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Showing posts with label art share. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art share. Show all posts

Monday, April 22, 2019

Art Share

Art Share

Enhance Your Colors By Providing Their 
Opposites!

    Understanding the notion of opposites creates creating rich interesting color.  To make anything look fantastic in our art, especially color, it is crucial that we think of opposites. If you have a dark saturated color that is a cool color, try adjusting what is around that color or in the proximity, to be a color that is its opposite. . . in this case a color that would be very light, unsaturated and possibly slightly warm.  [Look at your color wheel].   If you can get in the habit of seeing what colors will enhance the colors you have placed in your art, the overall color in your art will become more sophisticated.  (from Color Tips for Artists, Tip 02, Art2Life)

    Hopefully I will remember to do this and maybe one day it will just come naturally to me!

Friday, March 15, 2019

Art Share 2019 #5 - Slow Drying Acrylics are Here!

Art Share 2019  #5 - Slow Drying Acrylics are Here!


Golden Open Acrylics 
(no, I do not work for Golden paints)

It's here!  The acrylic that acts more like an oil; stays wet on the palette much longer than traditional acrylics, and wet on the canvas for an extended time.  Great for traditional painting techniques, as well as mono printing and Gelli Plate printing.  Cleans up with soap and water!


Try them!  I love them!  I just picked up a few at a time and now have this small collection!  

Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Art Share 2019 #4 - How to Get Perspective When Making Art

 How to Get Perspective When Making Art


A problem that I have when working in my small home studio is that I am very close to my art work. When working in a small space, sometimes it’s difficult to move back from your art work to evaluate placement of colors and values.  Either sitting at my work table or standing in front of my easel, there just is not enough space to continually step back a good distance to view my art with a more critical eye.  The problem is that when I am up close to my art work everything always looks beautiful and right! (smile)

I really want to share what I have recently read, and now practice a technique that helps me when working in a small area.  I use a few simple tools that you might have around your home, too, to gain distance from my art. 

1.   I use either a camera or the camera on my phone to snap pictures to review them on a smaller scale. 
2.  Here's an interesting idea:  use a door peephole!  I love this idea!   This is the kind you would put in your front door. Hold it up to your eye and look through it.   It immediately gives you that smaller view you need to evaluate your art work. The peephole is so small and easy to carry in your art tool box.  You can purchase these at your local hardware store.
3.  I also like to use a mirror. A simple makeup mirror will do. Hold it in your hand and look at the deisgn over your shoulder.  This will give you that visual distance between yourself and your art work. 
4.  And finally, my very favorite tool to use is a reducing glass. You simply hold it up, and view your art work through the reducing glass. You are then able to see which areas need some work, and that everything is flowing and coming together nicely.  A reducing glass is just the opposite of a magnifying glass.  You can purchase these at your local art store or order one on line.  

Go Make Art!



Friday, March 8, 2019

Art Share 2019 #3 . . . .Focus!


Art Share

"Almost everyone I've ever met would be well-served by spending more time thinking about what to focus on.  It is much more important to work on the right thing than it is to work many hours.  Most people waste most of their time on stuff that doesn't matter.  Once you have figured out what to do, be unstoppable about getting your small handful of priorities accomplished quickly.  I have yet to meet a slow-moving peron who is very successful."  - Sam Altman, in his book, "How to Be Successful."


I read this in a fellow artist's newsletter ("Focus is a Force Multiplier" by Clint Watson) and he says that he can't shake the feeling that this is an extremely important idea for us artists to internalize and practice. 

 The most important thing we can do as artists is to focus on our artwork!  Focus on producing it, on improving it, on mastering our craft.  It's critical for us artists to design our lives in such a way that maximizes our studio time! 

Go make art!


Can I hear an amen!


(Read Clint Watson's full newsletter on Fine Art Studio On Line).





Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Art Share 2019 #2. . . .for all my Artist friends!

Art Share for all my Artist friends!


I  read a lot!  I read all the art books I can get my hands on!  I also watch videos and movies about art and artist's.  So this is what I learned last year and have just now realized I should share this gem!

The Old Master's (and I think I would be safe saying we all love their work) always always kept an art inventory.  WHAAAAAT? 

It's super simple!  

1.  Find yourself a notebook of some sort (Dollar Store notebooks work well) that you can dedicate only to your art inventory.

2.  Label it so that you do not unintentionally use it for something else.  

3.  Label the top line of your pages with information that you feel is important for your inventory records.  Ideas: 

Title 
Year
Medium
Size
Price
Posted Online?  Where
Comments

(this is my title page)

4.  Start to record all your art that you hold near and dear to your heart.  Not the pieces that are saved just for progress sake or even the pieces that ended up in your recylce bin!  Just the work you either (1) are in your own private collection (stuff you would NEVER EVER sell) and 2.  the work that is for sale.  

5.  I also and this is probably over the top - but I make Shutterfly books for each year.  These books contain every piece of art I have made whether I trash it or sell it.  This is a wonderful way to look back over the years and see your own progression as an artist.  And they are also will leave a wonderful legacy!








Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Art Share . . . The Belle Epoque era of the art scene

The Belle Époque was an era of peace and plenty between wars

The French expression Belle Époque was used in retrospect after the horrors of World War One—a term of nostalgia for a simpler time of peace, prosperity, and progress.


Monday, July 2, 2018

Art Share #3

Art Share #3


     Art is an idea that belongs to everyone.  It is found in ever culture.  Whatever physical form it might take, whatever emotional, aesthetic, or psychological challenge it may offer, it is vital to every culture's sense of itself. 

     Lessons learned in pursuit of art are lessons that pertain to almost everything we experience.  Art is not separate from life; it is the very description of the lives we lead.  (101 Things to Learn in Art School).  

Sunday, July 1, 2018

Art Share #2

Art Share #2


     What is aesthetics?  Strickly speaking, aesthetics is not the same thing as the philosphy of art.  Aesthetics is a much broader term, not just referring to created artwork but to matter of taste in general.  The word encompasses any sort of sensory perception.

     In short, the the study of aesthetics, as we understand it today, is concerned with how our judgements of taste relate to our language, our minds, and our surroundings.  

     Think about the Mona Lisa.  It is probably the most famous painting in the world.  Is it your favorite painting?  Why is it so famous?  Why is it work so much?  If you saw it for the first time today and had never heard of it, would you find it beautiful?  Instead of blindly accepting the standards and traditions of our culture, a little philosphizing will challenge us to justify our beliefs about beauty and the arts!  (Daily Book of Art, pg 9).