Comments from the Steve Aimone workshop on Vancouver Island, October 2010

 

These two I had painted before the start of the abstract workshop, as a way to get into painting again. Little did I know….

 

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This next one happened early on in the workshop. It was an automatic drawing. Mine are usually round and closed loops, so I thought I’d try something else. Hummm, as we say, it’s a good underpainting! We then did an exercise where we painted our workshop environment, under Steve’s directions: paint the floor in front of you; 30seconds later: paint what’s above your head; 30 seconds later: paint what’s to your right, change paint color, etc you get the idea.

IMG_0369 So my next one was particularly ugly and disjointed, and I covered it with ‘pretty’ colors. Well, that made for another nice underpainting!!!! I was getting pretty desperate, so I took a drastic step. 

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Here’s what resulted:IMG_0375

Thankfully, the others will not see the light of day, they’ve been exposed enough on my easel for a week. Some have found a new life as pages for my altered books. Yeah!

This one is 48x48, and is a colored representation of a dancing model. Nice starting point for something else.

 

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The biggest learning for me is that a painting doesn’t stop at the first step, when it starts coming together and looks pretty. That’s just a better underpainting. The real work starts when the white paint or the black paint start obliterating the ‘underpainting’ to start another painting, but that still retains the spirit of the first layer. For some of the workshop participants, a final painting will have 10 or 15 layers. My easel partner, the lady with whom I shared the table where we lay all our paints out, would do as many as 25 layers. There were some truly gorgeous paintings, and up she would cover them with a thick layer of pale brown. I took it upon myself to interrupt her concentration and acknowledge the beauty of the layers I loved, otherwise, these layers would never have been acknowledge.

I do admit that her final paintings were stunning, some very disturbing, but it was an incredible work and I have been humbled to watch her process and learn so much: not stop at the first satisfactory step, but let the process unfold, and dig deeper and deeper.

After all, the workshop was called: The Spiritual Language of Art. One really had to dig deep to uncover the gem. Fortunately, we had wonderful organizers, thank you Mary Stewart, and beautiful friend, Donna B,, Jill, Eve, Susan, Jean, you know who you are.

This last one happened on the last day, that was my representation of a beautiful oyster shell we were given. Abstracted, definitely.

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4 comments:

  1. Amazing way to paint, as you say some of the under layers were really great, there was a lady at our workshop who painted like this and I mourned the loss of many of her layers but truth be told I liked them better than the finished ones
    http://www.artbreak.com/mariawiley/works
    her work is lovely though and you may like it!
    Thanks for taking us with you on the workshop I can see why the message needs to be digested!

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  2. Very interesting to hear about the process of the workshop. I kind of like that very first one. Very quiet=nice and your last one!!

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  3. my goodness..you created marvelous work. I have trouble going over older layers too but l found this blog very interesting.xlynda
    http://tyingtocreatarteveryday.blogspot.com
    my daily photo blog ( including alots of blogs on my visit to Paris in beg of Oct) http:chocolatelifeandjazz.blogspot.com
    Lyndax

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