Concrete Nature was based on a doodle in one of my work books, the subject probably reflects the way I feel sometimes when sitting in a meeting, that one one hand you may want to fly away, but on the other hand you are grounded and focused on the topic. Maybe I was one of those kids who stared out the window during class. There is a definite native theme to the design, with the bird and the fish both connected physically to the earth. Not sure what the walking teddy bear means.
Important to any composition are the lines that define the major shapes. In this work there is one continuous line that defines the wings and face of the bird and the entire shape of the fish, starting at the top of the picture and ending in a ripple at the bottom right. This defining line provides a smooth pathway for the viewers eye to slide up and down the composition. In this painting the central line is easier to see, in some of the other doodleisms works the line is not so easy, and can often be made up of several different elements. It is none the less important to have a nice line in your work regardless of whether it is abstract, portrait or landscape.
10x11" cold press, 2008
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Calypso
Calypso is a painting based on scientific ideas but meant to be purely abstract. The concept was two cells (small independent units of life in your body) contacting eachother in a meaningful way. The green cell on the top and the purple cell on the bottom meet in the middle, with small red highlights indicating the action in the middle. The blue dots represent nucleus of the cell, the epicenter of control.
Technically this painting looks simple but is in fact very difficult. I used the 'paint blob' technique where you drop on a large amount of fluid paint, and then let it dry overnight. The tricky part was ensuring that the purple and green blob did not mix too much, although a little mixing was inevitable and desired, as it provided a bit of harmony at the center. In addition, the blobs needed to dry in a somewhat circular pattern. Somehow I managed to get it right, and once it all dried I put on the pale orange background, the blue centers, and the red and green highlights, which are just barely visible at the interface.
10x11" cold press, 2006
Technically this painting looks simple but is in fact very difficult. I used the 'paint blob' technique where you drop on a large amount of fluid paint, and then let it dry overnight. The tricky part was ensuring that the purple and green blob did not mix too much, although a little mixing was inevitable and desired, as it provided a bit of harmony at the center. In addition, the blobs needed to dry in a somewhat circular pattern. Somehow I managed to get it right, and once it all dried I put on the pale orange background, the blue centers, and the red and green highlights, which are just barely visible at the interface.
10x11" cold press, 2006
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Addictive Puzzle
The idea for addictive puzzle came from an old doodle, in the doodle there were also groups of people on each level, trying to assemble the pieces, however the drawing was complex enough without having to depict a hundred people! The original concept had to do with the process of scientific discovery... you have a bunch of pieces that are all over the place, and many groups of people try to put them together. Without the people in the final work the message is lost a little, however you still get the feeling that a puzzle is sitting there, waiting to be assembled.
The method for this painting was rather straight forward. I started with a quick outline of where the different levels would be and then overlaid an heavy wash of pink and yellow and beige. Then I drew the outline of each puzzle piece, and filled in the colours as I went. Making the puzzle pieces was quite a chore, in fact I see now looking at the photo that a few are not filled in. The major challenge was maintaining the different sizes of the pieces, each level down the pieces get smaller. I called it addictive puzzle because when I started to look at the final work I couldn't take my eyes off it.
22x30" cold press, 2009
The method for this painting was rather straight forward. I started with a quick outline of where the different levels would be and then overlaid an heavy wash of pink and yellow and beige. Then I drew the outline of each puzzle piece, and filled in the colours as I went. Making the puzzle pieces was quite a chore, in fact I see now looking at the photo that a few are not filled in. The major challenge was maintaining the different sizes of the pieces, each level down the pieces get smaller. I called it addictive puzzle because when I started to look at the final work I couldn't take my eyes off it.
22x30" cold press, 2009
Friday, October 2, 2009
Waffle House, North Carolina, USA
Waffle House, for the uninitiated, is a chain of breakfast restaurants in the southern US, rivaled only by IHOP. On a walk around Greensville North Carolina I came upon this scene, which I felt reflected the American culture. Inside the restaurant I recreated Edward Hopper's original 'Night Owls' painting, the idea was to provide a more modern urban context for the classic painting. Of course 'night owls' was depicted at night, and this painting is during the day, but who eats pancakes at night. I smell an idea for a new painting here....
This version of Waffle House was painted from two sources, a photograph, and a location painting. I remember well the location paitning experience, lots of cars going by and little red ants biting my butt. Painting from photo is always a challenge because the colours are off, and there is too much detail. I used the location painting to get the colours right, and the photo to nail down some of the details. In the end the work looks a little stiff as compared to the location painting (which I should dig up some time and photograph). The thing that is missing in your studio is the 'environment', the noise, the smell, the air...when on location these elements will channel through the artist and onto the work. Other examples of this concept are my paintings Japan Busy Street, View from Mount Royale, and in general look to Monet and Tom Thompson (and the entire group of seven/Emily Carr) for examples of artists who channeled external energy into their work for great effect.
14x11" hot press, 2002
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