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The sunlight in the studio today felt like a spring. I dove into some hot red pigment, I think in part out of a desire to make some big marks. Having been pretty busy the last couple weeks, I fell out of my regimen. So we have red, to reclaim my hopes of a steady pace, to aid rising from the doldrums of a cloudy late winter. I am thankful for the pile of bases I worked on while in the old studio, I'm finding ways to build on them with structures and forms that overlay the soft ink patterns. |
Happy New Year! Last year at this time I was working on a piece in this series, and I feel the spread of time between them. I have enjoyed finding works that span months, to tie these bits of life together. My project for the winter is redoing the site to organize works, and separate these blog entries from the central pages. That is, if the time presents itself. Otherwise, I have a stack of paintings that will be slowly worked on. I hope you stay warm and cozy this winter, and find some moments of respite. |
This has been an ongoing project, well, more of an homage to our cycles of precipitation here in Michigan. They are left as is, capturing a simple moment.
The image to the left was blanketed in a heavy late spring snow, April 4th. Drops of ink rested on snow covered paper outside, and that is it, washed. The second image captures a late summer torrential downpour, August 3rd. Same method, just sumi heavily pelted by a shower of water then left to sit, and washed. At first I thought they could be used as texture bases, but the subtleties of pattern are so unique. They are a moment truly encapsulated, a photograph of touch, pressure, texture, and the memory of the sounds and smells at that fleeting moment. Peace |
The orb series of works have become a real play with energy, I come to work in the studio and want to slough off what ails, to make work that rides on what I am thinking and feeling, but also to make work that mends my thoughts together. I want to make work that feels like a good dance into something that may lead my heart to a better place. For a moment I am just giving in to the meditation of color and texture, water running over paper, the smell of the ink. Peace |
River Rocks triptych.
Together it measures 22in by 30in - and the plan was to frame them separately which will be cleaner but I also like preserving the whole as it is. Maybe I will do a few more so I can let go of keeping this as it is. Funny though because I rarely am attached to anything I have made, and this was completed in a couple of days between work. We will see... On another note if you're wondering if I show work anywhere I usually have a few pieces up at Gutman Gallery in Ann arbor. More on Galleries soon. River Rocks 22x30 425.00 unframed Ann Arbor pick up |
The advantage to working on multiple project - being able to come into the studio and work on something that best suits the condition my body is in. Big works with lots of texture that need a large feeling to work, energy and movement like dance, a desire to play with my space, make a mess - or pattern play, where I sit rest-full and let my hand slowly fill the page with purposeful details. Being able to make these choices echos my own being, and as with most creative works the pieces slowly become a part of you and so have the projects that I work on. |
This larger piece has come and gone in my space a lot in the last six or so months. I mixed up a batch of pigment that is running low and am ready to finish before I need to make more of this somewhat mystery color - getting the same pigment ratios again isn't something I look forward to doin but will if I need to... All in all I am overjoyed that I took the leap to work on something so large - although it is taking months to finish. The figurine embodies this melding between landscape and ornate human made structure. It falls well into the scope of work I'm hoping to have together in the next few months. So here's to finishing projects, and dreaming of more - peace |
This is probably the most challenging piece I've worked on in some time. Each petal took hours, and between those hours the normal life that happens when you are mostly relying on your income elsewhere. As a side note I love my work as it keeps me active and outside, but when it comes to focusing on a project and splitting up studio days it is often like seeing how far you can stretch a rubber band before it snaps and you lose a connection with what you were working on. But in the end I hope to work on more of these. In Ann Arbor we are lucky to have the Peony Gardens at the Arboretum with an abundant display of flowers every year to swoon over, and this tree peony was there - though I can't remember the name it had the most beautiful softness. Watercolor 10x15 in. |
Working in watercolor and graphite - I have always been the most comfortable with drawing, and love combining my two favorite mediums. It feels natural and appropriate to have the new life of the Skunk Cabbage flowers emerging from the drawn graphite leaves of last years debris and soil. I hope you find some out in the wild, and if you don't maybe something else will pop up in your outdoor travels. Today I went out to check on these and was surprised by the loud knocking of a Pileated woodpecker :) |
It seems impossible to ever know a thing - over the years I have spent a lot of time staring into flowers but am still a beginner when it comes to knowing the botanical names and parts. I am constantly in awe of the mechanics of plants. Like this Dogwood I am working on with it's true flowers these little inconspicuous clusters in the center of the bracts that I called petals for so long :) |
Witch Hazels, Hamamelis, the small trees that flower when you least expect them. Walking through the late fall woods in Michigan you can find the native Hamamelis virginiana with its diminutive yellow flowers. A pleasant surprise as the rest of the woods are putting themselves to rest for the winter. In gardens you can find a variety of wildly bright cultivars like this one with long boisterous legs that flare out into the cold of February like fuzzy stars. This one - I don't know what specific cultivar it is - was just buds last week, until I clipped a stem and stuck it in water to let it show off a bit early. Heres to a New Year, and hope for a brighter future for all. |
The daydreams of a gardener... Gardens for Humanity. What would your ideal city garden look like? I always am craving more green space, but spaces that are architectural in some sense. Places that blend the building site and the land. It is related in some sense to a few places that I have lived, and the feeling of living in an environment that has somehow grown from the earth rather than being plunked down like legos on turf. Check out Arcosanti and you will see where I am going with this. I hope to someday see more spaces like this, for more to feel at home in. |
I often wonder what is used in an artists' palette. I try to use single pigments when purchasing, but will premix large batches of color and use over and over for a period of time. As can be seen from my history, a palette will often stick around for a while as I work through what is attracting me to that color scheme. The palette for hellebore sketches: Yellow Sophie PY 93 Yellow Ochre PY 43 Quinachridone rust PO 48 Alizarin Crimson PR 206 Phthalo Blue PB 15 Ultramarine Blue PB 29 Viridian PG 18 Oxide of Chromium PG 17 Titanium White PW 6 |
The longer I paint with watercolor, the more I appreciate the water side of its nature, the subtle difference just a moments wait has on the flow of pigment. The more I let go and wait until the end to pull the piece together the more comfortable the pieces feel to me. I have trouble allowing this to happen, and struggle with the process of a piece being in it's phases, but am getting better at seeing through this. In the end I think it helps that I have only a few hours to paint at the end of a day, and what counts is the joy of the moment and an appreciation for being able to make time for it. Love |
Bloodroot
Watercolor 8.5 x 14in |
It seems frivolous in times like this to take a moment and update an old website that I have trouble with already, but want to share my love for this work, and in a more personal way than quick snippets on Instagram and FB. Since the beginning of the stay at home order I was laid off and able to take the time to work on botanical works in the spring. Due to circumstances I am back to work in a landscaping job that allows me the joy of work in the fresh air and a moment in some beautiful gardens. It is difficult in these times to be anything but grateful for work, and the sun on my skin, but am also angry with the inability to change things within our culture that have led so many of us to lives that are less than they should be. I share my hope for a brighter future through my love of creating work that revolves around the sacred beauty of our woods and wild places, and figurines that are a reminder to be vigilant in our need to be thoughtful and compassionate beings. Peace to all of you and your beautiful hearts |
As I work more with limited color I enjoy the subtleties of texture, the soft patterns in the paper, and the nature of the ink as it plays with the water. When I find my way back to the lunar/solar series that I started in the spring there will be no end to the vibrant cadmium and hot color to burn your retinas - but for the moment I am just getting to know the ink, and appreciating how far I have to go to be comfortable working so minimal. |
In the last phase of these figurines. I have learned a lot about the ink that I love working with so much while working on these, it's delicate nature suits my style well, but even less forgiving in some ways than watercolor. It is there to stay when you lay it on the paper. There is constant balance between the nervous tension of wanting the piece to be as I see it in my head, allowing the ink to be itself and beginning to trust the piece will do as it likes. |
There are three figurines in all - each corresponding to a different phase of the moon, this detail shows the outer edge of the halo surrounding the waning crescent moon figure. Each at the moment is completely monochromatic. I am working entirely with Sumi Ink. The ink sticks I use are made by Boku-undo in Japan, and this one in particular I have found gives me wonderfully consistent linework. It seems to hold up best when worked at a certain richness - this could also have to do with the water, as well as the paper - Arches 156 lb. |
I love building beings like you would a structure. Seeing the body as shapes and edges, places for pattern and places for smooth and rough texture. It takes the idea of the human form outside of what we need it to be. I am round and square and stable and frail and rough and smooth, full of light and dark and soft edges and hard edges like mountains and rivers, all and nothing.
Watercolor and Gouache on 156 lb hot press Arches H. 14" W. 8" |
Harmonious Landscapes Jan 22
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