Tuesday, September 08, 2020

More Greeting Cards

Note Card
5 X 7 Inktense and Pen

Happy Birthday
5 X 7 Inktense and Pen


Happy Birthday
5 X 7 Inktense and Pen

I like using Inktense because of it's stability when it is dry. It will not wash away if I go back into it with more pigment. It comes in pencils, sticks and a half pan set like watercolor. These cards were started with random design with the colors, when they dried I went in with pen and defined the shapes that I saw in them. Then I I added color in places where I thought it was needed, removed the tape that was masking the area for the stamp and added the stamp that I wanted on it. They are quick to do, and I do several at a time. I can keep them for my own use or sell them at a gallery where I have my work.

















































Tuesday, September 01, 2020

Watercolor and Pen


Two Greeting Cards

These are two greeting cards that I made with small paintings. The space for the stamp is masked out with tape before the painting is done. After the painting dries, the stamped words are added. I glued them to card stock that was cut he appropriate size. It's a fun project to do in an afternoon. Who doesn't love getting a hand painted card?



Thursday, July 23, 2020

Keep On Keeping On!

Clap Your Hands
Collage 4 X 4

Oh, Beautiful
Collage 4 X 4

As you can see, I'm still working small. I started to do some collage along with my other media just to keep things interesting.

Oh Clap Your Hands is from Psalm 47, we used to sing it many years ago and it comes to mind when I want to focus on the awesomeness of God rather than the messed up world we live in. He is the ultimate authority, I'm learning to trust that truth.

Oh Beautiful was done for Independence Day, from the song, "America!" No matter what is going on today, this country is beautiful and has come through many struggles that I'm sure baffled the people of the times. With God's help we will come through this too. God will continue to "shed His grace" if we ask Him to. I truly believe that.  

In the meantime, I'm going to keep on, keeping on!


Sunday, July 12, 2020

A New Life!

Let's Go Fly A Kite
ll X 14 Acrylic on canvas

Yes, I'm still alive and well! I have been painting and making collages but I have not been very good at taking pictures and putting them on my blog. 

This painting is for my new great-granddaughter who was born on July 7th. We are so happy to welcome Brynley Miller to the family. She's the most beautiful baby in the world, of course, and I can't wait to see her in person. The pandemic has caused disruption in all kinds of activities, hasn't it? Even meeting new family members.

I struggled with this painting because I was going from an idea and not from an actual picture. Then, is any artist completely happy with any of their paintings? Sometimes you just have to release it to the world with a sigh and stop questioning yourself!
The important thing was that it was painted with a lot of love. 

The rest of the time I have continued to work small since I have limited studio space. I finally got everything photographed and will try to post more often. 

Did you know that July is World Watercolor Month? Get out those watercolors and paint away!

Sunday, April 19, 2020

Working Small

 Mini Tulip
 Mini Fresh as a Daisy
Mini Sunflower

When things seem overwhelming I find it's helpful to work small, uncomplicated paintings with a limited palette. Who needs to make design and color decisions right now? These all fit into a 5 X 7 mat. 
Flowers are fragile and beautiful, like life, and their lives are short. In Psalm 90:12 it says, "Teach us to realize the brevity of life, so that we may grow in wisdom." (NLT) The Psalmist goes on to pray that their days of joy would match their days of affliction. Can I ditto that, please? 
Jesus says in Matthew 6:30, "If God cares so wonderfully for wildflowers that are here today and thrown into the fire tomorrow, he will certainly care for you." That is something to remember as you see the spring flowers beginning to burst open. You and I are more valuable than flowers to God, and if He is caring for us we can be as peaceful as a field of sunflowers! 

Wednesday, April 01, 2020

My 600th Post!

New Every Morning
Mixed media on canvas board 16 X 20

This title is from the Bible in Lamentations 3: 23. 
The whole phrase is: 

"This I recall to my mind, 
Therefore I have hope.
Through the Lord's mercies we are not consumed,
Because his compassions fail not,
They are new every morning;
Great is Your faithfulness."
Lamentations 3:21-23 NKJV

This piece to me is light and airy, like a fresh new morning. The sun is coming up and there's a light breeze, dispelling the last moments of night.  Every day is a new day for new attitudes and a renewed hope that things will get better. The writer of this book in the Old Testament was going through a very difficult time, probably harder that anything we are facing today. He encouraged himself and the reader that in God we have hope because he is faithful to be merciful and compassionate. 


Monday, March 30, 2020

The Good News

Butterflies Are Free
Best of Show
Mixed Media on Watercolor Paper

My painting won Best Of Show at the Pine Island Art Association Art Show and Sale of 2020. It was held in February before we had any inkling that so much craziness was ahead of us. I was surprised and pleased beyond words! 

Now that we're stuck inside maybe I'll be able to blog once again. Life gets in the way of so many things I think I will do. There are still the daily things that keep life and limb together.Since my husband has a heart condition I'm the designated shopper and cook which is the way it always has been, nothing new there. I just try to go less and unlike so many people out there, I try to buy only what I need. 

I'm finding it difficult to get motivated to paint but I'll post some of the things I've done since my last blog which was months ago. I did do a lot of painting in preparation of the shows that are held in the winter months. So, I have some things to draw on.

I would love some comments about how other artists are getting motivated to paint during this time. What do you do to keep your skills sharp and what inspires you?

Hang in there, fellow bloggers, this will end and we will be forever changed by it.

Monday, November 11, 2019

Deli Paper

Faces in Places
16 X 20 Mixed Media/Acrylic

As a mixed media/collage artist I get excited about little things that I find and it becomes a springboard for a painting. It was deli paper from Publix that my sandwich was wrapped in for this painting. It had such an interesting design of black lines on white background that I knew I had to use it. There were little faces on it as well as lots of other stuff. So, there are 3 faces imbedded in there that I was very careful not to cover completely. If you click on it to zoom in you should be able to find them. If I don't get back to blogging this month, I wish you a Happy Thanksgiving! Thanks for reading my blog and leaving a comment.



Monday, September 30, 2019

Art Projects

A Heart of Love
Watercolor 6.5 X 4.5

Every other week I teach an art class at Lifeline Family Center (lifelinefamilycenter.org). I need to have a project that can be finished in two hours and is easy enough for young women who may not have had much opportunity to use art materials. It's been a challenge. Collage and watercolor projects are good choices because they can be done fairly well with good instructions. This idea came from a book by Gina Lee King, Fast Fun Watercolors. I've used several ideas from her book. The background is scribbled with a white wax crayon leaving resist marks. Then the background color is painted and let dry. Next the heart is drawn with the love and bird. The heart is painted and sprinkled with Brusho Crystal Color and spritzed with a fine mister. After this dries the "love" is put in with gold gauche and the bird is painted. With the help of a hair dryer we were able to complete this and the students were happy with the results. Off they went and I didn't get a picture of their paintings, which often happens.

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Windmill of My Mind

Windmill of My Mind
Acrylic on paper 15 X 22

This is from the abstract class I took earlier in the summer. The assignment was to work in shades of black and white. The windmill shape just sort of came together, I didn't have anything in particular in mind, I was just painting shapes. At the end, I liked the composition and I added the yellow accents, just because. It's so freeing to just put paint to paper and not follow a photo or a still life. I just concentrated on making shapes and marks that pleased me. 

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

I'll Fly Away

I'll Fly Away
Acrylic Mixed Media/Collage
15 X 22


I actually did fly away! I've been away for far too long. I've been doing a little painting and collage over the summer but life seems to get in the way of taking pictures of my work and posting them. I think I finished this one in June and have been living with it on an easel in my living room, deciding if it is "done". Some artist once said a painting is done when it is sold so, who knows? Between times I've been visiting family and got to do a cruise along the shore of Alaska. I must do a glacier collage! Keep checking back, I will reappear like the summer thunderstorms.

Monday, May 20, 2019

Back Home

Back Home
Watercolor and Charcoal 9 X 15

I can't remember if I posted this before but I couldn't find a picture for it in my files so I think maybe I didn't. It received an Honorable Mention in a local show this year and the judge said some interesting things about it. 
"Canvas divided in quarters for focal area, high marks for design, e.g. diagonal line leading the eye, variety of rectangular shapes, skill turning charcoal into watercolor, with much diversity of shapes, feeling of balance, lots of variety yet coherent movement of the eye in the work, excellent feeling of childlike execution in small areas. Picasso said, "It took me four years to learn how to paint like Raphael, but a lifetime to paint like a child."
I guess I can take that as a compliment! 
Painting on a charcoal pour is a technique I learned from Karen Knutson in a workshop a few years ago. I do it when I want to get some challenge and diversity in my paintings. 


Wednesday, May 01, 2019

Abstract Painting

Out On A Limb
Acrylic and collage on paper 22 X 30

Every once in awhile I have to challenge myself so I started taking an abstract class in April. The second challenge was to paint larger, so I started a full sheet of watercolor paper. With acrylics I use Fabriano Artistico II, 90#. It seems to hold up well to the scraping and multiple layers that I use in my process and doesn't buckle. I rarely start with an idea in mind, I just play with mark making and texture in the beginning; it's very intuitive. There is a lot of "what if" and "what would happen if..." going on. That's when I started adding my collage of ladies in old fashioned dresses. Finally I had to tie it together so I used a stencil to put in the large tree. It worked! Yay! I have other works in progress. The fun part about acrylics is that you can gesso over the whole thing and start over. In golf it would be a "mulligan". I may have to name one or two that! 

Friday, April 05, 2019

Artists of the Month

Nancy and I with our collage wall.

My Collage Wall

My friend and mentor, Nancy and I were asked to be artists of the month at our local art league. She taught me the heat sealed (John Talbot) method of collage and then we taught it to interested students. The most fun of the class is not that the collages are heat sealed but in all the different ways that we make our own collage papers. We use a lot of old National Geographic magazines because of the quality of the ink and paper. We hit these colorful photos with various chemicals, sandpaper, paint, ink, whatever we can find. We also paint our own papers from craft tissue, paper bags, maps, book pages, music, wrapping paper, etc so that each collage is unique and can't be copied. Our students become so free and creative we learn from them too. 
Our work will be hanging in the studio for the month of April.   

Tuesday, April 02, 2019

Hope of Spring
Collage, 8 X 8

It maybe looks wintery, but it's that period of time in the snow belt when most of the snow is gone, there are signs of life and color but the trees are still bare. Some  are going through that right now and some places the blossoms have already opened. I saw the cherry blossoms in Washington D. C. on television and they looked glorious! We have spring in Florida, too, we even have bare trees! The weather is warm and dry and there are certain trees that blossom only this time of year. My early mango has set fruit that are the size of large walnuts. 
This piece was made from faded tissue, tissue with script, painted paper with marbling spray, printed paper and an acrylic transfer. All papers are coated with polymer gloss medium and heat sealed to a paper backing. It's coated with UV varnish. 

Thursday, March 28, 2019

I Love Dragonflies

Flight of the Dragonfly
Collage, 6.5 X 11.5

Dragonflies are wonderful creatures! They eat mosquitoes for one thing and that makes them very useful; they are fun to watch and they have such varied bodies, from large to small and every color of the rainbow, often iridescent. One time, up north after a rainy day, the sun came out and there were literally thousands of dragonflies. It was magical! How and why they appeared after the rain I don't know. 
This collage was done in the traditional manner by gluing (with matte medium) paper onto a backing which was mat board. The papers were hand painted craft tissue, the dragonfly was an acrylic transfer which I applied using the heat method. The "flight path" is an acrylic string. Acrylic string is made by squirting a fine stream of acrylic paint onto a nonstick surface like oven parchment. It is allowed to dry and is fastened to the desired surface with matte or gloss medium. Please put in a comment if you have any questions about the process. 


Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Dreaming of Paris

Old Paris
Mixed Media 15 X 15

Using old postcard pictures of Paris as an inspiration I started layering pictures and paint, along with old clock faces and script. Finally I finished it with a stylized Eiffel Tower. At least I think I'm finished. We will see, it's not in a frame yet. If you click on it to make it bigger you can see all the texture and details. 

Tuesday, March 05, 2019

Painting With a Celebrity

Leoma's Seahorse
Acrylic, 12 X 16

Yes, this is quite a departure for me but it made for a fun afternoon. We have a local celebrity artist whose name is Leoma Lovegrove (yes, that's her real name).  She has quite a following and is known all over the world for her colorful, tropical paintings. She was commissioned to have her paintings on clothing, accessories, household items like pillows, dishes, and you name it, for a Florida department store, Bealls. She graciously has been helping our art league to raise money to pay for our new, very expensive roof by attending an afternoon painting party. We choose one of her designs, invite the public, offer wine and snacks for a fee of course, and have an afternoon paint-along party. Afterwards, she signs the back of every painting. She is so generous! Here's the link to our art league, click on events to see the pictures from our fund raiser. capecoralartleague.org Also you can find Leoma on Facebook and   at leomalovegrove.com.

Monday, February 25, 2019

Circular Connections

Circular Connections
Collage 8 X 8



This collage is from the second day of the workshop that was led by Kathleen Conover. Some of the papers I made in the workshop, some were papers I had made before. I like using circles in  my work, they have a feeling of completeness and familiarity. I put circles on some papers that I make, some I add in the process of building the collage, some appear randomly while the paper is being made. When that happens I try to incorporate it into the collage. It's all connected!

Tuesday, February 05, 2019

Zing

Zing!
Collage on mat board 8 X 8

I've finally returned to my blog after a wonderful collage workshop and following that, a bout of shingles. (Yes, I had the old shot, it's only 30% effective). The workshop was taught by Kathleen Conover, an artist who splits her time between Michigan and Florida. She also teaches watercolor workshops so I would like to take more classes from her. Workshops give an artist a period of 3 days to a week to concentrate on their art and to stretch their creative spirit to learn some new techniques and to practice and share the old ones. 
Kathleen uses all papers that she has painted herself and does not use magazine images. She will use her own photograph which she will often distress and alter somewhat with paint. Our first day was spent making paper, then we cut our papers in half and shared with the others in class. That way we got a good variety of paper. The craft tissue we used was coated with a mixture of acrylic paint and matte medium. We planned our collages and fixed the tissue to mat board with thinned matte medium. Zing! is the first collage I finished on the second day made with the papers we made the first day. 

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