Quantcast
Channel: True Adventures of an Art Addict
Viewing all 247 articles
Browse latest View live

WIP: What's on My Table

$
0
0
Here's what's on my work table right now (besides the mess, I mean).  What's on yours?





Stay tuned, I will be showing the finished piece very soon!





Stronger Than You Know

$
0
0
Here is the finished version of the piece I showed in progress in my last post, starting with a couple of details:









Stronger Than You Know              9.25 x 13.5 inches
ingredients:  vintage papers and ephemera; found objects; image transfer; vintage photograph; vintage fabrics and lace; stitching




We gain strength, and courage, and confidence by each experience in which we really stop to look fear in the face... we must do that which we think we cannot.
                                                                                                           ~ Eleanor Roosevelt





Weekly Quick Collage: Imaginary Landscape

$
0
0
Imaginary Landscape         5 x 5 inches



This one is very different from the weekly collages I've done so far; in both style and materials, it's much more like the pieces in my long-onging series called Transformations. These are loosely landscape-based collages I make from scraps of old monotypes, all 7 x 7 inches.

Hope you enjoy it!





Weekly Quick Collage Two-fer: A Bit of Cheating

$
0
0
I guess you could technically say that I cheated on these, which is why I decided to put them both in one post. Though all the added materials were found on my work table (except for the stitching, of course), these collages are pieces of an old collage that I cut up. I was unsatisfied with it as a whole, but it had some parts that I really liked too much to just throw it away. So, I cut out those redeemable parts and added new materials to them. I actually think I like these enough now to consider them finished work.


 Map I          6.5 x 5 inches
 ingredients: vintage maps, decorative paper, joss paper, vintage book pages, metallic pens, artist pens, eyelet, stitching




Map II            4.75 x 3.13 inches
 ingredients: vintage maps, vintage notebook scrap, joss paper, vintage book pages, metallic pens, watercolor pencils, lace



Anyway, who's to say what's cheating - I make the rules here, right?   ;-)


Weekly Quick Collage: Abstract

$
0
0



Once again, made from only scraps found on my work table. This one is a little strange, but I enjoyed making it, and I do rather like it. Kind of 60's-ish - or something.





I like nonsense – it wakes up the brain cells. Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living. It’s a way of looking at life through the wrong end of the telescope… and that enables you to laugh at all of life’s realities.                                                                                                                                   ~ Dr. Seuss


RoyGBiv: Pink

$
0
0
In the Search for Roy G. Biv, hosted by Julie Booth and Jennifer Coyne Qudeen, we have rotated through all the "official" rainbow colors and are now on to pink. Pink is a color that has been on my mind a lot lately, as the bridesmaids' dresses for my son's upcoming wedding are in shades of blush and pink. Here's one:

Pretty, yes? I, however, have not been having so much luck finding a suitable pink dress, which is the reason my brain has been so stuck on pink.




 Here's a lovely wildflower called meadow pink...




 ... and another which for some inexplicable reason is known as joe-pye weed...







 I love this delicate pink primrose, which grows in my own garden...




This bright pink azalea is a joy every year, and the butterflies love it, too...




... a beautiful carved jade vessel at the Smithsonian in Washington.




Thanks for joining me on the search for pink. To see more, please go to Julie's or Jennifer's blogs for all the pink links!






Finally Finsihed - Pieces of the Sky

$
0
0
I finished the panels for this piece a long time ago, but could not figure out how to put them all together. I finally decided to attach them to two pieces of black suede. I feel pretty satisfied with the way this turned out.


Pieces of the Sky             22 x 10.25 inches

ingredients: vintage book covers, brass stamping, vintage book pages, monotypes, vintage puzzle pieces, vintage game piece, star guide, photograph, vintage maps, watercolor pencils, suede strips, brads, metal findings, book binding tape





Weekly Quick Collage: Sing

$
0
0



Sing     5 x 5 inches



A little late, but here is my weekly quick collage for this week. Hope you enjoy!














Prayer Flags

$
0
0
For the past few months, I have had three pieces in a traveling art exhibit called Tripletta, a show of miniature works of art. It is now in its third venue, and at the opening a couple of weeks ago, all three of my pieces sold. This is fantastic news, of course. The only problem, which really is not a problem, is that I now have to replace those pieces, since the exhibit is scheduled to go on to other venues. (To see two of them, go here and here; unfortunately, I never had a chance to photograph the third.)

The reason it's not a problem is that I love to make art. In fact, I've started a series of little monotype/collages that I call Prayer Flags. The only problem is that I'm not sure I like them enough to put them in the exhibit; I keep thinking that maybe I should continue with the Seed Story theme instead.




Prayer Flag I





Prayer Flag II







What do you think? Should I go with these, or try to do more Seed Stories?






Prayer Flags III and IV

$
0
0


Two more little collages in the Prayer Flags series, which I'm considering using as replacements for pieces in the traveling show Tripletta. My three Seed Stories pieces sold, so I have to send in new pieces for the show.  Both are monotypes with collage.



  Prayer Flag III




Prayer Flag IV



Have a glorious weekend, everyone!











Weekly Quick Collage: Space Buddha

$
0
0


Space Buddha      5 x 5 inches
ingredients: vintage book pages, image transfers, watercolor pencil drawing, vintage stamps, magazine cutouts




What is meant by the soul as suchness is the oneness of the totality of all things.
                                                                                                                                ~ Ashvaghosha









Black

$
0
0



collage by Derek Gores







n
Vietnam War Memorial by Maya Lin





ceramic plate by Kentucky artist Wayne Bates





Native American totem pole, Smithsonian





Goddess by Donna Iona Drozda






Small Dreams by Claudio L'Estremo Montgriffo




The color for "Searching for Roy G Biv" this month is black, and my goal was to find the widest variety of black art works possible.  Do you think I achieved it?

For more photos of basic black, check out the blogs of our hostesses, Jennifer Coyne Qudeen and Julie Booth.  Thanks for looking!






Studio Table

$
0
0
The incomparable Seth Apter of the The Altered Page has challenged us to reveal the truth, and I have accepted the challenge. In Seth's words, "Let's go behind the curtain, throw any feelings of shame out the window, and show the world the underside of art and craft. I'll show you mine if you show me yours!"

Embarrassing as it is, here are photos of my art table in all its messy glory, just as it happened to be on this 20th day of September, 2014. Was I tempted to clean it up, just a bit? Yes, I was. But I left it as it really was, and snapped a few shots to share with you.




Yes, this is where I actually work, in the middle of all this chaos. And I do, pretty much, know where everything is, which surprises me as much as it probably does you.




And, as Seth noted in his own reveal, when we run out of room on the table, the mess tends to spread onto the floor...




For links to over a hundred (and counting) other artists' studio table views, head over to The Altered Page, Studio Table Reveal.  I just love seeing the reality of other artists' messes! Am I some weird kind of voyeur, or does it just make me feel less guilty about my own?  Whichever, it's great fun!





More Prayer Flags

$
0
0

 Prayer Flag V




Prayer Flag VI




Once I get on a roll with something it's hard for me to stop. Two more Prayer Flags just came to me, so here they are. I may choose three of the six to substitute for the three sold Seed Story pieces (two of them here and here) in the Tripletta traveling show, but I'm also working on some more Seed Story pieces, so we'll see.


Hope you enjoy them!






Around the World Blog Hop

$
0
0
The very talented Maya Matthew has tagged me to participate in the"Around the World Blog Hop"!


Each participant must share their answers to these questions: 

1. What am I working on? 
I'm working on a couple of different things right now. If you're a regular reader of my blog, you know that I had three miniature pieces in a traveling exhibit called Tripletta.  All three of my pieces sold recently, so I now have to replace them. The pieces  that sold were called Seed Story I, II, and III; you can see them if you follow the Tripletta link. So,  I'm working on some more Seed Story pieces to replace them in the exhibit. Here are two that are not yet finished:











I'm also working on another piece in the Heron and Crow series, which are actually illustrations for what will hopefully be a children's book:


Heron and Crow II, monotype with mixed media, 9.75 x 9 inches

 It's about 90% finished, but still needs some tweaking here and there. 


2. How does my work differ from others of its genre? 
The mixed media genre is pretty wide open and eclectic, so I chose to answer this question in regard to monotype. Traditionally, monotype is usually done by coating the plate (I use a sheet of plexiglass) in one color of ink, then wiping the ink away to create the image. In contrast, my working is made by building up layers of transparent inks. Essentially, my method is almost the direct opposite of  the way most monotypes are made.



3. Why do I write/create what I do?  
The images I make are formed from the vocabulary of symbols that I’ve developed as I sought to express the theme that lies at the foundation of it all: a deep belief in the unity and connectedness of everything in the universe.  Related to this is my conviction that every part of the earth is sacred, including the myriad beings that ride it through space.  At the most basic level, we are made of the same stuff as the stars, the trees, the air, the ocean.  Having come from the same source, we are all connected in the most intricate ways, both visible and invisible.  This belief is expressed by the transposition of objects, the overlapping of transparent images, and by forms that seem to transform into something else.  I'm constantly searching for more effective methods of revealing this mystery, and it is the basis of my artistic practice.




4. How does my writing/creating process work?
My process for these mixed media pieces usually begins with a monotype base layer, to which I add further layers of color.  The monotype itself consists of many layers of oil-based lithographic ink, thinned to transparency in order to allow the colors of previous layers to show through.  In this way, I believe the mixing of colors to be richer and more varied than if I pre-mixed the inks in advance.  Normally there are at least four to six passes through the press, with leaves and other plant materials included in at least some of the pressings.  All of these pieces are done on a substrate of Rives BFK 100% cotton printmaking paper; inks and other materials are as archival and lightfast as possible.  



After the monotype is dry, layers of watercolor, colored pencil, and other (mainly transparent) media are added.  Collage elements may also be added; these are usually pieces of discarded monotypes.  With this layering process, I hope to achieve a certain luminosity and brilliance, as well as a blending and unity of images. This unity is an objective in conveying the content of my work.  The process I use in creating these pieces is one that I developed myself through trial and error, in an effort to achieve the result I desired.





Unfortunately, I couldn't find anyone interested in continuing the blog hop, so I guess the hop stops here. If you'd like to join in, please let me know, and I'll send you the details.









Weekly Quick Collage: Expansion of Dreams

$
0
0
Expansion of Dreams




Rambling around the internet one night, I found this poem by Stanley Kunitz, and thought I'd take this opportunity to share it with you. I hope you like it.


The Science of the Night
by Stanley Kunitz

I touch you in the night, whose gift was you,
My careless sprawler,
And I touch you cold, unstirring, star-bemused,
That have become the land of your self-strangeness.

What long seduction of the bone has led you
Down the imploring roads I cannot take
Into the arms of ghosts I never knew,
Leaving my manhood on a rumpled field
To guard you where you lie so deep
In absent-mindedness,
Caught in the calcium snows of sleep?

And even should I track you to your birth
Through all the cities of your mortal trial,
As in my jealous thought I try to do,
You would escape me--from the brink of earth
Take off to where the lawless auroras run,
You with your wild and metaphysic heart.

My touch is on you, who are light-years gone.

We are not souls but systems, and we move
In clouds of our unknowing
like great nebulae.

Our very motives swirl and have their start
With father lion and with mother crab.

Dreamer, my own lost rib,
Whose planetary dust is blowing
Past archipelagoes of myth and light
What far Magellans are you mistress of
To whom you speed the pleasure of your art?
As through a glass that magnifies my loss
I see the lines of your spectrum shifting red,
The universe expanding, thinning out,
Our worlds flying, oh flying, fast apart.


From hooded powers and from abstract flight
I summon you, your person and your pride.

Fall to me now from outer space,
Still fastened desperately to my side;
Through gulfs of streaming air
Bring me the mornings of the milky ways
Down to my threshold in your drowsy eyes;
And by the virtue of your honeyed word
Restore the liquid language of the moon,
That in gold mines of secrecy you delve.

Awake!
My whirling hands stay at the noon,
Each cell within my body holds a heart
And all my hearts in unison strike twelve.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Exciting News, and a Sneak Peek

$
0
0
I'm truly excited and so happy to announce that the wonderfully talented and generous artist, teacher, and now author Roxanne Evans Stout of River Garden Studio has asked me to make a collage for her  upcoming  book. I feel honored to be included in this project, and naturally can't wait until it comes out. I'm afraid that's about all I can reveal right now, but don't worry, you'll be hearing lots more about it before the release. In the meantime, I was given the go-ahead to show you a tiny sneak peek.



Yes! So excited!! Please stay tuned for more news as it becomes available.








Have a great weekend, everyone!



White

$
0
0
The Search for Roy G Biv has brought us beyond the rainbow, to white. However, I would be remiss as a science geek if I didn't point out that white light is actually all the colors of the rainbow, combined:

"Visible light, also known as white light, consists of a collection of component colors. These colors are often observed as light passes through a triangular prism [or a raindrop]. Upon passage through the prism, the white light is separated into its component colors - red, orange, yellow, green, blue, [indigo], and violet. The separation of visible light into its different colors is known as dispersion. ... each color is characteristic of a distinct wave frequency; and different frequencies of light waves will bend varying amounts upon passage through a prism." 
                                                                     ( Dispersion of Light by Prisms; The Physics Classroom )                                                                       

It was Isaac Newton who discovered that white light is composed of these different colors:

"Newton’s contribution created a new understanding that white light is a mixture of colored light, and that each color is refracted to a different extent. The different colors correspond to light with different wavelengths, and are refracted to differing degrees. This separation of colors is known as dispersion."
                                                                                        (Causes of Color: What is Refraction?)




 I'm not sure what type of caterpillar this is, but I think it's pretty cool-looking....





 A white egret at Hilton Head, South Carolina...





Bear grass at Glacier National Park...





A springtime favorite in my yard, paper white narcissus...






Clouds in Ohio, and in South Carolina...





This odd-looking Kentucky wild flower looks white, but is ever so slightly tinted with violet in places...






Seeds of the season with their fuzzy white parachutes, just before they fly away...






My son Colin's beautiful bride, Lindsey, in her shimmering white wedding dress last weekend...






For more beautiful examples of white found by others in the Search for Roy G Biv, visit the blogs of our hostesses, Jennifer Coyne Qudeen and Julie Booth; they will link you up!  Thanks for joining me on my journey into WHITE; hope you enjoy it!










Weekly Quick Collage: Passing Thoughts

$
0
0


The purpose of art is washing the dust of daily life off our souls.
                                                                                ~ Pablo Picasso




Passing Thoughts


Once again, made from stuff I found on my art table. If you're thinking I just might find the kitchen sink in that mess, you're probably right!






The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance.
                                                                                                                                            ~ Aristotle





Creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes. Art is knowing which ones to keep.
                                                                                                                   ~ Scott Adams







Have a wonderful, art-filled week, everyone!

Weekly Quick Collage: Passage of Time + Radioactive

$
0
0



Passage of Time





My favorite things in life don't cost any money. It's really clear that the most precious resource we all have is time.
~ Steve Jobs




Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood. Now is the time to understand more, so that we may fear less.
~ Marie Curie



I wanted to take this opportunity to share a wonderful book with you.  Lauren Redniss has written and illustrated a book about the lives of Marie  and Pierre Curie, called  RadioactiveThe book is beautifully illustrated throughout.Many of the illustrations are cyanotypes; this photographic printmaking process produces moody, deep blue  images that I think are just mesmerizing, and Redniss's gorgeously sensitive line drawings are equally enthralling.           .

If you look on Amazon, you can see more of the book's illustrations. Check it out!



Here is Lauren Redniss's Ted Talk, where she speaks about developing the book:




Viewing all 247 articles
Browse latest View live