Total Art Soul - for artists

" Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up. "
Pablo Picasso
Tags >> Landscape painting


My time at Dorland Mountain Arts Colony is coming to an end.

It is also my last of the three residencies I’ve received this winter. It has been an amazing journey. Weir Farm National Historic Site brought my work to a new level and I experienced many a break through there. Brush Creek in Wyoming was so good for my soul with its humbling majestic beauty. My work strengthened there as well.

Dorland is a truly magical place. ( I will be coming back for two additional weeks sometime this year! ). To wake each morning and look at the vista out my back porch is just an inspiring moment. Here my work in a very short time took a new turn as well. I am lucky enough to return to California and Arizona at the end of next week and I look forward to taking what I learned from the landscape around Dorland into my new work.

I'm not sure how to describe it but there's just an atmosphere here that pushes you to create...and you just can't ask for anything more. Thank you to the wonderful people who make this such an amazing place.

Here are the rest of my paintings completed at Dorland. If you're interested in seeing works completed at Weir Farm please visit my website EvelynMcCPetersArt.com. I will post my work from Brush Creek next week. It is currently hanging at The Studio at Gulf and Pine in Anna Maria Florida.

Thanks for stopping by!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Are We There Yet?

Posted by: artbyjude

Tagged in: thoughts , shropshire , Painting , painter , original , oils , Landscape painting , drawing , artwork , artist , art

artbyjude

I was having a conversation with a friend of mine the other day and it prompted me to think about the journey I have begun.  When is it exactly I can call myself an artist?  Not a budding artist, not an amateur artist, but you know, a 'real' artist.  In other words, AM I THERE YET?

I've pondered this question long and hard which has developed into more questions.  Do you become an artist when you've had a number of years experience?  Do you become an artist when you sell your first piece of artwork?  Do you become an artist when you're lucky enough to have a gallery recognise your work?  The list is possibly endless.

If someone had asked me "What do you do?", the question would have just stumped me.  I would have hesitated, stumbled and tripped over my words ..... which, as a Gemini and a lover of communication, would come as a shock to most people :-).

So what has been stopping me from saying it?  Could I, in a group of like minded people, stand up as if I was at an AA meeting and say ...... I'M JUDE ROBINSON AND I AM AN ARTIST and repeat it like a mantra?  The thought has embarrassed me if I'm truthful because I haven't felt worthy of that title.

Examining my own thought processes, I believe what has prevented me from saying 'I am an Artist' is observing and studying the work of the many fantastic artists I have the pleasure of knowing since I began my journey.  I am literally in awe of their creativity and often think, I could never be as good as that.

All that said, I've had to give myself a firm talking to (is that the first sign of madness?).  As they say, beauty is in the eye of the beholder isn't it.  What may be brilliant artwork to one person, may not be to the taste of another.

I will be attending my first meeting with a fabulous group of women called Network With Style on Wednesday of this week at a location in Shropshire, UK.  At the beginning, it will entail me standing up in front of the group and telling them what I do.

So I have forced myself to come to this conclusion.  I've decided that despite my career taking me down lots of different and mostly fabulous roads, even though I only started this artistic journey about 4 months ago, MY HEART HAS ALWAYS BEEN IN ART.  Maybe that should be another mantra :-)

I am determined, from now on, to say to everyone and to myself as this journey continues without a destination, and to say the same to all my fellow creative souls who are struggling with the same question ..... YES WE ARE ARTISTS ..... YES WE'RE THERE :-)

 

Jude xxx



Finally, after nearly 30 years I was standing, for the first time in a small room which I could call a studio. After a summer of renovations and domestic DIY I had redirected funds from our home decorating funds to convert the back-end of my garage into my first,  real dedicated creative space…..Thornwood Studio.  The space was small but it was the kind of space which would submit only to me and my dictates, that would respond to what I wanted and did not have to morph into someones bedroom, study, lounges or store.

For the first time I was able to purchase a real easel, unpack the storehouse of artists materials assembled over the years and fill the shelves of the small bookcase with the volumes of art books I had collected. After days spent arranging and rearranging furniture, lighting and materials; I was ready, the only question now was, what do I paint first.

After searching for material to paint I settled for a slide which had been taken by my late father. It was a rather dark picture of a scene from what used to be our family farm in South Africa and where I had spent most of the first 13 years of my life. The slide was of the view from the farmhouse veranda looking south into the early dawn. It was a very frosty morning and the sun was still behind the big mountain which stretches across the sky from north to south. One could be forgiven for thinking that the slide was a black and white picture because none of the colours had yet been activated by the first rays of the sun.

The immediate problem which confronted me was that, while it was the very scene I had always dreamed of painting, the colours were not those which I wanted to represent this important first painting. I suddenly realised that if I was going to achieve the scene I wanted, I would have to take myself back, in my head, to stand on that veranda and imagine I was a little boy again. I would have to dig deep and imagine the colours that I would have been looking at from that spot and at the time of day I wanted to have as the defining image.

As I began to paint, first laying down a base of Van Dyke brown and then building a more tonal sketch, I became totally engrossed in the picture. The real surprise however came when I started to add colour to the painting. I realised that it was not that hard to mix the paint to give me exactly at I wanted and I began to apply the colour with a new-found excitement. Nothing however could have prepared me for what happened next.

On the left-hand side of the canvas, about a quarter of the way up the scene, I had sketched in the shape of the massive old apricot tree which I had played in as a little boy. In a moment I was transported back in my mind to sitting alone in the crook of one of its big branches. It was a hot summers day, about midday and I was enjoying listening to the rustle of the leaves in the breeze as it cooled the air under the tree. It was the strangest sensation, standing in my small studio in Dorset England, 30 years down the road, yet at the same time feeling the scene I was paining in such intimate detail. Even to the point of tasting one of my mother’s home backed biscuits which I had removed from the stash in my khaki shorts pocket.

I remember looking out from under the dark shadow of the tree towards the south and over the crops in the fields to where my father would be buried some six or so years into the future. I could feel the warm burg wind brushing over my face and with it came the rich smell of the bush and vegetation growing along the irrigation furrow at the top of the field. The sensation of all this was so powerful that I suddenly realised that I had tears streaming down my cheeks. The memories that had been evoked by entering that painting at such a personal level in order to extract the memory of the colours, had stirred some really deep memories and emotions.

As a result of the experience I began a journey, which I am still on and one which continues to yield both sweet and bitter and bright and dark memories. With the sweet and bright I have remembered many warm and  wonderfully magical moments with my family as well as a few bitter and darker ones as well. What started out as the first painting in a little studio has become an ongoing movie of my past, a kind of rerun of my life. Out of it has come the opportunity to rethink, with the benefit of age and time, a myriad of thoughts, memories and emotions.

What a serendipitous event and what a cathartic experience, all because I chose, in a creative moment, to re-create memory from the past. Somehow the creative process and the application and transmission of the memory onto canvas created a vehicle  which comes to  ameliorate the dark and bitter and revive the sweet and the bright.


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