Hillcrest

After a busy day taking care of administrative work for the new semester I took two paintings to the Hillcrest Center for the Arts in Thousand Oaks (Civic Center Drive Thousand Oaks, CA 91360) for a show there. I was last to arrive, so I got a sneak preview of everyone’s work for the show, which looks really good. There are some very successful pieces in this one, and I can see that the curators have gone out of their way to find some very good images.

I took two of my tarot card paintings along: Temperance and Justice.

I’m hurting to get back to the studio. I spent five minutes looking at the Traveler this morning after yoga, considering what the next task should be. I’m very satisfied with the progress I’ve made so far, but I want to bring the sun into the sky where I originally intended to, so the figure is gesturing toward the glory of the natural world.

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Lecture for Delta Kappa Gamma

I thoroughly enjoyed giving a lecture to the Delta Kappa Gamma Sorority yesterday – I was invited to talk about museums and what we look at when we visit them. I’m posting my lecture: What are you looking at? as a pdf.

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Install

Installing the exhibit down in Bert Green’s gallery in Los Angeles went smoothly, and the dilapidated truck I borrowed to transport the paintings and the grail piece held up very well indeed, zipping along the California freeways quite nicely, and reminding me of how fortunate I am to live here. (I’m remembering again that Talking Heads song: “And you may ask yourself, well, how did I get here?…” which has been a theme for me since I arrived in Los Angeles twenty years ago.)

The opening reception is on Wednesday evening from six until eight. Please do come and visit the gallery. I’m showing two of my favorite works: As the Crow Flies (the golden panels with black birds wheeling around a seated figure) and the Grails installation, which increasingly feels central to everything I am about in the creative work I do. If you follow Bert on twitter you can find a picture of the installation as we were working on it earlier today.

Address and directions are here on Bert Green’s website.

This feeling of gratitude struck me repeatedly over the last few days during conversations with friends and family in England and West Virginia (Paul Luchessi). They’re living with pouring rain and snow, and in Paul’s case deep snowdrifts and a state of emergency. Meanwhile I’ve been busy in the garden digging out beds with the help of my children, planting the seeds of Morning Glory, White Sage, Hollyhocks, Foxgloves, California Poppies, and plenty of culinary herbs.

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Beckett plays

I spent a pleasant morning driving to Santa Barbara to meet up with everyone involved in the Beckett production that I’m designing for John Blondell. It looks as though the consensus of opinion is that everything should be as stripped down as possible, as simple as can be, with the theatre cleaned out of all superfluous equipment, a limited black stage, super-simple furniture and props. We will build a platform in the air above the stage so that we can make objects appear and disappear in one of the pieces, a very specific choreography for props and an actor. Simple black platforms, with grey cubes and lines, a painted pathway on the floor, very simple specific lighting.

Dialogue with John has been interesting and thoughtful, I’ll post it on here soon.

My kids brought home a lot of white sage seeds, so I’ll be sure to plant them in the garden. I love growing this sage – it smells fantastic.

Back to the studio tomorrow. I’ve got to prepare for the exhibit at Bert Green’s gallery, and for a little local show here in Thousand Oaks called Symbols and Words (I must deliver the work on Monday!).

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Head and sky

Finding a couple of spare hours in the studio, I cleaned brushes and got to work on the sky, using a Cobalt blue to the orange clouds on the upper right and repairing the error I made last time, caused by dragging a rag over too young a layer, causing the paint to tear and leave unsightly holes that are difficult to match or blend out of the affected area. I also worked on the face of the Fool, en grisaille, first layer painted in Van Dyke brown to define the features in a fairly linear style, then using the Ceramic white to add body to the face.

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The art of gardening

Being somewhat compromised as far as feeling good and painting goes I’ve been pottering about in the garden as a substitute, planning out where to put wood-chip pathways and planting herbs with my kids and their friends, who have been surprisingly good helpers with a minimum of attitude and even some enthusiasm here and there.

Monday the wood chips will arrive in a big truck, ready for us to transport into the back garden where they will hopefully do a great job preventing anything growing where I don’t want it to. Wonder if it will even stop the ivy? That would be good.

I’m posting this here because I actually find a lot of good ideas come as a product of working in the garden. There’s something very satisfying about working with dirt that feeds the imaginative processes of the mind. I value it very much. I particularly like herbs because they are profoundly forgiving, growing in bad dirt with little water, but with such a major impact on cooking.

Laying out the garden in a satisfying manner is immensely satisfying too – my soon to be teenage son is particularly into it, and very excited about digging the next herb bed out of the old lawn. it’s wonderful to have such a good project to work on together.

I might have to move a canvas over to the house for a while, because it’s difficult to find studio time when I have the kids here. If I set up a little space in the garage to paint in then I will be able to work while they play.

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Silence

Apparently losing your speech doesn’t improve your painting. I’m down to whispering for short periods of time, then running out of words completely, and painting rubbish. I worked at the sky for a couple of hours today, totally failing to do anything meaningful, and necessitating a repainting of one of the clouds.

Meh.

I couldn’t spend a great deal of time in the studio and was frankly relieved when I had to leave and couldn’t continue with the carnage.

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Voiceless

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I have totally lost my voice! It’s alarming to try to speak to visitors only to hear a croaking noise come out, although there’s something strangely pleasant about not being able to talk that I can’t quite put my finger on. All my conversation is at the level of a whisper, making the most mundane subjects become secretive and mysterious, and I’ve noticed that my friends sympathetically lower their voices.

Regardless of speaking or not, it’s been a good day in the studio so far: I’ve been working at the Fool’s sky and making some progress with getting something that is dramatic but not over-worked. I want to avoid excess and end up with a subtle but beautiful dawn. I’m finding that layering thick and thin coats is working well, using an orange iron oxide for the yellow tints close to the horizon, and a cobalt blue mixed into lead white for a nice thick coat of blue higher up.I used a rag to lift sky blue paint from some of the areas of Iron Oxide that I used to seal the canvas leaving a nice warm glow to areas of the clouds, then a soft badger-hair brush to pounce the remaining paint into the surface, giving it a very soft blended feeling. I dry-brushed some of the sky blue into the clouds, allowing some of the oxide to mix with it and create a brownish layer over the dark clouds.
IMG_1352 IMG_1351This can dry for a while now, then I’ll look at painting a glaze of Prussian blue up high, building the clouds up and darkening the sky above and making the horizon deepen and bring some depth to the painting.I’ve included a couple of details of the sky as it is now. With a few more layers of glaze and rich whites I think it will turn out rather well.

These big paintings use a lot of paint, you know. I’m quickly running out of materials. Time for a visit to Steve at Continental.

IMG_1348Finally, I crossed the studio to visit Amelia, and glazed the orb with the left over Orange Iron Oxide, ragging most of it off again, but leaving enough for this golden glow. The colour of the orb is far better balanced with those on Amelia. With a light on the piece she’s really reaching for the orb.

All these pieces work best with spotlights focused on them, while the rest of the room is left in relative obscurity. The spots highlight the focal points of the paintings too, adding to the illusion of light within them. The next show has to be lit very carefully.

Here’s a nice idea for the four paintings: in the corner of each, paint a little scene of the painting before and after it in sequence. For example, The Angel of Death is preceded by The Traveling Man and followed by In Between, so in the left corner I would paint a reference to the Traveler, and on the right an emblem of In Between, cementing the relationships between the painting and reinforcing the cyclical order.

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Samuel Beckett

John Blondell and I have known each other for nearly ten years. He’s the director of the experimental (and very fun) Lit Moon Theatre Company, which I’ve been involved with as a designer. I think he’s one of the most creative people I ever had the pleasure of working with, so it was a big treat to go up to Santa Barbara today to talk about working together on a production of Samuel Beckett’s short plays at the College he works at in Montecito. The pieces are quite short, so the set design has to accommodate all of them being done in the same performance, while simultaneously dealing with Beckett’s sometimes very specific direction on the way things are arranged within the space.

We start work immediately, so I have a small stack of scripts to read and figure out, and then I’ll sketch the design for the space. I’m interested in dog fighting pits and bullfighting arenas as a source. Rough wood, dirt, white-washed, peeling planks, sawdust.

With a bit of luck I’ll get Lucas to build it for me, as he did when I did the tree for Mitchell last year.

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Eastern Sky

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I built the Traveler’s sky this morning with Flake white and a little Ivory black, then letting that set up for a while during grocery shopping time, then scraping on some of that nice bright Ceramic White over the top of the grey and using a large brush to soften the knife marks and turn them into clouds. I’ll need to drag the platform over to the easel to complete the high part, which is ten feet in the air at the moment. This picture doesn’t look anything like the actual painting, although I shot it with my Canon, so it should have been ok. It was pretty gloomy in the studio all day, with a dark sky that looked as if it was going to rain all day long – unusual for Southern California.

I’m really enjoying seeing the man against the sky because it gives me a strong sensation of the potential depth of the painting.

I think there needs to be a tree on the rise to his left.

I’ve been working on the Traveling Man piece instead of the Angel of Death, first simply because I’ve been so focused on the Angel for such a long time that it’s good to take a short respite from the work, and secondly to get a good start on the next painting so that there isn’t too great a feeling of let-down once the Angel is complete. The piece is only one of a series after all, so I need to keep the momentum going.

I imagine the four pieces forming a cyclical narrative: The Angel of Birth, The Traveler, The Angel of Death, and Between Death and Birth. I’d love to build a cubic space for them, with a cosmos-painted ceiling and black glass floor lit from below.

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