Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Self Care: Enchanted Tea Party

 

One of my favorite self-care tricks right now is the Enchanted Tea Party.  I brew up a pot of herbal tea, put on a fun outfit, and create! 

Recently, I took inspiration from the bold & contrasting colors in Lynne Perrella's book Artists' Journals & Sketchbooks (Quarry Books, 2004). 
I pulled out my art journal & art supplies, and began layering bright acrylic paints and bold markers, then glued on some text and hand-wrote a quote.  All while sipping delightful Elderberry-Lemon Balm tea.  Time drifted away, my body and mind relaxed, and I slipped into creative mode.  
The bold, bright colors spilled sunshine into my soul, and freed up my mind to play.
I even incorporated the quotes from the tea bag labels into my page spread.
The beauty of creating in my art journal for me is that I allow myself liberty to create anything I want to.  There are no rules, only techniques to explore & materials to play with.  If I don't like some element of a page, I can paint or collage over it.  Each layer adds interest.
I found a quote, and felt the rich vermilion and carmine reds invited such bold thoughts, so I wrote it in and added some decorations with permanent markers.
If you would like to join me for an in-person course in creating your own art journal, follow this link: https://ccbc.coursestorm.com/category/arts?page=2

For information about my upcoming in-person art classes, follow this link to the Community College of Beaver County website, and click on the "Arts" button: https://ccbc.coursestorm.com/ 

I would love to see you in one of my art courses!





Sunday, December 12, 2021

Osher Figure Drawing with Model David

Friday morning, model David put us through our paces with his advanced gesture pose series. He began with a standing pose to let us get our bearings.

Then he began to creatively complicate the poses.

After he warmed us up a bit, David began throwing inventive poses with heavy foreshortening and unusual perspectives.  He said that these were poses he did for the more advanced students to challenge them to up their game, like this "shipwrecked" pose.

These curled up poses forced us to trust our eyes as we drew, and David quoted one of our favorite college drawing instructors who advised his students to, "Let your hand be an obedient servant of your eyes."

His poetic words rang true and helped us to focus on the process rather than the product.

 

We moved on to study drawing the feet.  A 15-minute pose gave us time to study the structure of the feet. For the first 3 minutes of the pose, I had David wear footie socks to hide any details of his feet.  We blocked in the shapes we saw, and then David took off the socks so we could finish our drawings with details.

We finished the session with an hour long pose (with model breaks). I used a 9XXB pencil on Charcoal paper.





Many thanks to model David for his creativity, inspiration and dedication to teaching the art of figure drawing!





Thursday, December 9, 2021

Osher Figure Drawing with Model Hector

 

Last Friday, we were swept away by model Hector, who held elegant, dancerly poses, and inspired us with a dramatic winter set, including a crown & scepter that he created for the long pose.

I invited my students to try wet media this week, suggesting a single color for the gestures, and watercolors for the long pose.

We began with 3-minute gesture poses to warm up, and  I used India ink in two tones. Using the lighter tone, I began with a mass gesture painting, then touched in bolder contours and shadows with undiluted ink.


I experimented with more expressive marks in the last gesture pose.
After our gesture warm-up, we switched to watercolor paints, and practiced mixing skin tones in preparation for the long pose. 

Hector crafted a winter woodland set with a snowy forest floor, blue drifts of fabric, and an inspiring backdrop to sweep us away to the storybook land of the Snow King of the Enchanted Woods.

Note his staff on the far left of the photograph below.
I sketched in the scene using a 2B graphite pencil, then laid in washes of ultramarine blue, pthalo blue, and a skin tone mixed with burnt sienna, cadmium red and touches of raw umber & ultramarine blue.

Many thanks to model Hector for his inspiring performance and set!

Thursday, December 2, 2021

Osher Figure Drawing with Model Sophia

Friday, November 19th, we had a wonderful session with model Sophia.  An incredibly inventive and flexible model, Sophia created gesture poses that stretched our abilities and strengthened our drawing and observational skills.

During the gestures, I asked my students to spend the first minute of each three minute pose looking for the underlying structure of Sophia's body. We used one color for the structure, capturing Sophia's spine, her rib cage, her skull and other bones.  With two minutes remaining in the sketch, I called for a color change and we chose a contrasting color for the outer contours and shadows, building upon the armature we had laid down in the first minute.




Sophia's last pose was so abstract that it pushed our observation and drawing skills, and was a valuable workout.
All warmed up, we moved on to practicing drawing faces.  I demonstrated the process of finding the shape of a person's head, laying in the eye line about halfway down the face, drawing the eyes, and then measuring where the nose and lips fit in.  

We finished up with a long pose that incorporated our study of Sophia's face.  I used pastels on blue Canson Mi Teintes paper, and followed my intuition on color choices within Sophia's figure and in the negative space.

Many thanks to model Sohia for an amazing session full of inspiration and discovery!