Category Archives: art projects

busy me

I will get back to posting soon. Just very busy with Thunderstorm Dancing for the moment and time is short:-)

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How not to do hand lettering

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It is hard to write with conté.

No respect for the arts

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Thunderstorm Dancing

DON’T LOOK DOWN!

I am balancing on the thinnest of ropes over an abyss of awful drawings.

I must keep going with the indian ink and not look down… or sideways, or upwards. Especially upwards.

I have been struggling with my roughs for Thunderstorm Dancing. The text is wonderful. The possibilities are endless. This is part of the problem. Endless possibilities are hard to deal with.

I’ve been working with pencils. Love those pencils, but when I have to draw eight characters (including Lucy the dog) interacting on the one spread, the pencil is not my friend. It is not broad enough. I tend to get all fiddly and fussy. I need to use loose lines to get those bodies expressing dance and play.

Lucy and Alice climbing on to the porch. Pencil looking great here. Only two characters and simple composition.

Then, today, when I was feeling a little lost and in need of help, I also made the mistake of looking at Alexis Deacon‘s blog. Aaaargh!! Begone Alexis, Thou Obscenely Talented Man! 

Alexis is herewith banned from my studio until I am happy with my roughs. Then I’ll feast my eyes again on his fabulousness.

So what to do? I needed to strike out in a different direction; re-boot the old drawing engine.

I selected a large piece of my most rubbishy paper (ignoring the sticky note at the top of my drawing board), picked up a brush and dipped it into the Noodler’s Ink.

small use the good paper!

One of the notes at the top of my drawing board. Cecily Osborn was my lovely school art teacher.

Big sigh! I could see some life returning to my drawings. Maybe Noodling is the way forward. Maybe it’s the medium to use. Maybe I need to Noodle my way into some happy compositions and then revert back to pencil when the shapes are right. At any rate it’s a lifeline for now (perhaps like one of those pool noodles you can use for flotation).

DO NOT DIVE

DESPERATE DRAWERS – DO NOT DIVE

Here are some of the quick, inky sketches. They’re only rough, but they have a bit of life. So…

A way forward for tomorrow.

alice dancing sml ink mitchell dancing sml ink mitchell dancing2 sml ink poppy dancing sml ink tommy and dad dancing sml ink tommy dancing sml ink

Art(z) Blitz (stubborn aren’t I?) – 2013 highlights

I had a busy day clearing up the mess yesterday. It was chaos here. So I popped down to the exhibition opening only briefly to join in the fun, and took a few photos and even bought a painting! Hooray! Fellow Blitzer, Sassy bought some art too. It’s so good to buy something. The artists will be happy, we are happy, Kingston Council is happy.

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Nathaniel Jeffrey’s polymer clay work called ‘Connect Eight’ bought by Sassy

Here’s Sassy’s own lovely collage.

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and here is her eight year old daughter Esther’s beautiful work. This one got my people’s choice vote.

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This is the one I bought. It looks like Hieronymus Bosch painted it in 1956. Awesome! Not sure how the blue frame will look in our house, but I suspect it’s an integral part of the artwork. Hmmmm.

This year I noticed they had mixed everything up nicely. Kids art all mixed up with adult art. This is very good. One reason is that this is a community event exhibiting work from school children, hobby artists, complete non-artists having a bit of fun, through to semi or professional artists. It’s such a mix that it is fitting to mush them all together.

Another reason is that it avoids unnecessary mortification on behalf of those poor, innocent, damaged victims of mis-categorisation! Yes, it’s true… I’m still blushing!

Once upon a time, before all the age groups were mixed together, my piece was exhibited in the children’s art room. I love children’s art for its naive beauty, experimental quality and the quirkiness of the lines they make. Upon reflection, I should be proud to have had my work mistaken for that of a child. But I guess the real problem was that I had been too serious about Artz Blitz as a competition, was trying very hard and I wasn’t happy with my own picture. So it was inevitable that I would view the mistake with irony rather than pride. Ah well! I noticed this year that I enjoyed the experience much more and was pretty indifferent to the competition aspect. So I have learned something!

Here’s a picture by Phyllis Fernandez who had the same idea as me.

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Phyllis’s baby has more attitude than mine I think :-)

Here are two embodiments of another idea that was on my brainstorm sheet. The elephants linked trunk to tail: A beautifully executed wire sculpture that won the Youth Prize. (Sorry I didn’t record the name of the artist. Will have to check it out later and update.) And a very cute pastel in a 50s looking white frame by Fiona Carter.

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I like wire sculpture. I think that’s something I’d like to play with one day. It looks really fun.

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Here’s another child’s artwork. Gabriel Martindale’s lovely train done in ink and watercolour. Gorgeous.

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lovely bold stuff, with fine liner details. Great colour!

Here’s the piece by last year’s winner of the 2D section, Craig Fry. Very nice again. Wish I could show you a photo of last year’s one.

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Here’s a sunset quilt that I liked a lot. (Once again, I’m sorry I didn’t photograph it clearly enough to read the name of the artist.)

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And last of all, the 2D second prize winner, which I really liked a lot. But I must admit I would have liked it even better if it had not had the human hidden behind the smaller bird. It is by Michael Kemp and is a mixed media called ‘Wanting and Being’. Sorry about the poor quality of my photograph.

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So that’s it for Art(z) Blitz until I get to go and collect my new painting and see what it looks like on my wall. Hooray!

Art(z) Blitz 2013

Why don’t they call it Art Blitz?

‘Artz Blitz’ when spoken aloud sounds like ‘Art Splits’.

When I mention this excellent annual Kingston City Council event in conversation I find myself pronouncing it with a kind of glottal stop to prevent people thinking I am talking about an Art Sundae served with a lot of cream.

Or some kind of gymnastic sequence involving a hand-painted leotard. (Cute… if only I could do the splits.)

But never mind. The theme was announced at 5pm Friday afternoon and it was ‘Connect’. I wasn’t keen at first. It evoked only mechanical thoughts for me. But a little warm-up-phone-text-brainstorming session with Juliet (thanks Juliet) soon got the connection juices flowing.

After a long day of drawing other stuff I felt like mulling over ideas for a while and going to bed rather than burning the midnight oil, so I didn’t do any blitzing yet. When I went to bed, my brainstorm page looked like this.

brainstorm lo res

I was leaning towards the bottom right corner. (obscure pedantic note: ‘toward’ means something quite different from ‘towards’)

I was pretty certain I was going to do a skeleton of some kind, probably a collage or a twisted wire arrangement or an assemblage of found bones (yeah, right! but I did set the alarm for 6am to go trawling the local wetlands where we often do find animal bones…). The medium may have been undecided, but bones was the go.

6 am: the alarm went off.

I turned it off.

7.30 am: I woke and realised the boys were supposed to be leaving for sailing school in half an hour. Woke up Scott and turned over to doze through the chaos. (evil snicker)

8.10 am: phone rang and it was fellow Art(z) Blitzer Kerrie (hereafter referred to as Kezza or Kezzita) I heard Scott telling her I was sound asleep and probably not doing Art(z) Blitz this year… At this point I had to make my awakeness known, and also debunk Scotty’s theory. Perhaps awakitude is better? You might well ask how I can be so pedantic and then make up words…

Okay, so I could go on, but this is getting boring, right? So eventually after a nice chat with Kezza I got up and after the boys vacated, I re-distributed the dogs and chickens in a complicated way. My mum’s visiting dog, Mannie, the Fox Terrier (alias The Anteater) would kill our chickens if not well separated from them –  by mind power alone if his teeth couldn’t get near them. Thereafter I could walk in and out of our house, studio and shed with my tape measure to collect appropriately sized (hoarded) frames, canvases and lumps of wood, without causing a feathery carnage. (horrors! I love my chickens.)

Hilda and Emily

Right! That done, I spent the morning painting over failed artwork with white paint or gesso (which didn’t work – good learning experience), getting first, second and third choice media ready for action, and sourcing reference material. I had at this stage decided on umbilical cords instead of skeletons.

I imagined I’d be doing an oil stick sketch on a white canvas background. I was keen as mustard to get my hands on that black oil stick and draw (not paint) a baby in a womb with an umbilical cord in oil paint. What fun! Yeah! But I needed my gesso (remember it failed) and my white acrylic paint white-out to dry first, so I thought, ‘Skip to Medium 2 and do a few monotypes while I’m waiting for my canvases to dry’.

The first attempt looked like this. And after a long afternoon of drawing, I still think it might have been the best of them. You can tell me if you think so. But I liked it, so I kept on doing monotypes all afternoon.

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Juliet helped me choose which one to enter in Art(z) Blitz and it was this one. (The very last one of the day)

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But there were quite a few others. As I got used to drawing babies in the womb, they got too realistic, and then they got too cute, and always with this kind of monotype it is a very tricky thing to manage the amount of ink and how light or dark they come out so many were either too light or too dark and blotchy. And sometimes, the pencil drawing on the back of the page was better than the monotype on the front of the page, until I had to do the smudging to add tone, and then the pencil drawing got smudged.

Once, I accidentally used two pieces of paper at the same time and after I had separated them, there was no way of continuing my monotype or adding tone, because I would have been working blind. (For a tutorial on how to do this monotype technique, go here. It’s great to do with kids.)

At one point I thought of switching to the topic of breastfeeding. Also a good example of connecting. But I decided that even though Picasso got away with it, my own attempts might be at risk of looking sentimental. Can’t do sentimental. It worries me. I can be sentimental but don’t like to draw sentimentally. Sometimes I do it by accident.

Here are the monotypes from today in all their mixed-upness. Some could probably be improved with a bit of extra work, but I was working on Ingres paper and it’s pretty thin and won’t take much wetting. I liked the effect of the paper texture.

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photo 3-1photo 1-6photo 2-6photo 3-4 photo 2-5 photo 3-3

photo 1-4 photo 2-4

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So there we are. Several hours of printing and a lot of fun really. But I just kept going, thinking I’ll do just one more. This next one will nail it. Right contrast, tone, line… Just one more!

That must be how gamblers feel on the dreaded pokies. Thankfully Art(z) Blitz has a time limit or I might be a slavering mess by now.

Mentone Park Primary School fundraiser auction

Dogs, dogs and more dogs! Do you desire dalmatians? Do you prefer pugs? What dogs do you like? Maybe some honest mutts?

These original illustrations (and perhaps a couple more if time allows) will be auctioned to raise funds for my sons’ primary school in Mentone Australia. The final day for bidding will be Saturday 23 March (if you can make it over to Broome Ave Mentone in person to enjoy the fun of the school fete) or you can bid over the phone until Friday 22 March if you live too far away or you’re too busy sipping champagne by the pool.

If you would like to phone through a bid with your credit card details, call the school office on +613 9583 4935 or you could email them on mentone.park.ps@edumail.vic.gov.au to make arrangements.

The Dalmatian and the Pug are monotypes (one-off prints) hand coloured with watercolour.

Arf!

pug web

dalmatian web