The duality of angels

Here’s the beginning – the duality of the pairing of the angels of life and death. How much more complete can opposition be than two squares, one completely black, one completely white?

I understand that there can’t be any true duality because there’s always a relationship between the two, the shades of good and evil, the grey shadows between light and dark, but there are clearly extremes of each side. I plan to bring elements of the opposing side into each of these paintings to soften the duality.

Both of the panels are gessoed and will be ready by tomorrow for the first drawing to go on, so it’s time to get committed to the angel of death. I’ve made arrangements to shoot photos for the angel of life on Tuesday afternoon. 

I’m still looking for really fabulous angel wings or a taxidermy swan with outspread wings.


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Gesso

IMG_9795We’ve had a very productive morning. Jason came over to help me with the big panels, and laid down a couple of coats of gesso onto the panel I stretched yesterday. I carried on with canvas and finished getting it onto the second piece, and used some wood putty to fill a crack down the centre of the third and fourth panel where the wood meets. We’ll gesso one of the panels with black in preparation for the angel of death, helping the darks to be really deep and rich, while the lights will pop out from the shadows.

This afternoon I’m heading over to the Brand library in Glendale with Brian to shoot pictures of the exhibit for my archives. It’s incredibly important to make a record of everything for use later in promoting the work to curators in other establishments. 

This Saturday at 4.00 pm there’s going to be a closing reception at the Hillcrest Center in Thousand Oaks to celebrate the exhibit that’s been in there for a month. I’m looking forward to it.

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One down

Here’s the first panel with raw canvas freshly stretched over it. To successfully cover a large panel I’ve found that the way to go is to stretch the cloth as one would with a smaller piece over stretcher bars, placing the panel face down over the cloth, pulling hard from centre to centre and circling the piece one side at a time as you progressively staple towards the corners on each side. With a large piece there’s no way you’re going to pull that canvas tight by yourself, so don’t panic when you flip it over and it looks like your grandmother’s tights, simply pour distilled water over it, rubbing the liquid into the fabric with your hand and watch the creases magically disappear. In the picture the cloth is still damp.

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Let it dry for a day or two, depending on how dry / humid or hot / cold it is where you live, then gesso. Here in sunny Southern California I can probably put the first coat on tomorrow, depending on what my priority seems to be in the morning – gesso this so I can get started soon, or stretch the canvas onto the other three so I can gesso them all in one go, saving a little time?

The canvas covered piece looks smaller than the bare wooden one, doesn’t it? 

Comparing the skeleton set to the canvas is making clear to me that this really is a life size painting, so I’m excited about the opportunities for concealing little details into the work. There will be lots of nice nooks and crannies to hide little messages and secrets in, inside skulls and bones and concealed in feathers.

By the way, I really don’t know who most of the regular readers of this blog are, but thanks – writing this is an incredibly good discipline for me. I feel far more motivated to make work each day so that I can post my progress on here, which in turns helps my students to understand how to make paintings, at least in the way that I understand it. Namaste.

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Epic begins

IMG_9791Now I’m in trouble. The canvas arrived this morning, so I’ve cleared some space to lay it on the ground and begin stretching it onto the big panels. The angel of death is all set up, requiring only a little lighting to make him perfect, so I should be able to get the first panel gessoed and ready by the weekend. 

Speaking of the weekend, the Brand gallery exhibit is coming out on Friday night and Saturday morning, so if you want to see the show while it’s up, please hurry over to Glendale and enjoy it while you can.

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Grin and bear it

IMG_9790By painting a glaze of very light grey over the sky and taking most of it off with a rag I’ve brought solidity to the bottom of the clouds, then put on some pure titanium white on the top edges, picking up the highlighted bright sunlit cotton wool of the cumulus masses.

That’s one of those big Californian June skies we’ve been having this month. I love this place.

The bear needed much more substance, so using my palette knife I scraped white over the first layer to build depth and dimension. Soon I’ll put a lot more detail into the pelt.

There was a large group of cheerleading trainers here for a weekend retreat to learn how to pass on their extraordinary gymnastics to high school kids. I’ve never seen such amazing flips and spins as I did today from these young men and women. I hope to shoot pictures of one of them tomorrow for the scorpion painting – funny how these things fall into place so perfectly – synchronicity is wonderful.

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Bear necessity

I’ve been thoroughly enjoying myself in the studio, helping Rich cut panels in the new woodshop, setting up the skeleton for the Angel of Death painting and making the landscape for the Fortitude piece. 

IMG_9788First the woodshop, which is completely wonderful. Rich has a week to go and paint seascapes on the California coast, so he needed to rip a sheet of plywood down to panels, ready to gesso and carry to the beach. (Painting seascapes isn’t a bad way of life, if you think about it.) I don’t want to get repetitive, but getting the shop going right next to the studio is so good, I can’t wait to get my students in there making panels and stretcher bars.

We got to spend an hour or two chatting and eating a meal together, and he helped with arranging the skeleton for the Angel project. This was really fun to do, in a gruesome way. The skeleton looks like a rock star again, with his jaw propped open into a big grin, arms raised as if he’s welcoming applause – but this guy is stepping on skulls in a pile at his feet.

Finally, I’ve added a desert landscape into the background of Fortitude, following the pattern of the other two virtue cards Justice and Temperance I’ve slightly curved the horizon to give a slightly fish-eyed appearance to the painting, bringing the girl and the bear into the centre of an implied circle in the landscape. I added a bit of width to the shoulder of the bear, feeling that he was a little too square and flat against the edge of the panel.

This evening I’m off to the ballet to see my daughter dance – perfect!

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Angel of Death

IMG_9787Having shown several friends the sketch of the angels of life and death that I did for the big panels I have changed my mind about these two characters. The reaction was so strongly in favour of making them that I pretty much have to do these pieces.

So I’ve been enjoying myself getting the skeleton set up as reference for the angel of death painting on the first eight by eight panel. I’ll need to find a taxidermic swan with outspread wings, or spend a day at a bird sanctuary shooting photos for reference to get the wings in, and I have to hang a cloth behind the skeleton so there is clear space between those tricky ribs in the chest. It really makes no difference if the wings are white or black, because the shift from light to dark is a simple matter of a glaze and cloth rubbing the pigment into the lighter version.

I’ll set up the skulls for the foreground later, then work out the lighting.

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Tarot celebration

img_9786Now Fortitude’s sky has clouds and my model has legs and the bruin is becoming more defined. I’m looking forward to tomorrow’s work, when I hope to get another layer of sky down, and to develop some mountains in the distance. There’s almost enough information down to move into the colour stages of painting the figure.

Wouldn’t it be a blast to have a celebration each time I finish a card? We’ll invite people to come and eat and drink and to see the gradual accumulation of the deck as it includes the entire trump group. Each event will have as its theme the card that has been most recently produced, so we’ll have a Hanged Man night, a Priestess night, a Magician night, and so on…

No canvas has shown up yet – I’m totally impatient for the package to arrive.

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Devils and angels

After my morning class I got started preparing the angels and devils sketches, moving toward decisions on what these big pieces are going to be. 

I’m particularly enjoying the scorpion-like people in the desert, and the hermit with the three figures in the distance. The two angels are more obvious, lacking subtlety, so they might not make the cut. I plan to continue drawing to see where the ideas go to, following the pathway the images take rather than trying to dictate their growth too severely. I like the way that one of the figures has fallen to the ground in the second scorpion sketch, for example, it brings a narrative to the image. Will the other scorpion person attack him now he’s down? Why is he on the floor?

I also spent a bit of time altering the hands in the Fortitude painting, giving them a bit of drama as they move to hold the mouth of the bear, controlling it without effort – not unlike the magician card. I think placing them in action is more interesting than having them already engaged.

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Woodshop redux

Sam and Jason and I spent a very cheerful morning finishing up the wood-shop benches, installing a small fridge and cleaning up some of the tools. This is fabulous! Now the shop is fully loaded with benches all we have to do is build a fold down extension for the table saw so the cut wood has something to land on, and acquire and install a vacuum system to suck sawdust out of the tools. Sam brought in a planer, and will bring more of his tools to equip the place in a month’s time.

Awesome! 

I’ll be making use of the shop in class for the first time next month, when our second session of summer school begins. My students will be able to learn how to craft panels and stretcher bars for their paintings.

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