I have some good news! Just when I was thinking “I really love Hudson, and I am so happy that I moved here, but I'm not sure that February is my favorite." I got an email. I had applied for a residency at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts in the fall (knowing myself well enough to suspect when I moved, that art time somewhere warmer would be like manna right about now ;)). I had been on the waiting list, but there was a cancellation, and I’m going to Virginia!! It is an amazing gift to be able to go as I am and spend some time focusing exclusively on art! I am so, so excited (I’d like to pretend I didn’t jump up and down and dance around when I got the email like a tween girl receiving Bieber tickets - but I did). I have some time to prepare, so my goal is to plan for and organize a Tempus Fugit sub-project so that I can hit the ground running when I get there.
In terms of art, this week I concentrated on the faux black velvet poster and finished it. I have to say, I find it intriguingly hideous, and it may end up on living on the back of my bedroom door. I broke one of my own rules with this though and worked on it outside the studio. I think the photos show exactly why I have a policy against that.
Because of the pens and markers, not the kitty |
patterns. Last night, I woke up in the middle of the night and realized I’d been
dreaming of drawing, so in that sense – it worked! I now think of art 24/7 and dream in tiny, neon lines. On
the other hand, it absorbed the time I otherwise would have put toward the block
print (not good). I’ve been thinking, I like making these, and it's good practice, but I wonder if there's a way to incorporate them into my day without diverting so much studio time and in a way that doesn’t lead to pens and markers
everywhere (apart from my just being neater with them while I work - I've given up the ghost on that one). One idea I had was getting a smaller size (or maybe photocopying to a smaller size - that way I could make multiples on better paper by manually loading the copier with art paper.) I was thinking of only using one color. That might be a fun challenge to see how many shades I can get
out of one color just by varying the mark/pattern. Using black and maybe just a little color, the result may look like grisaille stained glass. The time issue remains (as yet) unresolved though, hmmmm.
White ground lekythoi by the Achilles Painter at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |