Tail end and fixed ribs

IMG_1083There’s an academic holiday today which meant that after I had taken care of the administrative stuff I had to do in preparation for the next couple of weeks I was able to spend some serious time in the studio.

I fixed the ribs that were not quite in the right place, so now the cage feels more egg-shaped and even, then worked on the pelvis and tail feathers. I’m very pleased with this, although I had to move the coccyx again (third time’s a charm, right?).  I made the feathers very fast, using a glaze of Van Dyke brown, then taking much of it away with a textured rag, then adding a little definition with a OO lining brush. I’m still not thrilled with the spine, so I’ll rework that pretty soon to make it more accurate and to add highlight and shadows.

The easel is holding the painting nice and high, with about a four foot clearance to the bottom of the frame from the floor. What a fabulous piece of equipment! It makes it so easy to move this huge canvas around.

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Sons of Anarchy

Tommy Flanagan, who plays Chibs in the biker gang television show Sons of Anarchy came over to the studio yesterday. I really enjoyed hanging out with him and our mutual friend Paul Lucchesi at my house, where we talked about making movies, the worst cities in Britain, and art. Good times!

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Transcendence as a foundational truth

Foundational Truths for studio artists.

Transcendence

In discussions of studio practice we hear our fellow-artists describe an unusual state that comes upon us as we work, in which we experience “being in the flow” or “in another world” or that time no longer seems to function properly as we become immersed in creativity. Our consciousness is altered as we become one with our actions when fully engaged in the making of art, whether music, sculpture, painting or any of the studio arts. We describe this state with pleasure and a sense of mystery, not fully understanding what it is we experience, but relishing it because it is in such moments that we can do no wrong.

This transcendence is found elsewhere; in yoga meditation achieves the same state of mind, a separation from  ordinary time and space that is marked by peace and serenity. We find a mystical unity with the universe. 

The transcendent state is not confined to the studio artists’ practice, for it appears to be transferrable to the viewers of great art. How often we hear people describing their experience of standing before the work of a master with words of almost religious devotion: the work has carried them away, or made them cry, bringing to them an intensity of emotion that lifts them out of the ordinary world into another state.

By reducing the practice of making art to conceptualism in this last hundred years we have found ourselves excluding the transcendence of technique, in which viewers of art find themselves so amazed by the mastery of the work demonstrated by the artist that they are carried into reverie. This is a transcendence that changes lives, as young people decide to follow in the footsteps of the masters and learn how to achieve such heights.

Among my students are people who are “naturally talented” or “touched by God”, or whose “genes naturally predispose them to art”; they have a fluidity to their work that seems instinctive and they produce astonishing work. There are also those who work hard, sometimes for many years to learn technique, by their labor achieving a sophistication that allows them to produce images that are truly beautiful. Nothing can stop them from the production of transcendent art because it is a truthful and natural state for studio artists.

In all cultures the narrative of our origins begins with the creation of the universe, the deity’s mystical shaping of the world with words and bringing all things into being. As imitators of the primal creative force of the universe artists work in unity with the divine creator to explore our world, to understand our relationship to it and by doing so expand our consciousness and better appreciate the mind of god. 

Ex Tenebris Lux

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Focus on the Masters

Today I went to Ventura for the set-up of the interview I’m doing tomorrow for the “Focus on the Masters” project. Once they post it onto the net I’ll provide a link to their site. If you’d like to attend it, visit this link, where you’ll find the address and more information.

Focus on the Masters documents the lives and work of artists living in Ventura County.

7:00 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday October 6th
Technology Development Center
5200 Valentine Road in Ventura
 
Audience members MUST arrive by 6:30

$10 general admission  
$5 students and seniors (65 and older) with I.D.  
FREE to FOTM members and students under 18  
Join us at California Pizza Kitchen before and after! Pizza + fundraising = Philanthropizza. Please print and bring this Flyer
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San Francisco

I’ve been out of town for the weekend in San Francisco to visit a church just outside the city called Messiah Lutheran, where I got to tell everyone about the University and why they should send their students to us for their education. I really enjoyed this trip. I ate some great food and stayed in the centre of town, met up with some friends and saw a side of the city that I hadn’t really been aware of before. The hotel was in a pretty rough part of on called the Tenderloin, which is in an interesting transitional state, with the San Francisco Academy of Art buying up buildings and populating the area with students, so there’s a really odd mixture of run down dives and chic bars and restaurants.

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Pelvis

8724_1126949340121_1418808673_30314080_6223825_nI’m moving the pelvis and repainting the foundational work I did before because it had a weird twist that wasn’t right. The spine is also in need of some correction and I’ll get to that after the weekend and the interview next week. 

Photo thanks to Adrian Grimaldo, one of my students.

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From leather to feather

IMG_0955The wings took a giant step forward today after some serious time spent in the studio this morning and an additional shot at it this afternoon. Take a look at some of the feathery detail in the large image behind the small picture here. I’m really enjoying putting the shadows around the feathers, painting the shadow that’s cast rather than the feather itself. It’s very effective here where I’ve used it to pop out the bones of the ribs from the feathery background.

I used that Ceramic white that Steve gave me – it’s pretty good stuff – I can use it for bright opaque highlights and also find nice Zinc-like milky glazes. That’s pretty handy!

I have almost no time to write this evening because I must get to Ventura to meet Donna Granata for the pre-interview interview for her Focus on the Masters event in a week, when I’ll be interviewed and answer questions for an audience. She archives the interview with magazine cuttings and other documents, making the archive available to scholars and institutions researching artists in California. It’s quite an honour to be included on the list.

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Feather

IMG_0845Putting more detail into the feathers around the chest to pull the ribs out from the background of the wings. I’m painting the spaces between the feathers more than the actual feathers themselves, describing the shapes of the shadows around the object – describing the negative space that forms it. 

I’ll paint with a lining brush that gives me clean crisp definition, but combine it with my old standby soft rags and my fingers, softening the shadows as they move away from the darkest areas  into the light.

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Art Festival

IMG_0738

My weekend was tied up with promoting the University Art Department at the local Art Festival, sponsored by CLU for several years. We have a good relationship with the local community that is helped by our participation in these kinds of events. It’s enjoyable meeting people who are interested in coming to the campus and sharing some of our work with them.

In the photo Terry Spehar Fahey is carrying her painting of our model Chrisine, who was pregnant at the time of making the work

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White

I’ve been using a piece of a well-washed textured towel to create dynamic feathery marks in the paint, then controlling the movement with a piece of an old t-shirt, very soft fabric. I guess people don’t imagine painters using rags for anything other than wiping their brushes, but I couldn’t paint without them as tools for moving paint around. I use them to lift off paint and find the subtle surfaces of layered glazes, to give me texture in larger areas, and to make broad general motions in the paint. Lovely.

In the detail picture here you can see how the rag has controlled the white glaze over the brown layer beneath it. As this feather work gets still more controlled and detailed you’ll still see the general sweep of texture, giving the feeling of solidity to the whole wing, but with the details to bring out individual areas.

My comrade Steve Aufhauser of Continental Arts has decided to sponsor the closing reception of Paul’s show, so I dropped into his store last night to pick up his banner for display in the gallery. He gave me a tube of Ceramic White paint, which I’ve not seen or used before. It’ll be interesting to find out what this pigment can do – he says it’s almost luminous. He did warn me that it’s incredibly expensive and I would be cursing him if I liked it, but given that Flake (lead) White is almost unavailable these days I’d be really happy to find a decent white.

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