Sometimes the only way to begin is just to begin, not planning much, not arranging the paints, not a lot of anything. I can easily spend days preparing and never get around to painting. Bad thing.
So this time I grabbed a tiny (5"x7") canvas board, put tubes of some of my fave oil colors in my masterson palette, opened the Gamsol, and dug in. Reference: imagination, remembering of sunsets. So think of this as an abstract, having fun will color. Doesn't look like any real sunset you'll find. Ah well. At such times, that it's something is something big. Anyway, I do like the colors!
Small is hard, going bigger next, than on to very big pretty soon. Interspersed with more pastels.
Speaking of pastels, I got some Lascaux fixative for pastels; it's clear—really—and several coats render the work framable without mat and glass. So they say, and I sure want to believe 'em! If not, almost—once sprayed well, it's possible to use special varnish that does do the job. Later, I found a ground from Golden that makes any surface a surface for pastel painting. I've covered a gallery wrapped canvas with it and that will be the surface for my next pastel (which will be soon!).
Next post—mebbe—how playing the piano, badly but joyfully, is helping my art and writing!
Random thots, stories, and sometimes pix of my artwork. Often irreverent, always benevolent at heart.
Tuesday, February 28, 2006
Tuesday, February 07, 2006
Laguna Revisited in Time Machine
In my last post, I asked if anyone would like to see Photoshop's version of my Laguna de Santa Rosa pastel. One person said yes—and one person is a very important person to listen to and to please. I'll show the Photoshop version of the painting—that is, the way it came up in Photoshop before adjusting levels to make it look like the real thing—and then I'll tell you a story about the specialness of one person.
The one person who asked to see the alternate painting is a fine artist, Joyce Ripley, of New Brunswick, Canada. She too has a place on Blogger: http://hermitthrushstudio.blogspot.com/ . Go have a look.
Here's Photoshop's version of the picture. Something else, isn't it? Wish I'd done that! ; )
I promised you a story, and it's a true one. Long ago, I and my husband created a computer magazine, called Softalk. In one issue I wrote a fancy article about what makes good games. I began by likening good game making to good architecture—form follows function and so forth—and I called the article The Art and Craft of Games, taking after Frank Lloyd Wright's The Art and Craft of Architecture. Of course "form follows function" came from earlier architectural genius Louis Sullivan. (If you haven't read his Kindergarten Chats, you have a treat ahead.)
Our art director, Kurt Wahlner, being an aficionado of Wright and Sullivan, chose to decorate the pages of the article with Sullivan ornamentation—exquisite finely detailed filigree. He spent hours for each of several nights recreating this very special adornment for the story—each page having a different Sullivan filigree—and, when the magazine came out, it looked wonderful. Some people thought he was a little crazy to spend all that time when, they surmised, no one would know what it was anyway. But someone did, and one was all it took.
It was several days after that issue went out that one woman called to exclaim over the Louis Sullivan ornamentation. She said how it thrilled her, and how she recognized it was hand done and wanted to thank the person who did it for making the presentation so beautiful and so true.
She was the only person to call. But everyone who knew Kurt, and everyone who worked on the magazine, felt justified and proud because of her recognition of Kurt's work. She was a very special person, who, unknowing, wielded a huge amount of power for good.
Ever since, I try never to dismiss the input of one person. Thank you, Joyce!
The one person who asked to see the alternate painting is a fine artist, Joyce Ripley, of New Brunswick, Canada. She too has a place on Blogger: http://hermitthrushstudio.blogspot.com/ . Go have a look.
Here's Photoshop's version of the picture. Something else, isn't it? Wish I'd done that! ; )
I promised you a story, and it's a true one. Long ago, I and my husband created a computer magazine, called Softalk. In one issue I wrote a fancy article about what makes good games. I began by likening good game making to good architecture—form follows function and so forth—and I called the article The Art and Craft of Games, taking after Frank Lloyd Wright's The Art and Craft of Architecture. Of course "form follows function" came from earlier architectural genius Louis Sullivan. (If you haven't read his Kindergarten Chats, you have a treat ahead.)
Our art director, Kurt Wahlner, being an aficionado of Wright and Sullivan, chose to decorate the pages of the article with Sullivan ornamentation—exquisite finely detailed filigree. He spent hours for each of several nights recreating this very special adornment for the story—each page having a different Sullivan filigree—and, when the magazine came out, it looked wonderful. Some people thought he was a little crazy to spend all that time when, they surmised, no one would know what it was anyway. But someone did, and one was all it took.
It was several days after that issue went out that one woman called to exclaim over the Louis Sullivan ornamentation. She said how it thrilled her, and how she recognized it was hand done and wanted to thank the person who did it for making the presentation so beautiful and so true.
She was the only person to call. But everyone who knew Kurt, and everyone who worked on the magazine, felt justified and proud because of her recognition of Kurt's work. She was a very special person, who, unknowing, wielded a huge amount of power for good.
Ever since, I try never to dismiss the input of one person. Thank you, Joyce!
Monday, February 06, 2006
A Scrap of Laguna de Santa Rosa
The "Lagoon" in my last post bears no relation to the lagoon in the pastel below; but the paintings shared a piece of Wallis paper. Couldn't toss the 14"x5" scrap, so I've put a view of the Laguna de Santa Rosa on it, perhaps a learning piece, as they all are, really. This one wants a big tree toward the right; it took courage enough to put in the island on the left! The tree MAY enter the picture tomorrow. (By the way, do you know that if you click on the image, you'll see it enlarged?)
For reference, I used a photo shot by Eric Johnson, a friend of my friend Helen Shane; Helen is doing an oil from Eric's great shot. The original photo is of a misty, stormy day.
A terrible thing happened when I took my photo of the painting into Photoshop. What you see here looks just like the real thing. Unfortunately, this took implementing "auto levels." Before I did that, Photoshop had found a way to make this painting absolutely gorgeous and very masterly! Woo woo, I wish I had painted it that way!!! Do you want to see that one?
Strength and endurance are slowly returning, but there's plenty for making some art, and time too, with my fab boyfriend stepping up for ALL the chores. If I hadn't got drunk and married him 33 years ago, I might just do it now.
For reference, I used a photo shot by Eric Johnson, a friend of my friend Helen Shane; Helen is doing an oil from Eric's great shot. The original photo is of a misty, stormy day.
A terrible thing happened when I took my photo of the painting into Photoshop. What you see here looks just like the real thing. Unfortunately, this took implementing "auto levels." Before I did that, Photoshop had found a way to make this painting absolutely gorgeous and very masterly! Woo woo, I wish I had painted it that way!!! Do you want to see that one?
Strength and endurance are slowly returning, but there's plenty for making some art, and time too, with my fab boyfriend stepping up for ALL the chores. If I hadn't got drunk and married him 33 years ago, I might just do it now.
Saturday, February 04, 2006
Images from 3000 BC
I love to visit the Astronomy Picture of the Day (http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/archivepix.html) and check out what's going on in space, present and very much past.
This pastel painting is an interpretation of the Lagoon Nebula, which seems to be heavily populated....
The Lagoon Nebula is 5000 light years away. Light years is a measurement of time--in this case meaning this view is the way the nebula was 5000 years ago. But you can determine distance too, and the result is, well, astronomical. Light travels 5,865,696,000,000 miles in a year (almost six trillion), assuming no rush hour traffic... which puts the cosmic Lagoon at 29,328,480,000,000,000 miles away. M'gawd, that's even bigger than the US National Debt. The part of the nebula pictured is 50 light years across. Numbers, numbers; fascinating (to me) because they're so astounding, just about ungraspable.
And this is a relatively local nebula. ; )
Check out APOD to see for yourself!
This pastel painting is an interpretation of the Lagoon Nebula, which seems to be heavily populated....
The Lagoon Nebula is 5000 light years away. Light years is a measurement of time--in this case meaning this view is the way the nebula was 5000 years ago. But you can determine distance too, and the result is, well, astronomical. Light travels 5,865,696,000,000 miles in a year (almost six trillion), assuming no rush hour traffic... which puts the cosmic Lagoon at 29,328,480,000,000,000 miles away. M'gawd, that's even bigger than the US National Debt. The part of the nebula pictured is 50 light years across. Numbers, numbers; fascinating (to me) because they're so astounding, just about ungraspable.
And this is a relatively local nebula. ; )
Check out APOD to see for yourself!
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