Category Archives: writing essay

Oil on paper sketches

One of my goals in graduate school is to become more conscious of my creative process. The oil on paper paintings below are a selection from daily work done before or after sustained paintings. They are a way to quickly summarize an impulse or direction to explore. Time spent painting on paper took the place of drawing in ink done earlier in the semester. I plan to make this a consistent part of my painting practice.

Flowers, 4.5 x 9 inches, 11/17/11

Orange in plastic bag, 5 x 6.5 inches, 11/18/11

Studio corner, 9 x 8 inches, 11/22/11

Pink pitcher, approx 4.5 x 6 inches, 11/28/11

 

 

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Visual Critiques

Below are drawings done for two weeks of visual critiques. I drew directly from observation of the paintings without preparation, as I do with most of my work. Drawings done for these assignments become the property of the artist whose painting is the original subject.

George Bellows’ lithos of prize fights came to mind as I began ‘Fighters.’ As Bellows’ had done, I increased the distance between the viewer and the main action by adding a row of catcallers in front. The viewer thereby becomes a complicit member of the crowd. I focused the light into a spot light and added an emotional dimension between the figures, making their gestures less like a cartoon and more natural and exhausted.

102111_homework_01

Fighters, sumi ink & bamboo pen, 7.5 x 10 inches ( 19 x 25 cm), 10/21/11

For ‘Reflection,’ I added a musician playing pipes and a fish in the pond. For the main figure, instead of an ethereal object of contemplation, I turned her into a person who contemplates herself by turning the head to look straight down into the water. Unlike Poussin’s Narcissus who is in a revery of self love, my figure is a good deal more pissed, like a wild animal at a watering hole.

102111_homework_02

Reflection, sumi ink & bamboo pen, 7.5 x 10 inches ( 19 x 25 cm), 10/21/11

For the previous week’s work, I used a larger size cotton printmaking paper. It was a little too soft and a little too large for a bamboo pen. I added space where the original figure had been cropped at the head and right side. I also added distance between the figure and horizon.

laken_homework

Laken, sumi ink & bamboo pen, 15 x 11 inches ( 38 x 28 cm), 10/17/11

At first it seemed silly to do a line drawing of a large, gestural abstract painting. But as shapes began to emerge in the process of drawing, the painting appeared to be full of content just waiting to be called out. I saw the painting completely differently by the time I was done, resurrecting Ana Mendieta’s remarkable earth works and brief intense life.

pods_homework

River Pods, sumi ink & bamboo pen, 15 x 11 inches ( 38 x 28 cm), 10/17/11

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October Light

I continue to begin most days with drawings of the city from my studio windows using sumi ink and bamboo pen. The process led to an acrylic on paper painting in a larger than usual size. Using black and white has been extremely helpful to organize space more coherently. This week the color yellow made its appearance.

city_acrylic

City, acrylic on paper, 26 x 40 inches ( 66 x 102 cm), 10/13/11

The evening figure class instructor changes the context of the set-up each week. This time the wall was covered with colorful posters. Two brilliant silk kimonos were hung on easels along with a vase of artificial flowers. The model sat among it all. It was important to use color, so I ran to my studio down the hall to collect my gouache materials.

figure_kimono

Figure & kimono, gouache on paper,  15  x 11 inches ( 38 x 28 cm), 10/12/11

The process of visual critique that we engage in for homework continues to be a fascinating divergence from the sometimes tortured efforts of verbal response in what is familiarly know as “crits.” Edvard Munch’s painting The Scream, an image that launched countless illustration knock-offs, rivaled only by Grant Wood’s American Gothic in frequency, inspired my response to the open fig. I had anticipated doing a natural version of the hamburger; the cows arrived of their own accord. Two days later I developed the idea in oil paint.

scream homework

Fig Scream, sumi ink & bamboo pen, 10 x 10 inches (25 x 25 cm), 10/10/11

hamburger homework

 Hamburger and Cows, sumi ink & bamboo pen, 10 x 10 inches (25 x 25 cm), 10/10/11

cows

Cows and hamburger, oil on wood panel, 10 x 10 inches (25 x 25 cm), 10/12/11

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BU First Month

There is too much being done for me to show everything on the blog. Here are some highlights. The photographs are snapshots, hand held, daylight. The city paintings are influenced in part by recently reading Don DeLillo’s White Noise. The story concerned an airborne toxic event hovering over Somerville, Mass, circa 1985.

traffic_rain

Geranium with Traffic and Rain, oil on linen panel, 10 x 8 inches ( 25 x 20 cm), 2011

The next series of paintings use only black and white. The white is an unbleached titanium, a warmer color than titanium white. The color variations are due to the camera adjusting to light. It’s all the same paint.

palette

Value palette, five steps, Unbleached Titanium and Lamp Black

olives and plumOlives and plum, oil on linen panel, 8 x 10 inches (10 x 25 cm) 2011

olives and plum

Olives and plum, oil on linen panel, 8 x 10 inches (10 x 25 cm) 2011

olives and plum

Olives and plum, oil on linen panel, 10 x 8 inches (25 x 20 cm) 2011

night city

Night City, oil on linen, 20 x 22 inches (51 x 56 cm) , 2011

city daytime

Day City Bridge and Traffic, oil on wood panel, 10 x 10 inches (25 x 25 cm) , 2011

The two figures below are from different classes. The torn paper collage was made from drawings everyone in class made and then were instructed to tear up. One of many exercises that teach us to feel less precious or protective about our work and more generous. All the torn pieces were put in a pile. Then we selected a handful to tear again to make our collage figures. The pencil nude was the fourth session of three hours each of the same pose. I did mine on four separate sheets. Others in class were asked to work on one sheet. Finally got that left leg to turn properly.

torn-paperTorn paper, charcoal, approx 18 x 24 in (46 x 61 cm), 10/06/11

female-nudeFemale nude, approx 15 x 11 inches ( 38 x 28 cm), 10/05/11

I was loaned a postcard of a painting by the Spanish realist Tomas Yepes, c. 1595–1674. First step to understanding a painting is to draw it. So much is seen in this process.

yepes

Copy of Tomas Yepes — pomegranates, figs, pumpkin and quail, fountain pen, 7 x 10 sketchbook (18 x 25 cm), 10/04/11

The only class all the first year MFA candidates have together is Painting Seminar. Each week two people choose one of their paintings to hang in a common room. The rest of the group does a piece in response to help the artist see the original work. It also helps the maker see their own work in a new way. It’s up to the individual to respond visually in any way they choose. Below is my acrylic painting on paper in response to an abstract oil painting. It’s also interesting that many of us end up working at the same time in a communal drawing party. So far it’s been really fun. Much better than verbal critiques.

geometric abstract

Yellow, Grey and Orange, acrylic and charcoal on paper, 40 x 20 inches (101 x 51 cm), 9/30/11

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