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The Weight of Water

3/28/2018

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The paintings in this post are available to purchase.  Click on each image for more details.

I am finally recovered from a marathon workshop with the incredible (and hilarious) Pat Dews!  It will be a month before all of my "starts" are finished, but I did have time this weekend to ponder and complete one piece.  Which, in Pat Dews land, means I have a bunch of completed pieces. :)

One of the many lessons learned last week was the value of cropping.  Dews had us work on full sheets (22" x 30") all week long.  Even when space was limited and paint and elbows were flying, we worked LARGE.

The piece (which became pieces) I am showing you today consists of a dozen or more layers of watercolor, acrylic and gesso applied with a variety of tools and texture makers.  The final layer was a waterfall of watery gesso and ink over a pre-dried layer of gloss medium, then spritzed with alcohol.  
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The Weight of Water
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Shadow Puppets

Though I really loved the textures and colors in the large piece, the overall composition was rather stagnant and dull.  I was ready to start over, until Dews grabbed a set of "L's" (a 22" x 30" double sided mat cut into two L shapes) and began focusing on sections within the painting.  To my delight, there were five paintings within the larger piece, each needing a bit of finishing but otherwise delightful all by themselves.

​Many of Pat Dews' own complete paintings are cropped from large pieces, then finished with slight adjustments to make them sing.


​Another lesson (which resulted in an "aha" moment for me) was that abstract paintings generally work better with the weight on the top.  This is counter-intuitive, as realism places the darker colors on the bottom of the painting.  Time and again during critique time, Dews rotated paintings to place the darkest part on the top, and the entire class said "whoa!"


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Topsy Turvy
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Shadows of Civilization
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Out of Line

The third lesson I took away was the importance of finishing and construction paper.  You might be going "huh?" at that last bit...

Using pieces of colored construction paper, Dews taped objects to each painting she reviewed to demonstrate how the addition of one line, a half circle or a tiny square could "finish" a painting.  The construction paper allows you to audition ideas without changing the painting, until you identify the winner.  In the piece to the left, it was the yellow line at the bottom right.  Without it, the painting didn't work nearly as well.

I will be working on the remaining starts over the next month, and can hardly wait to see what's hiding in all of these glorious full sheets of texture and color!

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Three Starts

3/22/2018

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​It is mid-week of the Pat Dews workshop and there are paintings (and paint) strewn about the venue.  Piles of supplies, wagons of whatnots and a table full of snacks and good, strong coffee for bleary-eyed but determined students.

Going into day three, I have three good starts.  Pat has taken us through a myriad of processes to find inspiration and design.  There is glory in the room as each artist presents a start for public critique.  Oooooh and aaaaaaahs for these unique and triumphant paintings.  Even those "fails" seem brimming with potential as Pat outlines and points and tapes colors to spaces to demonstrate what could be.


​I have to pause here to point out the courage of each artist in the room.  Not just to paint (and for some outside of their usual wheelhouse) but to then place it on the easel in front of all the others and then listen, look and learn as each part of her painting is touched and critiqued.  It is in that very moment of bravery where the golden nuggets lie.  To really listen - without ego and insecurity - truly the act of a hero.  And the room is full of heroes.
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Pat Dews with one of my "starts"
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I am brimming with anticipation as we pile into the car for the drive back to the workshop this morning.  These days of scheduled, devoted, uninterrupted creating and learning are an exquisite gift.  And to experience it in the presence of heroes...well, it is humbling.

These starts and others will be further altered during the workshop and afterward, perhaps.  I will post the final versions when they're done, but thought you might like a peek into the wildly creative teachings of our instructor.

Now off we go. There is paint to be tossed about.
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The Substance of Personhood

3/18/2018

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"The Substance of Personhood" - mixed media on Canson art board, 20" by 16".  Ready to frame.  Available here and at Artfinder.

A rare Monday post as we prepare for an evening of revelry!  The Ambassador of Listowel, Damian Stack, has arrived, and we're hosting a soiree in his honor.  I don't know if he will mock our Guinness floats and green sheet cake or find each delicious.  But I do know my heart will rejoice to see a bit of Listowel after many months away.  

One of my traveling companions from the residency, the artist Carolyn Laudati,  is here to greet Damian and to experience a full immersion into abstraction during a week-long workshop we're attending with the artist Pat Dews.  This week is sure to be an adventure!  And so an early  post before the madness begins. :)
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This piece started as an experimental watercolor and an underwater sea creature painting.  Oh yes!  Sharks, manatees and octopi cavorted in a tangle of seaweed and bubbles.  But I didn't love it and so kept tossing chalky paint and burnishing and marking until this star-gazing countenance appeared...the sea became the heavens and the creatures swam away.  Following the paint is a twisty-turning path, filled with surprises.  The one constant between the beginning and the ending of this piece is the orange.  And if you're curious, here is a brief history of that color.

Ultimately, this version resonated with me.  In the current chapter of Mark Nepo's The One Life We're Given, he delves into the three fears: fear of the past, of the present and of the future, and of a time when he was paralyzed by all three occurring simultaneously.  The silver lining of allowing yourself to fully experience fear is to be stripped of all the tools and tactics for dealing with them until "the chance to rely on no tools at all but on the substance of [your] personhood, trusting it [will] eventually meet the wind like a wing."  It's all there - right inside us.  The very substance of our personhood is the only tool we need to traverse the land of fear.   

Let's meet the wind like a wing today.  And raise a pint to our guests!
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When the World Breaks Us Open

3/15/2018

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"When the World Breaks Us Open" - mixed media on Canson art board, 20" x 16".  Available here and at Artfinder.

The festival tent is back in the garage and the tables are packed away.  I'm back in the studio and covered in paint once more. 

The stories I am hearing this week, both in person and in the news, are about being broken open.  Some of them are hard to hear...people still in the throws of tumultuous change and hurting hearts.  And then those who have seized the brokenness and turned it into an opportunity.  A few of these fearless folk are taking a job loss and turning it into the chance to follow dreams long abandoned.  The excitement in their eyes is dazzling!  Others are uncomfortable in a place of vulnerability, struggling with life's twists and learning to lean in to whatever faces them.
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Here at malarkey central, brokenness is a bit literal, since I am learning my spine is more and more restricted with the passage of time.  My initial response to this is fist shaking, tears and a lot of juicy words.  But as I lean in and meet myself where I really am (needing help, slowing down) I can see the lessons waiting for me to embrace them.  Asking for help - that is a big one for me - recognizing that stubborn independence sometimes has a steep price.

Mark Nepo, in The One Life We're Given, advises us to see all of life in the one thing before us - to be present with devoted attention to right now.  "The threshold to the secret kingdom that is everywhere, hiding in the open, is that no matter the pain or weight we carry, we're challenged to regard whatever is before us as the only thing that exists."    And in being present we come alive.

Being present in the midst of brokenness means looking away from our suffering and into the eyes of the person we're listening to, the dog we're playing with or at the painting we are creating.  In that moment, we are no longer separate from the world, but one with all, head and heart connected and outside of time.  "Eternity is in each moment", Nepo writes,  "I am no longer looking ahead.  I'm no longer looking for something better to happen in the future.  Instead, I try to give my all to every blade of grass..."​  The world is full of heroes right now - brave souls contemplating their own blades of grass.  I aspire to be one of them.
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Baleja

3/9/2018

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"Baleja" - Mixed media on aquabord, 24" x 18".  Ready to frame, or can be leaned against a wall upon a shelf.  Available here and on Artfinder.

After a restful spring break week, our son heads back to college today and to an east coast tour with Gestalt A Capella.  Pongo is missing his boy, and is carrying the stress chicken from room to room.  The refrigerator is empty and the laundry basket is full. But with special visitors from Ireland, North Carolina and Ohio arriving later this month, there is no time to pout.  And there is painting to be done!
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I do a lot of sketching during festivals.  And I mean a lot.  Sitting still away from your own home allows your brain to wonder places other than to the pile of laundry and things that need to be done.  My best inspiration comes while traveling or being elsewhere and forced to just sit.  

In a critique group last week, the challenge was given to use unusual placement in a painting.  As I sketched some concept pieces, partially obscured faces became a bit of an obsession.  Look for several of these to come.  In this piece I celebrate the Baleja family (my dad's Eastern European roots) and distinctive noses.  

Also heading back to school are the kids from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.  I felt so privileged to be one of the scholarship judges for their art students yesterday.  As I was approached by one of the comfort dogs at the school, I thought at first "wait, I don't need comforting!" but then became teary as I pet the dog, realizing I was overwhelmed simply by being there.  I did need comforting.  Posters and signs everywhere show love, support, strength...but those kids!  Those young folks who returned to class amidst a massive police presence, guards, locked doors and memories are the strength of our future.  I am humbled by their courage, determined to support them however I can.  

The winner of the scholarship is a young lady of inestimable talent, whose life has been forever altered by the shooting.  She is not only a gifted artist, but a young entrepreneur.  Her art will be on display at the student booth at the Coral Springs Festival of the Arts next weekend, but for those of you far away her custom creations can be seen (and purchased) here.

This week I rolled out my website update, including a storefront! Woot!  Eliminating gallery commissions by selling direct allows me to offer flat rate shipping of $15.00 for any size painting anywhere in the U.S.A.  Take a look - let me know what you think.  In the meantime, I appreciate your patience as this website is a work in progress, not unlike a few paintings in the studio. :)
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Truth Windows

3/7/2018

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The studio is a shambles.

A festival last weekend; another coming this weekend (Artfest in Pembroke Pines).  Piles of stuff to walk over just to get to my work table.  Pongo is not happy with the state of things, which reduces his lounging space in the room.

I am painting, yes, but have nothing to show.  Soon, soon.
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In the meantime, I give you these little snippets of my studio, crammed with things that inspire me....small works I adore and haven't framed yet, note cards from the best people on earth.  Words that make me ponder or smile.
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When Danielle of GetNeat organized my studio some time back, I asked her to leave room for inspiration.  And she gave  me this magnetic strip which spans the length of my room underneath shelves that reach to the ceiling.  It is covered from one end to the other, images clipped in stacks.  It grows weekly.

This mini gallery includes works from Patti Bryan, Dotty Seiter, Carol Edan, Caroline C Brown,  Susan Schanerman and more.  Each of these artists has touched my life in some wonderful way (and they happen to have small works or notecards to collect).
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It is vital to surround ourselves with uplifting views.  Whether it is the art on our walls, the flowers in a vase or the views out of our windows.  Our eyes crave visual candy.
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The next chapter of Mark Nepo's The One Life We're Given is all about windows.  There is an ancient dwelling called a cob house which is known for being built with truth windows - windows showing what the wall is made of instead of opening to the outside.  "We would do well if our walls had truth windows, so we could be honest about what they're made of," says Nepo.  But he is speaking of the walls we put up in our lives.

He reminds us that "windows go both ways, letting things in and out, and letting us see and be seen."  Oh!  Letting things in and out, letting us see, yes and ok.  But letting us be seen...that's where we cringe and cower and close the blinds.  ​Even posting this little window into my studio makes me squirm just a bit.  Like the blog itself, a little truth window into my life.

So why do it?  Nepo again: "...hard as it is at times, love your window open, and become the opening itself until your walls come down.  When the walls come down, the opening is everywhere."​   Here's to becoming the opening.
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30 Paintings in 30 Days - The Last One

3/2/2018

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"Lola" - acrylic on aquabord, 14" x 11".  Ready to frame, or can be leaned against a wall upon a shelf.  Available at Artfinder.

Grandson: Grandpa? [pause] Maybe you could come over and read it again to me tomorrow.
Grandfather: As you wish.
THE END
            
 from The Princess Bride

The story is over, the book is closed, the last characters are gone and the paintings are done.  Another 30 Paintings in 30 Days has flown by like the wind.

And, as is my custom, I end this challenge with a self-portrait.  My big sunglasses were the perfect prop.  A wild color palette and some quick and dirty brush strokes.  There is a lot of determination and power in this one.  I'm glad I gave it a go.

But why "Lola" you might be wondering?
When you were younger (or, perhaps even now, you wild thing!) you might have day-dreamed about changing your name.  I always thought mine (Jennifer) was rather conservative and proper.   It didn't speak of exotic adventures or the freedom to be unconventional.  It was...safe.  Don't get me wrong, it is a fine and lovely name.  But as long as we're running down the road of day-dreaming, my inner wild child would choose the name Lola.

So when I am getting ready to speak in public or demonstrate art, I might occasionally call her out to give me a little more showgirl quality.  WWLD?  What would Lola do?  She would sashay up to the microphone and put on a show.  Lola isn't afraid of anything.  Jen might be shaking in her shoes, but Lola is shaking off her shoes to dance. 

Lola and I want to thank you, dear reader, for following us on this thirty day painting marathon...I am sad that it is over, but ready to rest and go back to a less frantic routine.  Never fear, twice-weekly blogs will continue and 30 Paintings in 30 Days returns again in September.  In the meantime, sweetlings, thank you, thank you.  I am honored by your presence on this journey. xo
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30 Paintings in 30 Days - Day 29

3/1/2018

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"Love Swept Over" - mixed media on 300 lb watercolor paper, 11" x 15".  Ready to frame.  Available at Artfinder.

Grandfather: "They rode to freedom. And as dawn arose, Westley and Buttercup knew they were safe. A wave of love swept over them. And as they reached for each other- -" Grandson: What? What?
Grandfather: Naw, it's kissing again, you don't want to hear that.
Grandson: Well, I don't mind so much.
          
from The Princess Bride
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The penultimate day of the 30 day challenge and a return to abstracted seascapes.  This one is an experiment with texture, with scored gesso over 300 lb watercolor paper and about a dozen layers of paint, scratchings and buffing.  A little pink on the horizon for our happy Westley and Buttercup as they ride off into the distance to live happily ever after.

This is an especially special painting for me.  Number 800. Yes, that's right - 800.  

When I first set off on the path of art, I was advised to paint 400 pieces.   After 400, it was said, I would know what the heck I was doing.  I determinedly counted each and every painting until I reached that number (which we celebrated a couple of years ago right here, dear reader!) and then kept on going.  So the question is, do I feel doubly capable after 800?  Hmmmmmm.  As with any skill we set out to master, the more I know, the more I know I don't know much.  I feel more in awe of the masters than ever.  More in awe of people in my art tribe who create astounding art.  And more humbled by how many really grand artists there are in the world.

But I do feel less intimidated, more willing to try just about anything and less "in my head" about whatever I am painting (or needle felting or collaging).   And I do get a sense that my hands just work even when my brain wanders off...like running and problem solving, I guess.  Your body keeps moving even when your mind isn't all there.  There is also a freedom from preciousness...I am less attached to the art and more willing to paint over it, alter it, tear it into pieces.  

One thing hasn't changed in 800 paintings - the miracle of a finished piece.  The ten foot view, when I step back and look and wonder "how did I do that?"  and a sense of surprise.  I am ever grateful to be on this path, following the paint. 
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Here's the blue wild, where
tiny dreamers ride beasts, speak
​ birdsong, hold the moon.

(by poet Mary W. Cox)
​


​Art prints available on request
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