Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Sketchbook pages

I recently indulged in a luxury sketchbook from Renaissance Art Fine handcrafted leather books. I had been hankering after a certain kind of rare sketchbook which could not be found commercially and finally found it in their books. My book is black with antique green marbled end papers and filled with Arches Text Wove paper for the body of the book. I feel very inspired by this book and it can take the vigor and the unusual materials with which I paint. Here are my first few pages...
The title page. I gold-leafed the white side of the marbled paper.

Then a spontaneous painting made with acrylic paint, tobacco, leather, silk, dried lavender flower buds, printed t-shirt material and paua shell fragments.

A ship flying the flag of frugality sails toward an island where a lonely man curls up in a very small cave. On board are the Gamblers. Acrylic paint with silk, paua shell, cotton/linen, kuba cloth, playing cards and reproduction 18th century gazette.

The flag (a fortune from a Chinese fortune cookie) tells us what we should do.

A mermaid floats on her back and gazes serenely at the stars above. She is oblivious to the warship on the horizon. She knows how to chart her own course. Acrylic paint with gel medium photo transfer and mica.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Maiden Voyage


You have all come along with me on this one so no explanation is needed, I think.

Acrylic paint on canvas, polyester and cotton with silk, glass, bone, ceramic beads, labradorite, quartz, amethyst, pearls and other stuff. 122 X 183 cm. (48 X 72")

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Painting in Progress (My Treasure Box)


A shot of my very own treasure chest - the big fold out box that holds most of my beads and little collected gems and jewels that I use to glue down to my canvases and works on paper. Those bone half discs I found at the Salvation Army Thrift Store will make perfect scales on a mermaid's tail.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Painting in Progress (Treasure in the Sea)

The faux coral made from silk strands and red paint worked. I laid it into the beach debris under the woman's arm, then added jewels and mica.

The doll surrounded by treasure.

I will continue to add jewels and mica until no more is needed.

Painting in Progress (Tiny Bubbles)

So that the illusion of the surf isn't totally dependent on the sponge painting, I added some bubbles in the surf by brush.

Another bubble...

This is the silk fringe of the old piano shawl. It serves a lot of purposes. The other day I made it into seaweed and doll's hair. Today I attempted to make red coral with it by mixing the silk strands with red paint, gel medium and a little bit of sand.

These are the bits of faux broken red coral. I have an actual red coral necklace, made of rough, unfinished, natural pieces, but I wasn't willing to sacrifice it so maybe these will work instead. The pieces available as beads are dyed bamboo coral, not genuine red coral, and since they are dyed I thought that the color might not last. This faux silk imitation is light weight in addition to being more lightfast than any dye. We will see how it works once it dries. It will hopefully echo the red color of the woman's hair and that of the doll.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Painting in Progress (Flotsam and Jetsam)

Here I am laying in the gel medium molds onto the canvas and adding a rough sand and gel mix to fill in any empty spaces around the uneven molds. The rough sand will help give the impression of the sand bottom under the waves.

Some "wreckage" that has swirled up and collected in the nook of the woman's arm.

I'm gluing down some long silk threads from a vintage piano shawl that I bought at a flea market. It wasn't in good condition, so no loss! It serves as "seaweed" in this case. (It has served as "mermaid's hair" in the past).

The same "seaweed" is tangled up in the detritus under the woman's arm.

The "seaweed" is painted light green.

The silk threads also serve here as doll's hair. The doll has been lost to the waves. Seaweed is tangled around the gel medium "coins".

To be continued...

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Sea Foam (Painting in Progress, continued...)

I'm beginning to paint in the gentle waves...

I'm dipping my sponge glove into the paint...

Getting a light coverage...

And pressing it onto the canvas for a sea foam effect.

This is the beginning of the gentle surf.

I bought some natural sponge and will begin to make further definition of the gentle surf. I will also add more molded details in the water and on the beach.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Painting in Progress (Black Beach continued)

The sand and shell mixed with gel medium makes a nice, beachy texture. I have painted it black, allowing some mother-of-pearl bits to shine through.

I placed some of the molded coins on the "beach" and gilded and painted them. You can see the mother-of-pearl bits more closely.

Painted the molded shell in natural color...

...as well as the seahorse.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Painting in Progress (continued)

I've laid in the sand and broken shell mix. After it dries I will paint it black and allow some details to show through.

Getting up into the contours of the body, as if she has washed up onto the shore...

Here are different types of aggregate that I am using. Haven't used the larger broken shell yet. I will glue that down later, or may forego it completely. I also have some broken paua shell I can scatter through the black paint.

I am adding some of the details in gel medium such as the mold of this tiny seahorse which my son found on an actual beach some years ago.

A Painting in Progress

I don't normally show pictures of paintings in progress, mostly because I get too busy to take photos. But I thought you might find this interesting.

This is the full sized painting with background laid out and painted in. I made a sort of "print" of the nude body of my friend on silky fabric. It looks like a female Shroud of Turin. I glued down the fabric to the 48 x 72" canvas (1.22 x 1.82 for my international friends), along with a lacy skull from an old t-shirt turned inside out to see only the outline of the skull, then began to paint in the details.

The more detailed face with the skull stitchery showing through the paint...

The canvas is now laid out on a table where I will glue on sand and broken shell pieces. I will also glue down gel medium molds of certain nautical objects - the flotsam and jetsam of a shipwreck or a beach after a storm.

A sextant, the mold taken from a sextant, and the result in dried gel medium.

A piece of coiled rope ready to glue onto the painting.

More later...