Collage

Collage
From Here To There

Portfolio & Bio

Saturday, December 22, 2012

The Gift of Teaching

I’ll admit the time invested into preparing, arranging, setting-up, gathering materials, and creating lesson plans, far outweighs the ‘class-hour’ wage one gets for doing a continuing education class, but let me say that the energy, enthusiasm, and generosity of the people that attend my classes are priceless rewards. It is also what makes me keep coming back to teaching. My last class of women at UNM this fall semester was outstanding. They contributed their voice, creativity, and an awful lot of humor to each session. I look forward to meeting up again with them in the future where we can continue on in our creative journey.


           

Michele: Map making                                            







                                                     Cathy: Mandalas             

 

Linda: Color, Shape, Form                    


                                           Debbie: Illuminated Letter.

                       

Creative Journal Arts

Monday, September 10, 2012

"In the Works"

 

I haven't touched watercolor in a long time. It once was my primary medium but then I moved on to oils. I'd use watercolor to do onsite studies but it was not until recently that I wanted to challenge myself to do a major watercolor piece. What you see here is a work in progress, well on its but not quite complete

Sweet Infinity

11 x 14

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

The Final Touch

Never to be taken lightly, framing the work needs careful consideration. In the case of the miniature exhibition, there were also restrictions that needed to be adhered to and guidelines to follow. A frame is the finishing touch and often is as much of the final work as the painting itself. The frame gives the work character and different frames will make different statements about it. So choose carefully, don’t rush the process. Plan ahead. Think about the qualities of the frame while planning out the work.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Complete

    



Titled Celebrate, Rejoice and Revelry respectively, my miniatures are complete. Framed and delivered, these works join their standard-sized companions of the same subject. The key to doing such small work is patience and having the right tools. It’s no use fighting your materials. In addition, allow yourself enough time if a deadline is in your midst. Trying to rush through such exacting work can be a disaster. And most importantly, and I’ve struggled with this in all of my work, there needs to be a connection to what you are painting. Uninspired work produces uninspired paintings and it will show.

Creative Journal Arts

Monday, March 5, 2012

The Road Ahead

        

Having come so far, there is still a long road ahead. Each of the three panels has now been blocked in with oil. Color schemes have been resolved yet small changes may be made in the final pass. (The purple ribbon in the third panel needs to be more like the bow in the second.) But none of these panels possess the contrast of highlights and shadow. If converted to grayscale, they would all be in a mid-tone range. The next pass over these panels will focus primarily on light and reflective color. Details will be refined and shapes will be defined with light and shadows. As the deadline draws near, there is little time to waste.





Creative Journal Arts

Friday, February 17, 2012

Blocking In

 



Once the underpainting is complete, it’s time to transfer to oils. Thin glazes are applied to build up the color blocking in the overall shape of each ribbon. I mix four values at this point to begin establishing light and shadow. I’m not concerning myself with reflected color or subtle detail. The color will continue to shift. The brightest highlights have not been applied and the shadow work needs refining. This is the beginning to laying in the oil foundation.

Creative Journal Arts

Friday, February 10, 2012

Under painting



      

Once the sketches are complete, I move onto the underpainting. These are worked in watercolor because of their flexibility on the panel. It helps me to see the painting take form. I become more acquainted with my subject; studying its texture. Here is where I begin to think of color and value; the colors here just a representation of what the actual colors will be. The proceeding work will be done in thin layers of oil paint and the saturation of the colors will shift. While sometimes the underpainting is a value study, a monochromatic painting that simply points the way through the lights and darks.  Bear in mind that these particular works are no more than 2”, so the work is done under a magnifying glass with brushes that specialize in miniature painting.

Creative Journal Arts

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Starting …

                  

Embarking onto a new trio of paintings. This set of sketches are made up miniatures no more than 2” x 2” and 2” x 4”. Primed with gesso on a basswood panel and sketched out in graphite. I’m going to begin the underpainting in watercolor. I find the medium easy to manipulate on the gessoed panel. It helps me to create a ‘road-map’ for the oil layers that will follow. I’m going to record their progress here. So here we go…

                          


Thursday, January 12, 2012

Safe Haven

Not a book gets written without the first word, or a painting without that first brushstroke. You must allow yourself a lot of muck. Clear it out, get it out of the way, and then move on. Whatever obstacles are blocking your way put it down. Make your first step an effort to express what is going on inside of you. This may take many sessions of sitting down with a journal and pen using the paper as your means to voice the moods and sensations you are feeling. Don’t worry about grammar or spelling, just keep the pen moving. Don’t censor yourself, don’t judge the work, this is not a literary masterpiece. It is a positive affirmative move towards healing your creative soul. Journaling is a personal therapeutic method for understanding yourself. When tragedy strikes, it leaves us in a dark place feeling very much alone, often in a room full of people. We often feel that no one can understand our pain or stress like we do. So here is where you put it. This is the vessel to fill with what you are feeling inside and witnessing around you. This is the first step towards finding your solution for working past it and into a productive, creative, place.



Creative Journal Arts