Category Archives: writing essay

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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Project Review

My studio practice in school quickly developed four areas of focus: oil landscapes, figure drawing, homework, and the bamboo pen & sumi ink drawing series. I suddenly realized drawing is pushing out painting time in the first three weeks. These are all good projects but the masters I am pursuing is in painting, not drawing. Adjustments will be made.

The oil landscapes are from my studio window. Cold titanium white was eliminated, or replaced with a warm unbleached titanium, to use it more sparingly and break the habit of adding it to every color.

city

City, oil on linen panel, 8 x 10 inches (20 x 25 cm), 2011

toxic city

Nickel City, oil on linen, 22 x 24 inches (56 x 61 cm), 2011 in progress

I am drawing from the figure nine hours a week in three sessions with two different instructors. In one class I am using graphite pencil, an exacting medium, to draw continuous tone. The benefit helps to see and control the overall light and value structure. The second figure class emphasizes visual invention. Each week we’re presented with a new set of challenges to learn to see uniquely. The black paper and white pencil in the photo below is an example. I’m supporting the figure work by copying a complete anatomy book in ink line.

figure

Figure studies: graphite pencil, continuous tone; white general’s pencil on black acrylic paint

anatomy

Anatomy sketchbook, fountain pen

The first year group, 12 candidates for MFA, have one class together called Painting Seminar. Our first homework assignment was to create a well developed drawing that was unrecognizable as our usual style and approach to art. My primary work involves direct observation of ephemeral or transient subjects. To do something different, I constructed an image based on photo sources with political content. The result is an image of my house from Google Earth enveloped by the shadow of a US military drone. Doing the drawing felt like recovering lost parts of myself. I had the feeling of violating prohibitions and gaining permission at the same time; in style, content and visual vocabulary. Below are four preliminary drawings and one final image.

drone surveillance

Drone Surveillance, sumi ink and bamboo pen with wash, 40 x 24 inches ( 102 x 61 cm), 2011

drone

Drone Surveillance development: sumi ink and bamboo pen; sumi ink and metal tip pen; with wash

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Class of 2013

BU banner

Having weighed our decision for a week last month, Drew greeted me with the banner shown above when I returned home from painting in Vermont, celebrating my acceptance into the MFA painting program at Boston University. I am deeply grateful to so many people who made this possible — first and foremost for Drew’s many years of encouragement and support; the artists who recommended and advocated for me; countless teachers, colleagues, friends and family. The success is not so much in the outcome as it is in making the decision to act. We don’t know how it will turn out. We have to start to see how far this direction takes us. It’s back to school!

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DeCordova Museum

decordova

I am extremely pleased to become a lending artist of DeCordova Museum’s Corporate Loan Program. DeCordova Museum was the first museum I learned about in childhood. My family went there often when I was growing up. Then in my twenties I worked from the figure for several years in night classes at the museum’s school. The main building is high on a wooded hill overlooking pristine Sandy Pond, a near neighbor of Walden Pond. A former private mansion, the house is designed with ivy covered round brick towers surrounding the original main entrance. The location of the entrance has changed several times since then. After delivering my artwork I took a walk around and remembered many years of encountering this magical place full of strange delights. I’m very proud to have my artwork included in DeCordova’s mission to place art where people work. Thank you to the terrific folks who run the program!

DeCordova has written about my participation on their blog here.

Artists interested in applying can read about the program here.

bowls_no1

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    © 2009 - 2012 Laraine Armenti. All rights reserved. Please do not copy pictures or text without permission.

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