Kits Art

Thursday, June 26, 2014

Salt and Art

Canning-Salt 11x9 pastel
 
The Arts Project sent a call for artists out this week, for a juried exhibition called "Salt". Submissions for work inspired by or using salt-based media (ie. Salt painting techniques, etc) will be exhibited in August to coincide with Mark Blagrave’s new book Salt in the Wounds.

I got all excited about this as I have been painting Canadian company series.  I already had one for Sifto salt. Canning is based on salt, sugar and acid as a preservative and I made one for Redpath sugar, too.

If you are interested in participating in this exhibition call for artists is here. http://www.artsproject.ca/gallery/call-for-submissions

If you plan to go:
Exhibition Dates: August 5 – 23, 2014
Salt in the Wounds London Book Launch: Thursday, August 14, 5 – 7pm

The Arts Project
203 Dundas Street, London, Ontario

Sunday, June 1, 2014

Things artists should know..

I am going to put myself on the spot and tell some thing every artist should know.

1. Tonal value is the most missed element in paintings. What is Tonal Value. It is the dark, medium and lightest tone. Easily seen in a black and white photo. See the photo below,,, Now squint at it and you will see the dark, medium and light tones.

Here it is in black and white. See how the tonal value is not related to the colour but the intensity of pigment.
 
2. Edges in a painting are important. You need a few lost edged in your painting so the subject is part of the landscape.

See how Bill's face on the left near the chin and up at the top in the hat disappear into the background. This makes him part of his surroundings. His glasses near his nose also disappear.
However there are hard edges at neck and ear to make him stand out. Too many soft edged make the subject look blurry and too many sharp edged make him look stuck on. This is a common mistake made by artist painting birds and butterflies.

 
Lets see how we did with Bill in black and white. Not bad, some of his inner face could have had better tonal contrasts.
Try painting from a black and white photo, it will improve your paintings.
 
Book recommendation: Harley Brown's Eternal truths for every artist

Friday, April 18, 2014

the Work of art

Most people think making art is a hobby, something done in your leisure time.  "I wish I had a hobby like yours. It must be so much fun to be creative." they say. 

There is work to art. First there is all the learning part, with its frustrations when thing don't go right the first time. Then comes practise, practise, practise.

Finally you become satisfied and enjoy the process more. And one day you think you might show what you have accomplished.

Time to enter a show or gallery. "send us a CD of your paintings" they ask, " and fill out a bio about your work."
Reject, reject, reject.

Perseverance pays off and finally you show a piece in an art show, and guess what, someone buys it. You are overwhelmed, someone liked what you did, they paid money for it,  they now own what you worked so hard on.  It isn't yours anymore. Cash the cheque and buy more paint.

Repeat. repeat. repeat.

Here is my suggestion. Go to a neighbourhood art show, poetry slam, music event and make an artist happy. Buy, buy, buy.
Now you know how hard they work, work work.

Hound Nose - water colour
In the Lambeth Art Association Show and Sale
April 24 - 26th 2014
Lambeth ON


Sunday, March 2, 2014

Black and white dogs

It seems I am always painting black or white dogs . Here is one of my white dogs,
 
I also made a paper mache Schnauser
 
"Get off the couch"
 
A great artist, Virginia will knit you a hat from a photo of your dog.
 
Keep making art!

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Paper Mache

This summer I played with Paper Mache. It is a moldable medium and very strong.

Patch the Chihuahua is one of the results.
I painted Patch with coloured parts of newspaper for a whimsical look.


He even has a collar.

Monday, July 15, 2013

Tiled Jerry

Shrink paper art of  "Tiled Jerry" is in the Square Foot Show at Westland Gallery in Wortley village, 156 Wortley Rd til August 3rd.

People are interested in how I made this art piece. I am working with shrink plastic. (See prior blog) It is # 6 plastic which is sanded on one side. Coloured pencil is used here to draw the image on 8x11 sheets.

You can see the shrunk piece in the corner.  Here is large sheet up close.

Just draw lightly on sanded side of plastic as the colour intensifies when shrunk.



 Place the plastic on a Parchment covered cookie tray and bake in a 325* oven for 3 minutes

This is the plastic after it is shrunk. Add them all together and you have Square foot painting of "Tiled Jerry"


Sunday, May 19, 2013

Falling in place

Sometimes a painting just falls in place as you paint it. For every ten or so paintings, one comes along that paints itself. Carly was one of those.

I wonder if  the accumulation of experience in painting the first 10, wizzes out the end of you brush . Or is it that the artist is relaxed and doesn't care so much. With Carly I told myself I would paint him as I wanted and didn't care if the customer liked it.

In this painting the composition was a combination of two photos I took. The colours where achieved with colour choice, ultramarine blue, phalo green, cad red , a bit of yellow and white. It was painted on a mid-grey toned canvas.

Hope you like it too.