bit of texture and I even found an old toothbrush to add a few more spatters for the water spray....I want you to feel like you may get wet if you stand too close!

to purchase: contact art@cindymichaud.com or check my etsy store here