Thursday, December 10, 2015

Awards, Events & New Work

Since my last entry to this blog, I've been rather busy with events as well as time in the studio.....and as a result of events & studio time, I produced new and exciting work that won  awards in 3 separate events.

The Kerrville Outdoor Painting Event is one of my favorite plein air events and this year was especially fun - I won 2nd place with my watercolor "Welcome Home"!
"Welcome Home" was the 1st one I painted (and my personal favorite) upon arriving in Kerrville and I'm honored that show judge, Rusty Jones liked it too!  The dirt & gravel road leading up to this historic farmhouse was picture perfect - no problem with making a good composition here; a no-brainer for sure!

The 45th Annual Women Artists of the West exhibition was in Tucson, Arizona this year and juror Carol Swinney gave my entry "Rainbow Row" an award of Excellence!  
The inspiration for Rainbow Row is from a fuzzy photo taken years ago from a tour-bus window doing 40 mph through a village in Belize. This painting also sold at the show - I'm happy and sad at the same time - happy it sold (yay!), but sad I didn't get much time to enjoy this one; it went straight from the studio to the exhibition.   

Last month, my painting "Scouting for a home" won Best in Wildlife award at the Campfire Texas annual Gala, An Artist's Christmas.
"Scouting for a home" - 8x10 Egg Tempera (sold).  This is a medium that I work in occasionally - it's rather "tedious" in that it takes layer upon layer of transparent color.  The Masters used dry pigment (ground very fine), mixed with the binder of pure egg yolk and water. To achieve best results, it must be mixed in the right ratio of pigment to egg binder.  Today, artists have the advantage of a "short cut" - the medium is pre-mixed and available in tubes from art suppliers.  Years ago, I painted a lot waterfowl and songbirds - this one was a favorite. 

This fall in the studio, I had 2 paintings going at the same time - Waiting for the Crew and Autumn's Overture.  
Autumn's Overture - 24x30 Oil on Gallery Wrap Canvas.  
"Waitin' for the Crew" - 20x24 Watercolor

I often work on 2 paintings at the same time in the studio and sometimes with different mediums.  Oil and watercolor are direct opposites in technique and medium - which for many painters creates a "brain warp"!  For me, it serves to keep me focused.  With 2 paintings in process, I'm also less inclined to overwork a painting.  I'm currently working on a Christmas commission - it's a gift from a mother to a daughter & I'll share that in a later post.

In retrospect, 2015 has been a wonderful and exciting year for me and I can hardly wait for 2016 to get started - it's shaping up into another great year too!  I'll be spending a lot of time in the studio during the winter months of January and February. March and April promise to be busy with workshops, demonstrations and...events (YES!).   In the meanwhile, my best wishes for a wonderful holiday season and I'll see you next year!

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Competition + Camaraderie = Creativity!

The year 2015 has been a great year for me in several ways:  I've produced some of my best work and have participated in 3 plein air events, each one different in their own way:
 
Event #1 - April 2015:  The Outdoor Painters Society's juried membership show "Plein Air Southwest Salon" hosted by Southwest Gallery in Dallas. This annual event presents plein air paintings completed in the previous calendar year.  OPS members submit up to 3 entries to a jury panel.  On average, more than 300 paintings are submitted with the jury accepting around 200.  Accepted artists compete for $20,000 in cash and merchandise awards.  The juror this year was Phil Starke of Arizona - great talent and a good eye for excellence.  I had 4 paintings in the show - didn't win an award, but just being a part of the event was award enough for me.
 
Event #2 - June 2015:  Paint Historic Waxahachie - This tenth annual paint out event is open to any artist working in the plein air tradition.  I'm the organizer of this event so I "wear 2 hats"; I'm "event staff" AND a participant.   One of my paintings was awarded 2 place by this year's juror, Deborah Paris.
 
Event #3 - July 2015:  Plein Air Easton - this event is rated as the #1 plein air competition in the nation.  I was honored to be one of only 58 artists selected to participate in the 10 day paint out event.  I loaded up my little Kia SUV and drove 1400 miles to Easton, Maryland - on the eastern shore across the Chesapeake Bay from Washingto0n DC.  It took me 2 days - 22 hours - to get there. 
 
The result of the events:  Re-acquainted with artists I haven't seen in a while,  met and became friends with artists whose work I've followed and admired, and  - best of all - produced 20 new paintings.
 
Competing against the best painters in plein air events is exhausting, frustrating, exhilarating, .......and productive.  I probably do my best work in competition situations and get into a "creative zone".  What fuels my creativity is being surrounded by really talented professionals that are an inspiration to me.   Competition events aren't for everyone - and it's perfectly alright if an artist doesn't want to participate.  They travel their own creative path with other painters of like minds who simply enjoy painting outdoors.  Absolutely nothing wrong about that!
 
I'll have the month of August and 1st part of September to "re-group" before I leave for Kerrville, TX to teach a 3-day watercolor workshop, then participate in another paint out competition the 1st week in October, Kerrville Outdoor Painting Event.  I'm an alternate for En Plein Air Texas in San Angelo the last week of October - I don't want to wish ill on anyone, but I sure do hope there are cancellations so I can participate!  In the meanwhile, I'll share some of the paintings completed in the past couple of months....under the pressure of competition  All these paintings were completed in 2 to 4 hours, alla prima (all in one go) - no adjustments after leaving the painting location:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 These paintings and many others are in my Plein Air Gallery on my website - check them out!
 
 

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Waxahachie Historic Jail

I spent the last 6 weeks of 2014 completing commissions that were for giving at Christmas.  The most challenging of my commissions is The Old Jail in Waxahachie  -  a beautifully restored building that is now privately owned by a law firm.  The following images are brief documentations of 3 stages of completion.  


This is the final drawing of the building.  With watercolor, the artist does not have the luxury of being able to "wipe off" mistakes or paint over a passage to make any changes.  An experienced watercolorist can make minor changes but for the most part, once a stroke of paint is applied, it's difficult to change after it dries.  At the onset, the original drawing is critical and requires a lot of "adjustments" in the process - erasing & re-drawing.  I use tracing paper because it erases easily and if I decide to completely change the composition, I can trace parts of the drawing I want to keep onto a new sheet of paper. 


After I completed the drawing, I transferred it onto a sheet of  300 lb. Arches watercolor paper.  To make the transfer, I use a "wax-free" graphite paper - an artist's "carbon paper".  I place the graphite sheet between the watercolor paper and the drawing (on the tracing paper), then tape the tracing paper drawing in 2 or 3 places to keep it from "shifting" during the transfer process.  In the above photo, you can see my photo reference displayed on a 22" computer monitor.  I refer to the photo reference during the painting process mainly for accuracy of color and building details.


This photo shows the initial layer of color; I painted the sky first then base colors of the brick & roof. and established the shape of the trees, adding the top of the courthouse "peeking" through. (the courthouse is actually a block away). From this point on, through to completion, I work all areas of the painting independently.

The Old Jail - 12 x 12 Watercolor

The above photo is the completed painting.  By comparing it to the previous image, you can see that I deepened values as much as 50 to 75% more in areas to offset the light values in the trees, building, and shadows.  The only area remaining untouched from the very beginning is the sky.   Throughout the painting, laying in  washes of stronger values suggesting a light source of sunshine in a bright blue Texas sky.

I delivered the painting to my client a few days before Christmas...and she said it was perfect...especially with the little "surprise" of the courthouse peeking through the trees.  I love my job!