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Playing with Watercolor and Dot Art

19 May

Framed Lotus Dot Art

It all began with a Mother’s Day present for my mom. Yes, I admit it, I’m cheap. Or more correctly, I’m poor. But it’s also true that there is a limit to how many bath products, flowers, and gift cards you can get a mother before it’s just routine. So instead I decided to play around with some supplies sent to me by my friend Brooke and ended up coming up with this:

Watercolor & Ink Dot Art, Framed

I’ve spent the past week working on sketches and playing with watercolor to begin a project for another friend’s mother who saw this piece and ordered two pieces of dot art.

One will be white dot art flowers on a turquoise background, and the other will be mirrored but turquoise dot art on a white background. This is just the first layer of watercolor so far.

The piece at the top of this post is not watercolor, however. It is something I started at first as a way to test out some new ink & paint pens in preparation for the pieces for my friend’s mom. As I went along, I realized that I might as well finish it and make something of it! The piece is available for purchase now at the Elephant and Dove Etsy shop.

A close up of the Lotus dot art piece

New Mixed Media Poem-Collage Series

6 May

This is a mixed-media series I created using my own poetry as transfers over acrylic painting on canvas panels. Some of them include collage elements, others use stamps, and others are a combination of items. Each is 8×11. These are scanned images, so the whiteness that you see comes from the brush strokes of the clear acrylic coating, but the originals are more vibrant in color. I chose bright colors and designs as a contrast to the poems, which are a little darker in topic. These will be available for purchase soon.

A Sneak Peek at Current Work

2 Apr

This is part of one of two series of pieces I am currently working on. This is very rough, obviously, just the transfers done so far. In fact I’m so unhappy with the Audre Lorde (the magenta one) that I will be trying it over again as my process has improved with more practice.

Better Image of Sacred Fire and Prints Soon Available

16 Aug

Details of Painting HERE

So, now you can see the awesomeness of the painting thanks to the magic of scanners. I will be setting up an Etsy soon to sell from, rather than selling thru my site. One thing I will be selling is colored photo prints of some of my collages, drawings, paintings, and possibly of zine covers or photos of fiber arts work even. I am very excited about this venture. Stay tuned!

Sacred Fire

13 Aug

Acrylic on cardboard, 8 1/2×11

Photo from camera phone, so quality is not the best.

I had the idea to translate my ink dot art into paint. You may find the subject familiar, since I just posted ink drawings of it a few days ago. This style, though not the subject matter, is also reminiscent of traditional Aboriginal art of Australia. For me, this was more of an experiment but I don’t know that I would continue with this form without some serious meditation on and interrogation of whether it constitutes appropriation of a traditional art form I have no right to. I did really enjoy it, however. I find dot art so relaxing, but doing it with paint requires more precision and attention. On the other hand, it also takes considerably less actual paint than other methods, which is something to think of if interested in conserving/low access to resources.

The background is a deep green with bronze dotting. The form is a stylized lotus. The background color of the flower and leaves is gold; the leaves are two different greens. The outer petals are a magenta/purple, second petals are red, third orange, and center yellow.

In general, I think that art is very open to interpretation and don’t expect artists to explain themselves or what they were going for. However, sometimes I think context is important and useful. If you are the sort who has no interest in what the artist intended, stop reading now. In this case, I would like to explain the vision behind this painting. :)

I was inspired by two competing ideas at the same time. I am fond of this particular lotus form. On the one hand, I thought of the Qur’anic verse “light upon light”.

God is the light of the heavens and the earth.
The likeness of this light is a niche
in which there is a lamp,
the lamp in a glass,
the glass like a glittering star,
kindled from a blessed olive tree,
an olive that is neither of the east nor the west,
the oil of which could shine without being touched by fire.
Light upon light;
God guides whom He please.
- Quran 24:35

I was thinking of the light, a flame, and how to incorporate that into the lotus design because a previous drawing had raised that interpretation from a viewer.

But the other reason that I love this particular style of lotus is that it makes me think of the feminine. Georgia O’Keeffe was a master at utilizing flowers to depict the divine feminine, sexuality, childbirth, etc. Inspired by that, and clearly seeing a “yoni” motif in the lotus from the first time I saw it, I am paying homage to her work. At the same time, I went with “flame” colors to also reference the Sanskrit meaning of yoni as it relates to the “sacred fire”. As the term yoni refers to sacred space specifically, and its role in the “sacred fire” of love, sex, etc. it can also be understood as a reflection of appreciation for love between women, that sacred connection that is different than that between men and women, in that it affirms our own selves even as we give to another.

The painting can be seen in an “innocent” view from the perspective of the ayat of the niche, or as a “hidden” (or perhaps overt) reference to female sexuality. But I actually connect the two because we speak of love and channeling sexual energy into service to the Beloved.

Sketchbook 3/27/11

27 Mar

It’s been a whole month since i posted stuff from my sketchbook, but i was not sketching as constantly due to the previous project i was working on. Here are a few things i’ve done over the last month in my sketchbook:

Turkish Tulip - done as a gift

attempt at a lizard

playing with new watercolors

The Temple of My Familiar – Theme Swap

27 Mar

With yet another group of friends, we put together a private swap around the theme of Alice Walker’s The Temple of My Familiar, which we read together.

For my partner i sent a sketchbook and her favorite kind of erasers, because one theme in TOMF is how creative outlets are healing and support self-exploration.

The other part of my gift was a small (5.5 inches by 4.5 inches) handmade booklet of “The Gospel According to Shug”. i used thin cardboard for the covers and pasted a hodge-podge of print outs of the actual pages of the book that the Gospel are on, then laminated it. i added the poppy because i know my partner loves poppies and it would help give a decorative touch, and a cowrie shell to the string that i used to bind the book together (i forgot to take a photo after i added the cowrie shell, unfortunately). the first and last page are decorative poppy-print papers. then each page (27) has one of the Gospels on it and some kind of art work by me. Some of the artwork is in color pencil, some is ink dot art (my current passion), and some watercolors. Here are a few select pages:

The Gospel According to Shug - cover

The Gospel According to Shug - 2

The Gospel According to Shug - 4

The Gospel According to Shug - 5

The Gospel According to Shug - 11

The Gospel According to Shug - 12

The Gospel According to Shug - 16

The Gospel According to Shug - 17

The Gospel According to Shug - 23

The Gospel According to Shug - 27

Paintings

2 Feb

Free Will: Make Your Own Fortune

this one has been in my mind for a long time and i was collecting fortunes from cookies for it. craft acrylic paints on cardboard with paper. i did it mainly to get back into the habit of painting, because i was preparing for a week long vacation from work and to work on a larger painting (below).

untitled

craft acrylic paints on cardboard. some is free drawn, some i created templates that i used to trace onto the painting to get shapes/sizes right and consistent, and a few elements were paper templates that were not created by me but that i cut into template forms for use.

i documented the process of the painting in photos (by camera phone, so i apologize for the quality) and it can be viewed here.

 

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