Category Archives: Pastel Painting
Q: As you reflect on your overall art career beginning with your art education, what major event stands out as an important sign that you were headed in the right direction?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: In 1989 I left a career in the Navy to pursue life as a full-time professional artist. In July 1996 Bryan and I were traveling in Mexico. Something told me to check the phone messages at our Virginia house so I did.
There was a message from Mia Kim, the director of Brewster Arts Ltd. on West 57th Street in Manhattan, requesting a dozen large pastel paintings for a two-person exhibition in October, just three months away!
At the time I was still living in Alexandria, Virginia so exhibiting in Manhattan – let alone securing prestigious gallery representation – seemed a far-off dream. Yes, I had sent Mia slides, but she had not seen my work in person. She first saw my “Domestic Threats” pastel paintings when I delivered them to the gallery for exhibition. The show was called “Monkey Business.”
Brewster Arts was an elegant New York gallery that specialized in Latin American Art. There was just one other non-Latina artist that Mia represented, Leonora Carrington, whom I met that October at my opening. I remember Mia introducing me and declaring to the entire crowd, “Barbara has the SOUL of a Latina.” I’ve always loved that. It was the first time I realized I was really on my way!
Brewster Arts Ltd. continued to represent my work until the gallery closed some years later.
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Posted in 2019, An Artist's Life, Art Business, Domestic Threats, Mexico, New York, NY, Pastel Painting
Comments Off on Q: As you reflect on your overall art career beginning with your art education, what major event stands out as an important sign that you were headed in the right direction?
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Q: What’s on the easel today?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: “Poseur,” Soft Pastel on Sandpaper, 58’ x 38” is awaiting finishing touches… at last!
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Q: Did your military experience become a building block on which you formed your artistic ideas?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: In my younger days boredom was a strong motivator. I left the active duty Navy out of boredom. I couldn’t bear not being intellectually challenged (most of my jobs consisted of paper-pushing), not using my flying skills, and not developing my artistic talent. In what must be a first, by spending a lot of time and money training me for jobs I hated, the Navy turned me into a hard-working, devoted, and disciplined artist! Once I left the Navy there was no plan B. It was “full speed ahead” to become an accomplished artist.
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Posted in 2019, An Artist's Life, Art in general, Pastel Painting
Comments Off on Q: Did your military experience become a building block on which you formed your artistic ideas?
Tags: "Answering the Call", "full speed ahead", accomplished, active duty, artist, artistic, boredom, building block, devoted, disciplined, experience, flying.skills, formed, hard-working, intechallenged, military, motivator, Navy, paper-pushing, plan B, soft pastel on sandpaper, spending, talent, training, younger
Pearls from artists* # 356
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
*an ongoing series of quotations – mostly from artists, to artists – that offers wisdom, inspiration, and advice for the sometimes lonely road we are on.
Science is concerned with the general, the abstract, and the knowable. In contrast, art deals with the particular, the unknowable, the singular. This applies not just to the content of artistic works but also to the way this content is received. Even in the case of a film or concert attended by large numbers of people, the artistic experience remains a fundamentally solitary one. Each one of us lives the work from the work alone. Whatever sense of togetherness accompanies the experience comes precisely from the fact that, faced with the singularity of the aesthetic moment, each percipient feels his aloneness before the radical mystery that enfolds us all. Wherever an act of creation is shared with others, then, there is individuation – not just for the author of the work but for the audience too. The singularity of art awakens us to our own singularity, and through it to the singularity in the Other. I have argued that artifice unifies by imposing a univocal image that replicates itself indefinitely in each spectator. True art tears the spectral out of the mass of sameness, calling forth from the numberless crowd a new people and a new communion.
Reclaiming Art in the Age of Artifice: A treatise, Critique, and Call to Action
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Posted in 2019, Art in general, Inspiration, Pastel Painting, Pearls from Artists, Quotes, Studio
Comments Off on Pearls from artists* # 356
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Q: What’s on the easel today?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: I continue working on the latest in the “Bolivianos” series, “Poseur,” Soft Pastel on Sandpaper, 58” x 38.” I haven’t decided yet whether to put a pattern on the fabric.
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Posted in 2019, Art Works in Progress, Bolivianos, Creative Process, Pastel Painting, Studio, Working methods
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Tags: ”Poseur”, Bolivianos, decided, easel, fabric, pattern, soft pastel on sandpaper, today
Q: Are you certain that the art materials you use are light- and color-fast?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust

“John,” Soft Pastel on Sandpaper, 22” x 26” (image), 1989.
A: Yes, I am. Recently I came into possession of a pastel portrait that I had not seen in thirty years. How fantastic to report that it looks exactly the same as in 1989 when I made It!
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Posted in 2019, An Artist's Life, Pastel Painting, Working methods
Comments Off on Q: Are you certain that the art materials you use are light- and color-fast?
Tags: art materials, color-fast, John, light-fast, pastel portrait, soft pastel on sandpaper
Pearls from artists* # 351
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
*an ongoing series of quotations – mostly from artists, to artists – that offers wisdom, inspiration, and advice for the sometimes lonely road we are on.
That art is apolitical does not mean that artists themselves can be excused from the political responsibilities that fall on others. It means rather that as a manifestation of eternal psychic force, each work of art goes farther and deeper than the limited perspective of any individual mind, including that of its author.
No artist can predict how his work will affect the world… The artist invests his entire personality into the work, but he does so as a means of expressing a vision that is transpersonal. Everything that makes him what he is informs the work, but the final result transcends all personal contingencies.
J.F. Martel in Reclaiming Art in the Age of Artifice: A Treatise, Critique, and Call to Action
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Posted in 2019, An Artist's Life, Art Works in Progress, Bolivianos, Creative Process, Inspiration, Pastel Painting, Pearls from Artists, Quotes, Studio, Working methods
Comments Off on Pearls from artists* # 351
Tags: "Reclaiming Art in the Age of Artifice: A Treatise Critique and Call to Action", "The Orator", apolitical, artists, author, contingencies, deeper, entire, everything, excused, expressing, external, farther, individual, informs, invests, JF Martel, limited, manifestation, personal, personality, perspective, political, pychic forces, responsibilities, result, themselves, transcends, transpersonal, vision, work of art
Q: What’s on the easel today?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: I have two large (38” x 58” and 58” x 38”) untitled pastel paintings in progress.
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Posted in 2019, Art Works in Progress, Creative Process, New York, NY, Pastel Painting, Studio, Working methods
Tags: easel, pastel paintings, today, Untitled, works in progress
Q: What does a pastel feel like in your hand?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: Each manufacturer uses distinct binders to hold the raw pigment together to form a pastel stick. Due mainly to this binder, each pastel feels slightly different. Rembrandts are medium-hard and I generally use them for the first few layers. The black backgrounds of my pastel paintings are achieved by layering lots of Rembrandt black.
I enjoy using Unison because they feel “buttery” as I apply them to the sandpaper. If you’ve been to my studio, you know that I use just about every soft pastel there is! Believe it or not, no two are the same color.
Each pastel has its own qualities and some are harder or more waxy than others. Henri Roche has the widest range of colors and they’re gorgeous! I want them to show so I use them for the final layer, the ‘icing on the cake.”
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Posted in 2019, An Artist's Life, Art Works in Progress, New York, NY, Pastel Painting, Studio
Comments Off on Q: What does a pastel feel like in your hand?
Tags: achieved, ”icing on the cake”, ”Worlds Seen & Unseen”, believe it or not, binders, black backgrounds, buttery, colors, Danzante”, distinct, expensive, experimenting, final layer, harder, Henri Roche, individual, layering, learning, manufacturer, medium-hard, pastel artist, pastel stick, qualities, range, raw pigment, Rembrandt black, Rembrandts, sandpaper, Unison, waxy, Westbeth Gallery
Q: What made you fall in love with soft pastel versus another medium?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: I like to get my hands right into my work. In other words, I don’t like brushes or anything else to intervene between my hands and what I’m working on.
I work with 400 or 500 grit Uart sandpaper so the downside is that I rub my fingertips raw from blending layers of soft pastel onto sandpaper. I’ve tried using rubber gloves (they make my fingers sweat and wear out fast), cotton gloves (they leave bits of lint on the paper), using a blending stump (it leaves lint on the paper), etc., but nothing works as well as my own fingers. So sore fingertips are an unavoidable occupational hazard. I sometimes take days off from the studio just so that my hands can heal.
I adore color and love looking at the thousands of pastels in my studio! After working with this medium for more than thirty years, I still love what I am able to accomplish and I am still pushing it to do new things. The colors are rich, intense, velvety. No other medium is as sensuous or as satisfying.
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Posted in 2019, An Artist's Life, Inspiration, New York, NY, Pastel Painting, Studio
Tags: "The Champ", accomplish, ”Worlds Seen & Unseen”, blending, blending stump, brushes, days off, fall in love, fingers, fingertips, hands, intense, medium, occupational hazard, pastels, rubber gloves, sandpaper, satisfying, sensuous, soft pastel, Studio, UArt, velvety, Westbeth Gallery








