Monday, July 26, 2010

Roots: more beginnings


Roots
40" x 60"
300lb watercolour paper
mixed media

Stage two has arrived! There is always a hesitation and a quandary about the exact point at which a different media is introduced. I knew the transfer of an image of my grandmother holding one of my cousins would be part of the painting. Another piece of knowledge was bugging me. Once acrylic gel has been introduced to the surface of the paper it seals it and further adjustments are no longer possible with watercolour. The transfer also had to be done early enough for the drawing to have the necessary presence. Later. I will think about it later. Look at those leaves! Some of them must be gold. Out came the gold leaf and following some very anxious moments I admired the beautiful results. Fun. Transfer coming up! Oooh. I like that too. Now for the second washes of watercolour. Purple blue tree trunks here we come! Next: a few tissue paper leaves. I wonder what effect they will have on their surroundings. I don’t know. Do you?

Monday, July 19, 2010

Roots: beginnings


Roots
60"x40" (152cm x 102cm)
300lb watercolour paper

Roots

I am distracted. Definitely. I ran into a problem with one painting so I hung it on the wall to incubate. It is still incubating. I prepared four other canvases. They are patiently waiting at various stages of preparation. An idea had come along. It is amazing from whence ideas venture forth. This one came from disappointment. Someone had asked me to do a workshop on negative space so I looked through my photos and discovered the perfect clump of trees. Not only could we explore negative space in the background but the image lent itself to foreground adventure as well. The workshop was cancelled. So I had this image and an idea. Resistance set in. This was not the way I had imagined it to be. Having no idea when I would use the lesson I had prepared I put it aside to concentrate on the five works waiting for me. Resistance is futile. The more I thought about it the bigger the idea got. Watercolours were a must. I have such fun playing with watercolours and negative space. I toyed with the idea of a full sheet size. No. Too small. What was the plan for the other two sheets of 40”x 60” watercolour paper I had stored? I forgot. Perfect. First of all I looked for the original image on my computer to make a few other copies….. Lesson #135: do not delete images for which you may have a use. Off to the photocopying machine before I took a felt pen to discern the spaces I would use. Grid out the image and transfer it to the paper. What you see is the first play of watercolour. This is another in the series for “The Many Faces of Eve” so it will be mixed media…. Stay tuned!

Monday, July 12, 2010

Commissions


Alexandre Tache
Historical Portrait
24"x18"
Mixed media
Cradled board

Commissions come in clumps, feast or famine. This one is my latest. I was asked to paint a historical portrait on Bishop Alexandre Taché as a gift to a newly opened school bearing his name. I love challenges. I was neither certain where to begin nor when I was going to take the time as I was teaching in two different schools as artist in residence and leaving for a week to San Francisco. God provides. I decided to accompany my husband (a school trustee) to the opening of the school and was totally delighted with the keynote speaker, Père Bélanger, who provided me with all the historical data I required. I asked him for a copy of his speech, visited the archives for photo references and set to work. Mixed media is such fun! I tore out the tree shapes from tissue paper, transferred a sketch of Père Lacombe and adjusted everything with watercolour pencil. I prefer oils for portraiture and proceeded to render a full colour likeness from a black and white reference. Challenges: the spice of life! There was something not quite right about the final image. I could not identify it so I took it with me to my regular mastermind meeting for critiquing. The eyes of others are so clear. One less tree clump and voilà! I love masterminding almost as much as I love mixed media….

Monday, July 5, 2010

Lipstick and Sunshine


"Lipstick and Sunshine"
6"x8" (15cm x 20cm)
mixed media
canvas

The idea of creating a painting per day, quick and easy, totally intrigued me. This is my first attempt. I decided to remain consistent with the other work in which I am presently involved so I chose mixed media. Having previously prepared several panels beforehand (which means at least four layers of various ingredients) I grabbed one and marched into my kitchen. The sunlight was pouring through the semi-opaque window pane (I must clean that someday…) and danced across the tablecloth on its way over my struggling lipstick plant. If I remember to water it, it may bloom again one day and I will do a second version. As the image was generally green in my area of focus I chose a red watercolour pencil to do the drawing. I love drawing and was soon lost in the foliage happily creating darker and lighter shapes, playing with negative space. When I looked again the shadow patterns on the table had totally renewed themselves in a different composition. Lovely. I will have to remember that…. I decided not to redraw it and began adding layers of colour. By this time it was lunchtime. All in all it was a delightful exercise and it only took me four days to complete!