Showing posts with label marks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marks. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 14, 2018
Keeping On Track.
Sigh.
I am not so good at staying on the blogging track.
Priorities. Remembering. Keeping track.
Too many "irons in fire" or not the best irons?
Time to consider creating more sheep -
because friends on Facebook suggested a number of excellent Sheep Names.
Rosemary, for one.
Here is the photograph I shot at the Minnesota State Fair that was used for newest pastel - now titled "Luna."
Focusing in helped. So the above became this:
Somehow "art" happened. Decisions were made. Guesses were second-guessed. And a few last marks were decided upon.
I do not know how YOU keep on the various tracks you are on.
I do know that now I can leave a coffee shop and block on a few more tiny squares in a journal.
Lose the journal - lose the life! Almost Haha.
I guess this life is about making marks - in the manners in which they might add up to living a life...
So - back up the hill -
And on to getting back to blogging more often and with better content.
Hi-o, filling in "boxes" - away!!
- Fare-thee-well,
Sue
P.S. - We have been accepted into the Spring Green (WI) Art Festival in late June, 21018. We ARE excited!!
Friday, April 15, 2011
Waltzing With Sargent
Now most of us will never be compared to the great painter John Singer Sargent. However, a lovely lesson we all can learn from his work is how much can be inferred by a dash or a dab or a squiggle. We can practice our dots and dashes, symbolic flicks and bits, to help the viewer along with the seeing while actually forcing him or her to do a tad of imagining. Examine Sargent's work and note the abstract shapes and lines and dobs he uses to depict a head or hand. A fashionable dress is actually a series of thickly laid slashes.
This is a work in progress.... Major gestures have been decided and the "Sargent-squiggles" are starting to appear. I tend to either ignore detail or put too much in. A Sargent-style of painting allows the artist to hint rather than clobber. To lead rather than lecture. One can play in a number of areas with a wide variety of colored ticks that add up only when seen as a whole. I like to create jazzy bits of interplay - some bold, others subtle. Improve is the name of the game once the basic composition is drawn. This does not always work out for the best; it's simply how I prefer to create. As a reformed pen-and-ink girl, my using pastels spontaneously doesn't come easily! And messes do occur. But the forgiving nature of pastels lets us "try, try again." As Martha would say, That's a good thing."
Producing images that conform to one's ideas and plans takes study, practice, and persistence. Serious stuff. We have to do our home-work now so later we can communicate with ease. So keep at it. And have fun. Play with dabs, and globs, and smears, but have them lean toward meaning something. Maybe some day, like John Sargent Singer, we'll get the hang of using those dots and dashes to get our message just right. On to the painting dance.
Waltzing in my mind -
Sue
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