Maple Walnut Cream II, Apr 13, 2014, Oil on Canvas, 20″ X 16″
I don’t always love to paint. It’s like running. I don’t love running all the time, but I really love HAVING RUN. And I love HAVING PAINTED. Even if the result is really mediocre or even downright crappy and embarrassing. Like something Tim Kreider says about writing – and I translate into painting – having DONE it, I feel that I have somehow earned my keep for another day – or in my case, another week. Yes, it began only after three hours of procrastinating and doing everything BUT beginning… and having finally just started and then just continued and continued and attempted one simple step after another: add the darkest bits here and then all of the highlights in this area and then work a bit on the background and then refine the edges of this or that and then deal with the shadow and maybe a bit of blending in this area to see how it falls together and then a little more finessing over here and some more dark bits and more highlights and some detail and some more build up of colour or depth there and then maybe enjoy a few bits here and there – strokes and marks that are just asking to exist and finally, standing back and taking a look… and maybe hating it and maybe kind of liking it and maybe just saying enough is enough regardless of the outcome.
I don’t love the beginning. I rarely love the middle and I have never loved the end result – at least not after a good night’s sleep and a little distance. Fortunately, I often find little bits here and there that make me happy. And I feel that having put in another four or five hours I have moved a little closer to where I want to be. and perhaps next time I will do better.
I don’t mean to glorify the myth that a person needs to experience some sort of existential torture in order to create beauty (whatever ‘beauty’ may be) yet if it doesn’t cost anything, does it really have any value? Maybe it’s just about taking the first step, committing to something in the moment, following a trail to the end simply to see what happens next and if there is a price to pay, paying it and moving on with no attachment to the outcome, knowing that the value is in the time spent and that will always be intangible and important.
2014 04 06, Maple Walnut Cream, Apr 6, 2014, Oil on Canvas, 16″ X 20″Maple Walnut Cream WIP, Apr 5, 2014, 9:28pm, Oil on Canvas, 16″ X 20″
ok, I kind of like the chocolate right in front. But not the wrapper and not much else. Perhaps I shouldn’t have refilled my wine glass that last time…
H2O Detail One, Mar 29, 2014, Oil on Canvas, 12″ X 12″
“Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the Shadow”
– T.S. Eliot
Having for some reason been reminded of Wayne Thiebaud’s work, Samantha and I made an extra stop today to find some cupcakes that I could paint. As they were fairly coveted, I photographed them when we got home so that we could enjoy eating them BEFORE I painted them. I also photographed ball bearings, apples and glasses half filled with water. (perhaps a result of the lingering effects of seeing Divergent this afternoon.)
In looking at the photos and feeling very un-inspired and mundane, I chose the half-full glass over the cupcakes. (it’s likely the cupcakes will show up down the road.) I was intrigued by abstracted, close up bits of the image on my computer screen and although my intention was to paint one fairly realistic image of the glass, I decided to attempt two detail bits and to play a little. Minimal colour and contrast and yet something I found interesting.
I had spent the week looking at pretty amazing artwork and feeling very mediocre. When I grow up I hope to create work like Heather Hingst Bennett – I am enamoured by her minimal, painterly brush strokes that so beautifully depict her subjects. And I am eternally envious of Lucia Dill’s chairs. Perhaps one day I will be able to so emotively depict everyday objects that somehow express such human situations. I am both so very inspired and yet completely dejected by these artists when I so clearly see the gap between where I am and where I want to be. And yet I can’t not continue. For whatever it’s worth…
Vancouver Public Library completed. I don’t love it, but I don’t really want to continue to mess with it either. It is what it is and I will move on to the next thing.
I’m still working on adding my older artwork to the appropriate pages. And I’ve decided to add a new page showing pieces as they progress and are completed. I am always interested in seeing how different artists develop their work and thought perhaps I could learn something from observing my own processes.
Vancouver Public Library, Mar 22, 2014, Oil on Canvas, 22″ X 16″
“Libraries are the thin red line between civilisation and barbarism.”
Another product of my current painting class and an attempt at architecture. If I am going to paint a building, I’m going to paint a building that I personally like to look at. The Vancouver Public Library, designed by Moshe Safdie, completed in 1995. The painting is still in progress. I hope to finish it this week and post a completed image next week. Let’s see if I can find time to do that.
VPL WIP One, Mar 15, 2014, Oil on Canvas, 20″ X 16″VPL WIP Two, Mar 15, 2014, Oil on Canvas, 20″ X 16″
An assignment in the current painting class I’m taking – one I enjoyed in fact. I have to state up front that I didn’t actually draw the image, I transferred it onto the canvas from a photocopy of a photo of James Dean. But I did have fun playing with oil paint again. And the pervasive smell of linseed oil that still lingers. Below that is another little image resulting from a little playing with a new medium – Liquid Pencil. I quite like the text of the book page as a background and am trying to create something a little larger like that.
Rebel, Mar 8, 2014, Oil on Canvas, 14″ X 18.5″The Dutch Wife, Mar 2, 2014, Liquid Pencil on Book Page, 5″ X 6″
Yes Lorde, that may be the case. And perhaps that is as it should be – as long as we fight them honestly. And develop our own artistic style along the way.
Two choices:
1. Scroll down immediately to see two new paintings
OR
2. Read my rather wordy reflection on my evening of painting.
Both equally valid options.
Back in January, when I decided to redefine the content of my blog and focus on my artwork I had thought I would write about my process from time to time – because I love to read about the process of other artists. But so far I haven’t. Until now. This is a bit new to me and I’m not sure if it comes naturally or not, but here goes. Let’s see if I can learn something from it….
My goal wasn’t to recreate it exactly, and really, I had no specific intentions as to exactly what I would do with it – would I change the colours? Perhaps blend where he had defined edges and define edges where he blended? Or something else? I just started and went. I picked colours that I haven’t worked with lately plus a few old favourites to see what they would do together and to explore. In the process I discovered a couple things:
1. I’m not sure I will ever really like acrylics – specifically for all of their defining features. Which begs the question, why am I using them? Is it time to switch mediums?
And
2. I am really up in the air about the purpose of recreating other accomplished artists’ works of art.
How decisive and profound….
or not…
The backstory:
1. The first painting medium that I ever loved was oil paints. It was a combination of the texture and the way I could play with it on the surface of the canvas and blend and blend and basically rub all of the substance of the paint away to leave behind only the stain of colour and really worn down brushes. I rarely mixed colours on my palette. It was a tactile and almost mindless repetitive process and (being a teen-age girl with my mind on many others things) I found solace in it. And yet, having been required to work with acrylics in university and feeling somewhat daunted by the cleanup required for oils and what I expected to be small windows of time to create and finish paintings, last May, when I re-committed to painting again, I decided that I would paint in acrylic. I felt I had accomplished a fair bit of proficiency in college with gouache (also fast-drying without the luxury of a lot of blending opportunities) and had fared alright.
So I went to the candy art store and noticed Golden’s OPEN ACRYLICS line – acrylics that dried somewhat slower than the norm. And I bought some. And I hated the consistency of the Titanium White – far too thin for my taste. None of the buttery texture that I love about paint.
What I hadn’t realized was how “OPEN” it really was. With my Lawren Harris experiment, having run out of the OPEN version of Titanium White, I resorted (with a sense of relief) back to the typical Golden Titanium White and was pleased to find the thicker texture I had been missing. And then I started to paint. And realized that perhaps I was sadly mistaken to think I could ever like acrylics. Mid brush stroke, once again disappointed to find my paint drying far too quickly, I realized that I had no idea as to what I was trying to accomplish in this small area of water up against the rocks and, really, completely without a vision of where I was going with this painting. And kind of hating the result too. (but maybe I’ll like it when it develops a bit more…?) Am I trying to blend? Am I creating defined edges? What the hell colour am I really looking for and just how many brushes can I hold in one hand as I am repeatedly frustrated with the dirty greenish-yellow colour that I’m dragging through the snow here?
The conclusion I draw from this experience is that I need to reconsider my medium. Even as I cringe to think of all of these brand new, still practically full and not inexpensive tubes of acrylic paint carefully arranged in front of me.
Hmmm.
When exactly does productive experimentation become self-punshment?
Yes, I am still daunted by the image of the endless cleaning process of oil paints (not to mention the environmental arguments against them).
I could consider the water-soluble oils, but something about my Ukrainian/Saskatchewan upbringing makes it really hard to think that that is a genuine option to consider. (nope, absolutely no logic there, just gut feeling.)
So, a decision to be made…. acrylics, or oils? Have I earned it? Do I need to EARN it? Hmmm.
2. Although it may not be evident looking at my recent paintings, once upon a time I was working diligently towards a fine arts degree in painting. But rather than finishing that degree, instead I transferred out of the studio courses and into the dark lecture halls and dry seminars of an honours degree in art history. (Two reasons: I really LOVED art history. And I had no idea what I wanted to express as a painter exactly at that point in the degree where they want you to start committing to a particular style. Three being I did NOT want to be another “poser” pretending I knew what I wanted to paint when I was really just painting exactly what a particular prof liked about my work which somehow seemed to resemble to a great degree HIS work – not that anyone in my painting course ever did that… hey – if you are not authentic, who the hell are you ANYHOW?)
The assignment:
Pick a Renaissance painting and re-create it with an original twist that is all your own. And, somewhat arbitrarily – one of the dimensions of the painting must be 4’.
Shockingly, (considering my long-term Venus fetish) I chose Venus on the half-shell, cropped to a 4’ X 7’ format.
Towards the end of the process, while working away in class one day, listening to my very high-tech Sony Cassette Walkman, the prof, a very accomplished artist, came to chat with me.
After stepping back to review my progress, he asked me, “Have you ever read “What’s Bred in the Bone” by Robertson Davies?”
In retrospect, I should have said, “No. Why do you ask?”
But I didn’t. Instead, I said, “No, I haven’t.” And he profoundly said “Hmmm” and walked away.
He gave me a decent grade on the finished painting and I immediately went to the library and checked the book out. And I still really have no idea what his comment meant.
My point is, although many of the Renaissance masters spent years grinding paint and leaning how to paint by copying the masters of their generation, I really wonder where the greatest value lies in copying the work of other artists. Is it the process of trying to literally “COPY” the work? Is there value in the practice of attempting to reproduce what they created and perhaps make some of the same decisions while choosing and mixing colours and determining the appropriate tilt of the brush to achieve a particular paint stroke in an effort to not only recreate the painting, but to recreate the process – and within that to recreate the learning of the original artist?
Or is the value in the interpretation of using the painting as a starting point to then create something brand new and completely your own? I really don’t know. I guess at some point while reading that damn Robertson Davies book, I decided that I had no style of my own. (not that I ever believed I had the necessary skills to be an art forger either.)
And the result of this evening of painting and animated debate with myself over a lovely bottle of red wine: Where am I now? Still not sure. Time will tell.
Here is the end result.
After Morning Light, Feb 28, 2014, Acrylic on Canvas, 15″ X 15″
And from nineteen years ago…
Venus on the Half Shell, Feb 1995, Oil on Canvas, 4′ X 7′
Having had no opportunity to paint this past week I have no new artwork for my blog. Instead I am posting artwork that I created in college while I was studying graphic design. After storing these pieces for years, moving from one place to another, about ten years ago I decided to photograph the ones I liked and to toss the originals. Sadly, what I thought were good photos at the time were very mediocre. And some of the dates are best guesses – as are most of the dimensions. Most of these were done as specific assignments – some quite obviously. Other’s not so much. Clearly I preferred some mediums far more than others. And maybe one day I’ll gain some rudimentary skill with watercolour – or not. And that’s ok. It is what it is.
Benetton Wasteland, Apr 1990, Watercolour & Gouache on Illustration Board, 24″ X 19″Too Late Already, Mar 1990, Silkscreen on Mayfair, 20″ X 24″
Single Family, Feb 1990, Tech Pen on Illustration Board, 26″ X 12″Not the Red Planet, Nov 1989, Watercolour & Gouache on Mayfair, 14″ X 14″Timeless, Oct 1989, Tech Pen on Illustration Board, 24″ X 20″The Ultimate Driving Experience, Oct 1989, Coloured Pencil, Marker & Inkjet on Paper, 8.5″ X 11″Eleventh Hour, Mar 1989, Gouache on Mayfair, 15″ X 18″Fashion Bits, Feb 1989, Gouache on Mayfair, 8″ X 16″Pentax K-1000, Jan 1989, Tech Pen & Ink on Illustration Board, 18″ X 13.5″
Life Drawing Sketch, Dec 1988, Vine Charcoal on Newsprint, 20″ X 24″
Life Drawing Sketch, Nov 1988, Vine Charcoal on Cartridge Paper, 20″ X 24″
Life Drawing Sketch, Oct 1988, Vine Charcoal on Newsprint, 24″ X 20″Life Drawing Sketch, Sep 1988, Vine Charcoal on Newsprint, 24″ X 20″
Last life drawing class for awhile and we started out drawing on newspaper – another exercise in loosening up. It was a good last class – hopefully I will have a chance to do more of this in the new year.
First three: Oil Stick on Newspaper, newspaper sized.
Last two: Vine and Compressed Charcoal on Paper, 18″ X 24″.