Thursday, April 30, 2009

Grad School

I forgot to mention anything because it was a whirlwind. But I'll be going to UMass Dartmouth next year!!! It looked like a great program with a balance between conceptual and traditional painting techniques. AND I may get to go along to Sicily for three weeks as a teaching assistant. Yea!!!

Lacrimosa 24 x 48"


Perhaps you can't see this very well, but I have begun another large panel. This one has three crying finches on it. For the moment the birds are vehicles for autobiography - stories about my family and about illness. The subject seems more down to earth to me than earlier ideas about evolution; and I think there is a certain spiritual meditation going on here that will allow me to access and incorporate religious references. We'll see. I did my thinking and this is the path I am walking down right now. While I do it, I have to put the thinking aside and use my intuition instead. Stay tuned...

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Improvements

Remember this one? It went from this....

to this..




Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Beginnings...


Pulmonary: 11 x 14"

I sat down to work on this for two or three hours yesterday, and I'm getting a good start.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Pulmonary

Pulmonary: 11 x 14"

Above is the first sketch of a new painting I am beginning. I am thinking of using the birds in the fashion of Mexican Catholic "milagros" - the word means "miracles" in Spanish. Small charms are fashioned from metal in the shape of ills or trials about which people may offer prayers to God. Small legs, ears, or even children are made to represent illness, disability, or the wish for a baby. I am thinking to introduce tiny beaded milagros on the bodies of the birds which indicate the ares where I pray for the health and safety of those I love. Perhaps capitalizing on the altar idea uncovered in this month's critique.

Buttons and finches

Buttons and finches: 8 x 8"

Above is another variation on the sketch theme - a small painting where I can quickly play with an idea. I am deciding to sand down the larger Darwin's finches piece and instead am using the imagery of the finch heads in this smaller piece - perhaps to work out how best to employ them. This painting is borrowing from the more structured compositions of the earlier Warbler experiments when I worked with orzo and beans.


Sketch paintings

I have been busy lately - too busy. But I am working in the studio as well as flying through my life and hanging on. Below are a series of small paintings wherein I have been working out ideas on abstraction and collage. You may recognize the last image as having been posted earlier. The other three are an expansion on the idea of brainstorming in beads and paint.

sketch 2: 6 x 6"

sketch 4: 5 x 5"


sketch 3: 5 x 5"


sketch 1: 6 x 6"

Thursday, April 09, 2009

Fishing for show titles

I'm just putting it out there, but it's time to start coming up with a title for my August solo show. And well, you know how well I do with titles...If I were a wordsmith, I would be a writer not a painter. So I'm looking for ideas. So far I'm considering "Songbirds". I expect to include the two large panels I completed recently - Hunger and Hope/Heal; as well as the four square bird paintings made during the fall - sparrow, oak warbler, chickadee, and house finch; and the small warbler project paintings with the pulses adhered to the panels. That will give you an idea of what you're naming...

Friday, April 03, 2009

Teeny tiny sketch painting 5 x 5"




I bought a few small panels with the idea of working towards an installation painting, as I'll call it. (A series of small pieces installed on a wall in an organic arrangement.) But here I've used the panel to play and work out the new materials I am beginning to incorporate into my work. I'm smitten.

Amazing little embroideries

I beginning to explore the possibilities of textiles in my paintings which makes stumbling upon these very exciting. I like the combination of materials; and the humor in the pieces makes them particularly fun.

Thursday, April 02, 2009

Darwin's finches 48 x 24"


This painting is not going well. And the more I work on it I believe that I am fighting the underlying grid I set up with the repeating pattern of birds heads. I have brainstormed lately about the concepts that interest me and I've come to some ideas about science and metaphysics that I would like to explore. The current piece Darwin's finches uses diagrams of the heads of finches that Darwin discovered in the Galapagos which led the development of the idea of evolution and natural selection. Thus far I am awkwardly bridging the gap between thought and it's visual expression; but I am sure after some more time and experimentation I will hit upon a good visual articulation of this idea. The painting is also unfolding quickly which is resulting in some muddying of the color. I am considering putting this aside for a while and allowing it to fully dry before reworking the piece.