Blog Archives
Pearls from artists* # 84
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.
I have a stockpile of sculptures, paintings, and drawings – every work of art I have made that has not sold – in a storage space for which I pay every month as regularly as I pay my utility bills. This is a sensible arrangement, as I can leave this work to my children. Most of the time I never give it a thought, but this morning it flashed across my mind that if it were blown away I would be bereaved in a way that would hurt me very much. I have not been inordinately materialistic, but I am attached to my house, to my inherited belongings, and to the things that I have chosen for myself. All these objects add complexity to my emotional ties to people with whom I have shared, and share, my life, and to my aspirations for myself.
Anne Truitt in Turn: The Journal of an Artist
Comments are welcome!
Posted in 2014, An Artist's Life, Art in general, Creative Process, Inspiration, Pearls from Artists, Photography, Quotes
Tags: "Turn: The Journal of an Artist", across, Alexandria, Anne Truitt, arrangement, aspirations, attached, belongings, bereaved, bills, blown, children, chosen, complexity, drawings, emotional, flashed, house, hurt, inherited, inordinately, leave, life, living room, made, materialistic, mind, month, morning, myself, never, objects, paintings, pay, people, regularly, sculptures, sensible, share, sold, stockpile, storage space, things, thought, ties, time, utility, work of art
Q: Can you speak about what draws you to the Mexican and Guatemalan figures that you collect?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: I search the markets and bazaars of Mexico, Guatemala, and elsewhere for folk art objects – masks, carved wooden animals, papier mache figures, children’s toys – to bring back to New York to paint and photograph. Color is very important – the brighter and the more eye-catching the patterns are on these objects the better – plus they must be unique and have lots of personality. I try not to buy anything mass-produced or obviously made for the tourist trade. The objects must have been used or otherwise look like they’ve had a life (i.e., been part of religious festivities) to draw my attention. How and where each one comes into my possession is an important part of my creative process.
Finding, buying, and getting them back to the U.S. is always circuitous, but that, too, is part of the process, an adventure, and often a good story. Here’s an example. In 2009 I was in a small town on the shores of Lake Atitlan in Guatemala, called Panajachel. After returning from a boat ride across the lake, my friends and I were walking back to our hotel when we discovered a wonderful mask store. I spent some time looking around, made my selections, and was ready to buy five exquisitely-made standing wooden figures, when I learned that Tomas, the store owner, did not accept credit cards. I was heart-broken and thought, “Oh, no, I’ll have to leave them behind.” However, thanks to my good friend, Donna, whose Spanish is much more fluent than mine, the three of us brain-stormed until finally, Tomas had an idea. I could pay for the figures at the hotel up the block and in a few days when the hotel was paid by the credit card company, the hotel would pay Tomas. Fabulous! Tomas, Donna, and I walked to the hotel, where the transaction was made and the first hurdle was overcome. Working out the packing and shipping arrangements took another hour or two, but during that time Tomas and I became friends and exchanged telephone numbers (the store didn’t even have a telephone so he gave me the phone number of the post office next door, saying that when I called, he could easily run next door!). Most surprisingly, the package was waiting for me in New York when I returned home from Guatemala.
Comments are welcome!
Posted in 2013, An Artist's Life, Black Paintings, Creative Process, Guatemala, Inspiration, Mexico, New York, NY, Pastel Painting, Photography, Travel
Tags: accept, across, adventure, animals, arrangements, attention, bazaars, behind, better, block, boat, brain-stormed, brighter, buy, buying, called, carved, children, circuitous, color, company, creative, credit card, days, discovered, Donna Tang, draw, easily, elsewhere, exchanged, exquisitely, eye-catching, festivities, figures, finding, fluent, folk art, friends, Guatemala, heart-broken, home, hotel, hour, hurdle, idea, important, lake, Lake Atitlan, leave, life, looking, markets, mask, masks, mass-produced, Mexican, New York, objects, obviously, otherwise, overcome, owner, package, packing, paint, Panajachel, papier mache, pattern, pay, personality, phone, photograph, possession, post office, process, ready, religious, returned, returning, ride, search, selections, shipping, shop, Spanish, speak, spent, standing, store, story, surprisingly, telephone numbers, Tomas, tourist, toys, trade, transaction, unique, United States, waiting, walked, walking, wooden, working
Q: What is it about soft pastel that you find so intriguing that you use it as your primary fine art medium?
Posted by barbararachkoscoloreddust
A: For starters it’s the medium that I fell in love with many years ago. I recently read this article online, “What is Pastel?” by Mike Mahon, and will quote it because it neatly sums up what I love about working with pastel.
Pastel is the most permanent of all media when applied to conservation ground and properly framed. Pastel has no liquid binder that may cause it to oxidize with the passage of time as oftentimes happens with other media.
In this instance, Pastel does not refer to pale colors, as the word is commonly used in cosmetic and fashion terminology. The pure, powdered pigment is ground into a paste with a minimum amount of gum binder, rolled into sticks and dried. The infinite variety of colors in the Pastel palette range from soft and subtle to hard and brilliant.
An artwork is created by stroking the stick of dry pigment across an abrasive ground, embedding the color in the “tooth” of the ground. If the ground is completely covered with Pastel, the work is considered a Pastel painting; whereas, leaving much of the ground exposed produces a Pastel sketch. Techniques vary with individual artists. The Pastel medium is favored by many artists because it allows a spontaneous approach. There is no drying time, therefore, no change in color occurs after drying as it does in other media.
Did you know that a particle of Pastel pigment seen under a microscope looks like a diamond with many facets? It does! Therefore, Pastel paintings reflect light like a prism. No other medium has the same power of color or stability.
Historically, Pastel can be traced back to the 16th century. Its invention is attributed to the German painter, Johann Thiele. A Venetian woman, Rosalba Camera, was the first to make consistent use of Pastel. Chardin did portraits with an open stroke, while La Tour preferred the blended finish. Thereafter, a galaxy of famous artists—Watteau, Copley, Delacroix, Millet, Manet, Renoir, Toulouse Lautrec, Vuillard, Bonnard, Glackens, Whistler, Hassam, William Merritt Chase—used Pastel for a finished work rather than for preliminary sketches.
Pastels from the 16th century exist today, as fresh as the day they were painted. Edgar Degas was the most prolific user of Pastel and its champion. His protégé, Mary Cassat, introduced Pastel to her friends in Philadelphia and Washington, and thus to the United States. In the Spring of 1983, Sotheby Parke Bernet sold at auction, two Degas Pastels for more than $3,000,000 each! Both Pastels were painted about 1880.
Note: Do not confuse Pastel with “colored chalk.” Chalk is a porous, limestone substance impregnated with dyes, whereas, Pastel is pure pigment—the same as is used in other permanent painting media.
Today, Pastel paintings have the stature of oil and watercolor as a major fine art medium. Many of our most renowned, living artists have distinguished themselves in Pastel and have enriched the art world with this beautiful medium.
So knowing all this, I often wonder, why don’t more artists use pastel? Is it because framing is a big issue? Works on paper need to be framed and pastel paintings have unique problems (see my April 27, 2013 blog post). Second only to the cost of maintaining a studio in New York City, frames are my single largest business expense. Sometimes I am grateful that pastel is a very slow medium. I typically finish 4 or 5 paintings in a year, which means I only have to pay for 4 or 5 frames!
Comments are welcome!
Posted in 2013, An Artist's Life, Art in general, Creative Process, New York, NY, Painting in General, Pastel Painting, Photography, Quotes, Studio, Working methods
Comments Off on Q: What is it about soft pastel that you find so intriguing that you use it as your primary fine art medium?
Tags: "What is Pastel?", 16th century, abrasive, across, allow, amount, apply, approach, around, article, artist, artwork, auction, beautiful, binder, blended, blog post, Bonnard, brilliant, cause, champion, change, Chardin, color, colored chalk, commonly, completely, confuse, conservation, consistent, Copley, cosmetic, cost, covered, create, day, Delacroix, diamond, dry, dry pigment, drying time, dyes, Edgar Degas, embed, enrich, exist, expense, expose, facet, famous, fashion, favor, fell in love, fine art, finish, first, frame, framed, framing, fresh, friends, gallaxy, German, Glackens, grateful, ground, happens, hard, Hassam, historically, impregnated, individual, infinite, instance, intriguing, introduce, invention, issue, Johann Thiele, knowing, La Tour, largest, leave, light, limestone, liquid, living distinguish, love, maintain, major, Manet, Mary Cassat, means, media, medium, microscope, Mike Mahon, Millet, minimum, much, neatly, New York City, oftentimes, oil watercolor, online, open stroke, overhead, oxidize, paint, painter, pale, palette, paper, particle, passage, paste, pastel, pastel painti, pay, permanent, Philadelphia, pigment, porous, portraits, powdered, power, prefer, preliminary, priism, primary, problem, prolific, propery, protege, pure, question, quote, range, rather, recently, reflect, Renoir, renowned, roll, Rosalba Camera, second, sketch, slow, soft, soft pastel, sold, somtimes, Sotheby Parke Bernet, spontaneous, spring, stability, starters, stature, stick, stroke, Studio, substance, subtle, sum up, technique, terminology, time, today, tooth, Toulouse Lautrec, trace, turrn, typically, unique, United States, use, variety, Venetian, Vuillard, Washington, Watteau, Whistler, William Merritt Chase, woman, wonder, word, work, working, year
Pearls from artists* # 39
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.
When you think of paying an author for his work you ought to think generously. It is the author who makes your magazine. If you cannot pay in cold cash, why don’t you write the author and ask what you could do for him? Offer to do something in the nature of a personal sacrifice, I would say. He may need to have some typing done, or some printing; he may need a table to write on, or books to reference; he may need some research work done for him. There are a thousand and one things he may need and appreciate much more than cold cash, especially when it constitutes a sum which, by American standards of living, means absolutely nothing. It costs me, for example, almost five dollars a week for postage. It costs me much more than that for the gifts of books and water colors I am obliged to make to enthusiastic admirers who are too poor to buy my work.
… But this, it seems to me, is the way one good artist should treat another. And you who are editors of small magazines are mostly artists yourselves, I take it. You all expect to become celebrated writers some day; you identify yourselves with the men whose work you admire and hope to publish. Well, carry out the identification to the nth degree, I say. Think how you would feel if, after years of labor and struggle, you are asked to accept a trivial sum. It is far, far better to say: “We have no money at all. We believe in you and your work… will you help us? We are willing to make any sacrifice in order to make your name known.” Most authors would be touched by such an appeal; they would offer their work gladly; they would probably offer to help in other ways. I am thinking naturally of the kind of writers whom you wish to interest in your project. There can be a magnificent collaboration between author and editor, author an publisher. But you, as editor, must first begin by giving, not demanding. Give the shirt off your back, or offer to give it, and then see what sort of response you will get form the author. I have often noticed with beggars that when they ask for something and you offer them twice or ten times as much, they are so overwhelmed that they often refuse to accept anything, or else they offer to become your slave. Writers, in a way, are like beggars. They are continually begging to be heard, to be recognized. Really they are simply begging for a chance to give of their great gifts – which is the most heart-rending begging of all and a disgrace to any civilized community in which it happens. Which is to say, almost the entire civilized world.
Henry Miller in Stand Still Like the Hummingbird
Comments are welcome!
Posted in 2013, An Artist's Life, Art in general, Inspiration, Pearls from Artists, Photography, Quotes, Travel
Comments Off on Pearls from artists* # 39
Tags: "Stand Still Like the Hummingbird", a thousand and one things, absolutely, accept, admire, American, anything, appeal, appreciate, artist, ask, author, beggar, begging, begin, believe, better, book, carry out, celebrated, chance, civilized, cold cash, collaboration, community, constitue, continually, cost, disgrace, editor, enthusiastic, entire, far, for example, generous, gift, give, gladly, great, happen, heard, heart-rending, help, Henry Miller, hope, identification, identify, interest, kind, known, labor, magazine, magnificent, mean, men, money, name, naturally, nature, need, New Mexico, nothing, notice, oblige, offer, overwhelmed, pay, personal, poor, postage, printing, probably, project, publish, publisher, recognize, reference, refuse, research, response, sacrifice, say, simply, sky, slave, small, some day, something, standards of living, struggle, sum, table, the shirt off your back, think, touched, treat, trivial, typing, water color, week, work, world, write, writer, year, yourself