Category Archives: Working methods
Start/Finish of “Avenger,” Soft Pastel on Sandpaper, 58″ x 38″
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
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Posted in 2020, An Artist's Life, Art Works in Progress, Bolivianos, Creative Process, Pastel Painting, Studio, Working methods
Comments Off on Start/Finish of “Avenger,” Soft Pastel on Sandpaper, 58″ x 38″
Tags: “Avenger”, finished, signed, soft pastel on sandpaper, start
Q: What’s on the easel today?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: “Majordomo,” 20” x 26,” soft pastel on sandpaper, is coming along. After today’s studio session, I will put it aside and add finishing details when I am able to see it fresh again. I‘ve been looking at this piece too long to know what else it needs now.
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Posted in 2020, Art Works in Progress, Bolivianos, Creative Process, Pastel Painting, Studio, Working methods
Comments Off on Q: What’s on the easel today?
Tags: “Majordomo”, details, easel, finishing, looking, session, soft pastel on sandpaper, Studio, today, work in progress
Start/Finish of “Schemer,” Soft Pastel on Sandpaper, 26” x 20”
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
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Posted in 2020, Art Works in Progress, Bolivianos, Creative Process, Pastel Painting, Studio, Working methods
Comments Off on Start/Finish of “Schemer,” Soft Pastel on Sandpaper, 26” x 20”
Tags: “Schemer”, easel, finish, soft pastel on sandpaper, start, today
Q: What’s on the easel today?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: I’m working on a 26” x 20” pastel painting that will be number 14 in the “Bolivianos” series. This is very early in the process.
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Posted in 2020, Art Works in Progress, Bolivianos, Creative Process, Working methods
Comments Off on Q: What’s on the easel today?
Tags: Bolivianos, early, easel, number, pastel painting, process, today, work in progress
Q: What is your favorite thing about creating on sandpaper? (Cassandra Alvarado Oliphant via Instagram)
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: Undoubtedly, I could not make my work without UART sandpaper since my entire pastel technique evolved around it. I use 400 and 500 grit. My favorite thing about it is its ‘tooth’ (i.e. texture or roughness).
Over the many months I spend creating a painting, I build layer upon layer of soft pastel. Because this paper is relatively “toothy,” it accepts all of the pastel the painting needs. And as many people know, I own and use thousands of soft pastels!
Many layers of soft pastel and several months of studio time go into creating each painting. My self-invented technique is analogous to the glazing techniques used by the Old Masters, who slowly built up layers of thin oil paint to achieve a high degree of finish. Colors were not only mixed physically, but optically.
Similarly, I gradually build up layers of soft pastel, as many as thirty, to create a pastel painting. After applying a color, I blend it with my fingers and push it into the sandpaper’s tooth. It mixes with the color beneath to create a new color, continually adding richness, saturation, and intensity to the piece. By the time a pastel painting is finished, the colors are bold, vibrant, and exciting.
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Posted in 2020, Art Works in Progress, Creative Process, Pastel Painting, Studio, Working methods
Tags: Accepts, adding, analogous, applying, beneath, build up, Cassandra Alvarado Oliphant, continually, create, degree, exciting, favorite, fingers, finish, glazing, gradually, Instagram, intensity, layers, oil paint, Old Masters, optically, painting, pastel technique, physically, relatively, richness, roughness, sandpaper, saturation, self-invented, soft pastel, texture, thousands, tooth, UART sandpaper, vibrant
Q: How long did it take you to discover the properties of pastel? (Liliana Mileo via facebook.com/BarbaraRachko/)
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: After I moved to Alexandria, Virginia in the mid-1980s, I began taking classes at The Art League School. I was extremely unhappy with my career as a Navy Lieutenant. I worked as a computer analyst for the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Pentagon and was searching for something more meaningful to do with my life.
I began with a basic drawing class and liked it. I enrolled in more classes and decided to spend two years working exclusively in black and white media, such as charcoal and graphite, before advancing to color. Fortunately, early on I found an excellent teacher in Lisa Semerad. I remain deeply grateful for the strong foundational drawing skills she imparted to me during this period.
After two years I tried water color and soon discovered it was not for me, a perfectionist who needs to refine my work. Then I tried etching and found it extremely tedious, the antithesis of instant gratification.
Finally I began studying soft pastel with Diane Tesler, another gifted teacher, and fell in love with this medium! At The Art League School I also completed a one-week workshop with Albert Handell, who introduced me to the archival sandpaper that I have been using ever since.
While I fell in love with pastel three decades ago, I continue to learn about its unique properties. I am pushing pastel to new heights as my techniques continually evolve. This is a lifetime journey of learning. I hope to never know all there is to know.
Comments are welcome! Ask anything and I may answer in a future blog post, as you’ve seen here with Liliana’s question.
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Posted in 2020, An Artist's Life, Creative Process, Pastel Painting, Working methods
Comments Off on Q: How long did it take you to discover the properties of pastel? (Liliana Mileo via facebook.com/BarbaraRachko/)
Tags: advancing, Albert Handell, Alexandria, antithesis, anything, archival, basic drawing, blog post, charcoal, classes, completed, computer analyst, decided, demonstrated, Diane Tesler, discover, drawing skills, enrolled, etching, evolve, exclusively, Facebook, found, foundational, future, gifted, graphite, grateful, heights, imparted, instant gratification, introduced, Joint Chiefs of Staff, lifetime journey of learning, Liliana Mileo, LIsa Semerad, meaningful, medium, Navy lieutenant, Pentagon, perfectionist, period, properties, pushing, question, refine, remain, sandpaper, soft pastel, studying, teacher, techniques, tedious, The Art League School, unhappy, unique, Virginia, water color, working, workshop
Q: What’s on the easel today?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: I’m slowly working on a small, 20” x 26,” pastel painting. The tentative title is “Majordomo,” although I’m searching for something better.
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Posted in 2020, Art Works in Progress, Bolivianos, Creative Process, Pastel Painting, Studio, Working methods
Comments Off on Q: What’s on the easel today?
Tags: “Majordomo”, better, easel, pastel painting, searching, tentative, today, work in progress, working
Q: What do you do when you are feeling undervalued and/or misunderstood as a visual artist?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: After more than three decades as a professional artist, I wish I could say this rarely happens, but that’s not the case. People say dumb things to artists all the time and I’m no exception. Often I tune it out, remembering the title of a terrific book by Hugh MacLeod called, “Ignore Everybody and 39 Other Keys to Creativity.” Come to think of it, it’s time for a re-read of Hugh’s wise book.
But ignoring people is not always possible. So I might take a break from the studio, go for a long walk along the Hudson River, compose photographs, think about what’s bothering me, and try to refocus and remember all the positive things that art-making has brought to my life. I always feel better after this simple ritual.
Here’s another helpful quote that I read recently and try to remember:
‘’An artist cannot fail; it is a success to be one.” – Charles Cooley
I wonder, what do you do?
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Posted in 2019, An Artist's Life, Creative Process, Inspiration, Photography, Working methods
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Tags: "Ignore Everybody: and 39 Other Keys to Creativity", art-making, artist, bothering, Charles Cooley, compose, decades, exception, favorite, feel better, feeling, helpful, Hudson River, Hugh MacLeod, ignoring, misunderstood, people, photographs, posdible, positive, professional, re-read, recently, refocus, remember, ritual, simple, Studio, success, terrific, undervalued, visual artist, wonder
Q: What’s on the easel today?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: “Schemer,” Soft Pastel on Sandpaper, 26” x 20” is nearly finished. Among other things, I will do more blending to soften the transitions from light to dark in the fabric.
Comments are welcome!
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Posted in 2019, Art Works in Progress, Bolivianos, Creative Process, Pastel Painting, Studio, Working methods
Comments Off on Q: What’s on the easel today?
Tags: blending, easel, fabric, finished, soft pastel on sandpaper, soften, today, transitions, work in progress
Q: Why do you make art?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: Last spring I viewed Ursula von Rydingsvard’s exhibition at the National Museum of Women in the Arts. One thing that stayed with me is her wall text, “Why Do I Make Art by Ursula von Rydingsvard” in which she listed a few dozen benefits that art-making has brought to her life.
I want to share some of my own personal reasons here, in no particular order. My list keeps changing, but these are true at least for today.
1. Because I love the entire years-long creative process – from foreign travel whereby I discover new source material, to deciding what I will make, to the months spent in the studio realizing my ideas, to packing up my newest pastel painting and bringing it to my Virginia framer’s shop, to seeing the framed piece hanging on a collector’s wall, to staying in touch with collectors over the years and learning how their relationship to the work changes.
2. Because I love walking into my studio in the morning and seeing all of that color! No matter what mood I am in, my spirit is immediately uplifted.
3. Because my studio is my favorite place to be… in the entire world. I’d say that it is my most precious creation. It’s taken more than twenty-two years to get it this way. I hope I never have to move!
4. Because I get to listen to my favorite music all day or to Public Radio stations.
5. Because when I am working in the studio, if I want, I can tune out the world and all of it’s urgent problems. The same goes for whatever personal problems I am experiencing.
6. Because I am devoted to my medium. How I use pastel continually evolves. It’s exciting to keep learning about its properties and to see what new techniques will develop.
7. Because I have been given certain gifts and abilities and that entails a sacred obligation to USE them. I could not live with myself were I to do otherwise.
8. Because art-making gives meaning and purpose to my life. I never wake up in the morning wondering, how should I spend the day? I have important work to do and a place to do it. I know this is how I am supposed to be spending my time on earth.
9. Because I have an enviable commute. To get to my studio it’s a thirty-minute walk, often on the High Line early in the morning before throngs of tourists have arrived.
10. Because life as an artist is never easy. It’s a continual challenge to keep forging ahead, but the effort is also never boring.
11. Because each day in the studio is different from all the rest.
12. Because I love the physicality of it. I stand all day. I’m always moving and staying fit.
13. Because I have always been a thinker more than a talker. I enjoy and crave solitude. I am often reminded of the expression, “She who travels the farthest, travels alone.” In my work I travel anywhere.
14. Because spending so much solitary time helps me understand what I think and feel and to reflect on the twists and turns of my unexpected and fascinating life.
15. Because I learn about the world. I read and do research that gets incorporated into the work.
16. Because I get to make all the rules. I set the challenges and the goals, then decide what is succeeding and what isn’t. It is working life at its most free.
17. Because I enjoy figuring things out for myself instead of being told what to do or how to think.
18. Because despite enormous obstacles, I am still able to do it. Art-making has been the focus of my life for thirty-three years – I was a late bloomer – and I intend to continue as long as possible.
19. Because I have been through tremendous tragedy and deserve to spend the rest of my life doing exactly what I love. The art world has not caught up yet, but so be it. This is my passion and my life’s work and nothing will change that.
20. Because thanks to the internet and via social media, my work can be seen in places I have never been to and probably will never go.
21. Because I would like to be remembered. The idea of leaving art behind for future generations to appreciate and enjoy is appealing.
Comments are welcome!
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Posted in 2019, An Artist's Life, Creative Process, Inspiration, Working methods
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