Plein Air Painting

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A friend of mine was visiting from Maryland and wanted to go to Art Palm Beach Show.  I’m so glad she asked as it was a marvelous show.  That’s one of the great benefits of visiting friends; they open eyes of possibilities.  It’s like when John lived in New York City; he hadn’t visited any of the sights until I came down from Boston.

It’s the 13th time the event has been held and it’s billed as a dynamic event in America’s premier winter destination, hosting international galleries.    It’s a wide-ranging presentation including contemporary art, photography, video, installation art, public sculpture and design.  One nice touch is part of the proceeds of the food and beverage sales go to the local art community.  It almost made a four-dollar bottle of water worth the price.  After spending that much, we made a point of savoring it as if it were a fine bottle of wine.

Since she is interested in mid-century furniture and my passion is watercolor, we did a good job of covering the entire fair.   However, what we both enjoy was “Risk,” an installation constructed from sneaker parts by Fredrick Uribi.  It was a fascinating exercise in the reuse of materials with, of course, a very strong Green message.

Later in the week, I went to the Norman Rockwell exhibit at MoAFL  with a few of my friends.  Although I had seen many of the same paintings in the Rockwell museum, in Stockbridge,  MA while on my summer sketch tour, it was great to see them in the expansive space of the museum.  The highlight for me was the room that displayed every single Saturday Evening Post Rockwell did on one wall, while the series of drawings showing the artists’ process and the final painting for ‘Southern Justice” was on the other wall.  The exhibit is a t MoAFL until 2/7/2010 so there is still time to see it.

In other weekly news, I went to the Palm Beach Society’s Paint Out at the American Orchid Society.  The cold snap had wrought a sea of change on the vegetation.  Much of it has suffered severely.  Fortunately, inside the greenhouse things were still spectacular.   I spent a lot of time in there.

In the art education department, I am again taking a figure drawing class at the Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale.    Also, I’m taking a 3 day workshop called Creative Watercolor given by Miles Batt and sponsored by the Delray Art League.  I’m learning a lot and cannot wait for a block of studio time to put into practice all these new skills and techniques.

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Time has flown swiftly.   I was juried into the Delray Art League, and John and I started participating in their recurring show/sale, “Artists in the Park.”  It hasn’t been as steep a learning curve as it is for some artists because John used to own an Internet bookstore that did live sales at shows and conventions so we’ve had a bit of experience with selling from under a tent.

The first time through we didn’t make any sales, but the “old hands” tell us that this weekend is the start of the busy season now that all the Snowbirds have abandoned their snowdrifts for the beaches of Florida.

Paint-in with PBWS

I also joined The Palm Beach Watercolor Society and I’ve been participating in their “paint-ins” and “paint-outs;” these are opportunities for the members with a live model and lots of friendly interaction.  They are held at the Boca Community Center for the paint-ins.  These have been a wonderful adjunct to the figure study course I took in the Fall and I’m planning to take again.  For the paint-outs we have been going to the American Orchid Society for plein aire painting.

Right now, I’m in a show by The Palm Beach Watercolor Society.  It was a wonderful experience to go to the reception and seeing all the work by the Society’s members.  I’m planning on entering more of their shows.  It’s a good way to get exposure and to meet the other artists.

I’ve also taken to making copies of the Old Masters in order to learn the body parts better so my figures are more natural.

In December, John and I went on a cruise of the western Caribbean that yielded a number of good paintings and a number of reference photographs that, over time, I’ll use to create watercolors that show scenes in Grand Cayman, Isle de Roatan, Belize and Cozumel.

One highlight of the cruise was the submarine cruise we took off Cayman.  The experience was like being in plein aire or plein l’eau.  Now, I regret not taking my paints on the dive, but I took plenty of photographs as we cruised by reefs, dipping as low as 150 feet at times.  It was an interesting experience, sitting dry, in air conditioned comfort as the sea bottom cruises by only a few feet away.  I’m sure you’ll be seeing paintings on my site soon that will be a direct result of that dive.

I’ve been notified that I’ll be the featured artist in the Remodernist group on the website Red Bubble.

After a bit of procrastination, I sent in my application for the Vermont Artists’ Week.  If I get in, and I feel the chances are good, I’ll be going up there for a week in April.  If all that works out and I’m comfortable with the environment and the staff, I may do one of their longer residencies.   Those seem like a great opportunity.

On a personal note, the holidays were great fun.  At Thanksgiving, five of my nieces were together in Florida and I had a chance to paint will all of them.  They range in age from three to nine; each has her own style untainted by “formal art education.”

The nine-year-old was experimental, looking to try the techniques that I had used and to test out various tools and brushes.  The seven-year-old was more objective.  She plunked down this little stuffed turkey and “just drew it,” quite well in fact.  The six-year-old leaned toward impressionism with a free flowing style.  The five-year-old was “my little Jackson Pollock.”  I’d mixed paints for them in little cups.  She picked one up and dumped it on the paper, looking back at me for some sign of approval or disapproval.  I said, “You can do that, but don’t mix them ALL together or they will come out looking like mud.”  I kept mixing colors for her and she kept dumping.  The three-year-old was just at the point where she was learning  to control her brush with the help of the nine-year-old.

I recommend painting with children if you want to have fun and loosen up.  It’s hard to be uptight about the outcome when you are painting with them; they are so free.

Right now, I’m working on finishing up my “cruise series #1.”  If all goes well, I’ll have a number of those ready for the next outdoor sale.

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It’s time for another blog.  It’s not that I haven’t been inspired but I’ve been taking a number of classes that have been enjoyable, but they have taken time.  One is a figure drawing class in The Fort Lauderdale Figure Drawing School, which is part of Nova Southeastern University.  The instructor is a wonderful, classically-trained artist.  I’m learning a tremendous amount in each class each week the figure looks better and I can see places where improvement is needed.

I’m also taking a water color class from another wonderful instruction at the local high school as part of Palm Beach Community Educator Program.  The class is in an open style so each student can take maximum advantage of the teacher regardless of their skill level.

Another thing I’ve done is applied to the Delray Art League.  I had to bring in three paintings to be evaluated and was accepted as a member.   About the same time, I also joined the Palm Beach watercolor society.   That’s another great group.

Today, I’m spending part of the day at The Green Cay Nature Center in Delray Beach.  Now that the Florida weather has broken, it’s a beautiful clear day.

 

t was a lovely five mile bicycle trip from my home, and now I’m standing in a recreated hut used by the Miccosukee and Seminole tribes.  The roof is covered with cabbage palm fronds.  This kind of building was in use when the Spanish conquistadors arrived in the 1500.  The style was popular because it could be taken down and moved when invaders moved through the area.  It’s also a particularly sturdy construction since this particular hut has survived not one, but two, hurricanes in the past few years.

As anyone who has seen my body of work knows, I’m inspired by nature, and this is the perfect place for me to sit, paints in hand.  Right now, now I’m watching a flock of ducks fighting over some food and mulling how I can capture the incredible dynamics of the conflict in with is essentially a static medium.   I just wish I had the eye of Charles Thévenin in his La prise de la Bastille or George Bellows, who did the classic A Stag at Sharkey’.

Sadly, the recent mini-drought has reduced what is normally an impressive expanse of water to a number of smaller ponds and I suspect the conflict I’m observing will soon be the rule rather than the exception.    Still, it’s a wonderfully active ecosystem, turtles and frogs sunning themselves on logs and a number of alligators arrayed on the shore, mouths wide open, to allow the commensal animals to clean his teeth.   After the fray with the ducks, it’s nice that my last image is cooperation.

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Blue and Purple Hibiscus

Blue and Purple Hibiscus

I have created this watercolor painting of a blue and purple hibiscus measuring 10″ x 14″ to benefit the Arthritis Foundation.. Limited signed prints are being produced for $125. All net proceeds are going to the Arthritis Foundation.

I will be walking in the Let’s Move Together Walk on 11-14-09 in Lake Worth in support of the Arthritis Foundation, hopefully the 3 mile walk, but at least the 1 mile walk and I’ll be wearing a blue hat indicating that I am a walker with arthritis. I’d love to have you walk with me! Please purchase a print of the blue-purple hibiscus, all net proceeds of which go to the Arthritis foundation. Or, if you’d like to donate directly, please visit my personal donation support web page or make your check out to the Arthritis Foundation and mail it to me at 4823 S Lee Rd, Delray Beach, FL 33445

Thank you in advance for your support!

 

Donna Walsh

www.donnawalshwarren.com

561-948-1542

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Alter at the Church of Nazareth, Israel. Photo taken 1981 on a tour of the Holy Land. /
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alter at Nazareth

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What does art have to do with spirituality.   Now, I accept the difference between religion and spirituality.   Both are an important part of my life as is art.   I wanted to examine the links.   Scholars have defined art as: “the process or product of deliberately arranging elements in a way that appeals to the senses or emotions.    Art is a simulation of feelings, expressions, and ideas, communicated to elicit, provoke, inspire, and create those feelings, expressions, and ideas in an observer of the visual art work.”   In short, art seeks to communicate.   Universally, you find symbolism in all art.   In some art, we may have lost the cultural “language,” but even if we don’t understand the message, we can feel it trying to speak to us.   This symbolism often seems to be spiritual in nature.   Spirituality is based on a sense of connection, a sense of connection that goes beyond the physical world and one’s self.   It can include emotional experience, including those of awe or reverence.   If you’ve been reading these blogs, you know that I’ve been long interested in the fusion of art and science.    However, I accept that the scientific method is not well suited to validating either religion or spirituality.   Some of the dichotomy is that while science endeavors to “know;” art endeavors to “express.” Of course, they are not completely things of different planes.    The things at science learns find themselves expressed as art.   This makes me wonder about the purpose of art, especially as it relates to spirituality.   In this, I take my lead from an address by Pope Pius XII to a group of Italian artists received in audience on April 8, 1952: “The function of all art lies in fact in breaking through the narrow and tortuous enclosure of the finite, in which man is immerged while living here below, and in providing a window to the infinite for his hungry soul.”   Obviously, one doesn’t have to buy into the particular flavor of religion that the Pope was representing to recognize that the phrase does carry much of what some artists seek to convey when they are dealing with a spiritual subject.   A more mundane, tripartite breakdown of artistic components could be expressed as physical, social or personal. The most easily defined category is physical.   No one can argue that even today art is an important component of most day to day items, from chairs to clothing to whole buildings to, if people like Paolo Soleri have their way, entire cities.   These categories often overlap in a given piece of art.   A warrior seeking to “stand out from the mob” might well have the image of a martial god carved upon his shield.   This would not only identify him from a distance but would be a statement of from whom he derives his strength and resolve.   Many artists have felt strongly that they have to make a statement about their culture.   This may take the form of idealizing and honoring the culture or of criticizing it by making what is generally invisible, through conditioning or neglect, visible.   Without a personal reason for doing art, I doubt much would be produced.  The incentive may be the sheer joy of producing beauty or of stimulating thought, but bags of gold and silver provide an incentive equally powerful.   Here I’d like to concentrate on the personal component where the artist is trying to some spiritual or symbolic.   The symbols in art reflect a multi-dimensional reality.   We start to see the spiritual aspects of the artist’s intention.   Looking back in the history of art, one can sense the constant presence of this spiritual intention.   Take the earliest art known, the Venus of Willendorf sculpture that was created sometime between 25,000-20,000 BCE.   At first glance, it is a crude female figure much pregnant and lacking detail.    It is likely it was either the representation of a specific fertility goddess or is a general fertility charm.   In any case, it has meaning far beyond its first appearance, being an attempt on the part of humanity to influence powers beyond its ken.   It simply amazes me that this earliest know art has this art-spirituality link.   This concept came to me recently when I visited the African Art Exhibition at the Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art.    There was a multitude of masks and other things used in their rituals.    I was struck at the many ways these people used art as an interface to communicate with their gods or as objects of devotion to ease the passage of loved ones into the next world and give them standing and status there. This seems to be consistent over time.   Art and religious were conjoined largely because generally the Church had the kind of money needed to endow artists, and the rich outside the Church were obsessed in being able to transfer their status from this world to the next. As the societies because more worldly, the short lived Metaphysical Art movement of the early 1900’s sprang from the urge to explore the imagined inner life of familiar objects when represented out of their explanatory context.   Also, Surrealism , as defined by the founder, Breton, is based on the belief in the superior reality of certain forms of previously neglected associations, in the omnipotence of dream, in the disinterested play of thought.   It tends to ruin once and for all other psychic mechanisms and to substitute itself for them in solving all the principal problems of life. And so to the present.   One of the artists I’ve been communicating with through FaceBook told me about Vedic art which presents itself as a way to achieve a higher state of consciousness through artistic creativity, to create beyond the demands of technique and result-producing.   Some of their material meshes nicely with my present ponderings about art and creativity.   There have been times when I pined for the “good old days” as in the Renaissance where artists lived in communities and learned from one another, but I have come to the conclusion that I’m in an even better world.    We do have a vibrant artists community here in Southern Florida, but through the Internet I have both direct and indirect contact with tens of thousands of artists all over the world who can expose me to concepts like Vedic art, something that might well not have happened in the more conventional schools of the past.   This brings me back to how I came to be identified with the Remodernists.   First a brief definition from RedBubble, a group that I’ve found to be very valuable in my growth as an artist: “Briefly, Remodernists do not think that Modern Art is rubbish, we do not believe that communication via art is impossible, and we do believe that one of the legitimate goals of an artist can be the sincere expression of an authentic personal spirituality.”   This, of course, resonated with me, and it seems I’ve become a link in a chain for accepting it and passing it on.    I recently received an email through FaceBook saying that the writer hand read about my recognition that I was a Remodernist at heart and from what I had written she found the same feelings in her heart.   I think there is a great desire to find a meaning beyond the everyday, the physical, the mundane, and that desire is what brings spirituality to the fore.   Over the past few years,  I’ve been exploring some of the new thoughts of consciousness and metaphysics; factor in my new, practical interest in art and I can feel a synergy forming.   It’s not yet stable or tangible for me to grasp more than the fascinating outline,  but I do find myself being called to express the spiritual essences that I seem to sense.   So this is where I find myself on this dim and fog shrouded road,  filled with both thrill and unease. Ahead,  I sense wonder but know I have a long way to go before I find what I hope is ahead.

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/At the Barton FairEquestrian Competition at the fairadvertising the fair
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As the end of my last week in Vermont comes to a close, I’ve been thinking of my approach and motivation as an artist and how my sketch tour has played into that.

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For example, John and I were at the Orleans Country Agricultural Fair, and it was wonderful.  I’ve never been to an event like this and I was delighted to see all the handcrafts, the prize winning vegetables and pies, and to watch the children petting and grooming horses and other livestock.  I was amazed at how inspirational the experience was for the artist in me.  I can’t wait to translate the feelings and images into paintings and share this little piece of Americana, to show others what life is like up here.

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The sketch tour, not to mention my broken ankle, has forced me into a pace, a schedule and rhythm so I have a nice schedule as to when to read, when to paint, when to study as well as ample time to practice which has just been wonderful.  I’ve painted every single day.

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I’ve found that Turner used to do a summer sketch tour every year of his life and that led to an enormous output.   I felt a great nostalgia or connection when I read that.

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The approach I’ve taken is first to master the technique while trying not being a slave to it.  When I go to paint something I want to be able to use technique as a tool and not be frustrated by my inability to do that.

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I’ve focused my attention and practice to water color techniques.  I was reminded of this fact when I recently used acrylic to create postcard for someone who has been wonderful and supportive about the new direction my life is taking.  However, despite the acrylic medium, I found myself painting with water color techniques and aiming for a watercolor feel and look.  Obviously, I couldn’t send an actual watercolor postcard because the image was unlikely to survive to its destination.

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I like to interact with the subject.  Up to now, that has largely been nature.  What I mean by “interacting” in a sense of wonderment, joy or whatever it is I feel when I see my subject.  Even the most mundane things can create this feeling.  For example, Verizon’s cell phone service is extremely spotty in this area.  To put it in their own terms, most of the time they can’t “hear me now.”  Perforce, I regularly find myself in the middle of a cornfield about a half mile from where we are staying in order to keep in touch.  But still, that cornfield is inspirational.

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Also, there are so many butterflies here.  Every time I’m sitting outside there are usually two or three.  To watch them flittering about, gives me, brush in hand, a delightful feeling.

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Once I develop that response, I try to communicate it in my painting.

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I’m still not sure how I would categorize my style.  I was quite young when the modern abstract movement was reaching its crest.  While I didn’t understand it at the time, now, with it as part of my cultural environment, I’m becoming more appreciative.

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However, My style seems largely influenced by the impressionists.  I don’t want to be a “mere recorder” as some of the post-impressionist artists criticized the earlier movement, and tried to move beyond.  I want part of myself to be part of each work.

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Part of me sees the process of creation as much like part of the scientific method, collecting data.  I feel that when I’m studying, photographing or looking at various subjects.  I’m now seeing them in a different way.  The images, even of the minutest object, have an enormity, an immenseness, that calls for a reduction, a distilling, to allow the uncovering of aspects that have been hidden by the sheer mass.

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When I synthesizing a painting and communicate my response, I feel I am summarizing the data in much the same way the report of an experiment or study has a conclusion wherein readers are invited to comment.

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In the final construction, I’m continually amazed that individuals have such different responses.  It’s gratifying to know that there is something intangible yet quite real that goes on in the process of creation.  Being part of the process is one of the major things that has drawn me to art.

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My motivation is related to my approach, responding to the subject and then communicating that response.  The entire work, both seen and unseen, evokes a very mystical and spiritual response, and that is what I’m trying to convey.

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Art of any generation is a reflection of its surroundings and culture.  I see myself as an East Coast Remodernist artist.  I try to paint in a representational manner, but in a manner that creates a spiritual feeling in the work.  These four weeks in Vermont have certainly clarified much of that for me.

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As this stay in Vermont comes to a close, I’m looking forward to the trip home during which I’ll stopping to try to capture some of the Appalachian atmosphere.

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Today’s blog is going to be on design.  When I first approached doing art seriously, my impression was that painting was simply spontaneous.  If one had good drawing techniques, a work would simply “evolve.”

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As I, myself, evolve, I find that this isn’t sufficient.

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When I’d look at a completed painting, I’d come to recognize that what I had in my hands was not what was “in my head” when I began.  Obviously, something was missing.

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As I noted before, I’d concentrated on technique under the assumption that if I had a good set of tools that, in itself, would be enough to execute my vision.

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The epiphany came through an anonymous quote, titled Road to Mastery.

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“Unconscious incompetence

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Conscious incompetence

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Conscious competence

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Unconscious competence.”

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I realized I was on a cusp between conscious incompetence and conscious competence.  A feeling that was both comforting and disquieting, but now I have a goal, “Unconscious competence.”

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Another quote that real resonated with me is from James Whistler, “Talent is the ability to do hard work in a consistently constructive direction over a long period of time.  Many people have told me I have “talent,” but I feel that anything that has turned out good is the result of working hard on it.  Whistler puts it in a perspective that is more comfortable.

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Whistler, himself has been styled as an “art for art’s sake person;” however, for him, it seems the subject was secondary and subordinate to the design.  This is important to me because sometimes, I feel overwhelmed when by  all the myriad issues and techniques: design, competition, color, technique.  Reading, Whistler’s work convinced me to focus on design but I thought it best to begin by focus on one aspect, “Designing with value masses.”

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I love color and am attracted to artists who use color with an intelligent flair.  I was lead to Delacroix considered one of the first artists to study and use color in something of a pre-impressionistic way.  One of his quotes that particularly touched me is “If, to the composition that is already interesting by virtue of the choice of subject, you add an arrangement of lines that reinforces the impression, a chiaroscuro that arrests the imagination, and color that fits the character of the work, you have solved a far more difficult problem and rise superior.  Harmony, with all its combinations, adapted to a single song: it is a musical tendency. ”

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It seems intuitive to me that music is, at its heart, mathematical, but I’m struggling with applying it to art.  Looking at it as pure design helps.

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I’m including in this blog one picture with in which I’ve been able apply this was inspired by a boat trip John and I did in Boston Harbor.   I tried I to compose the view of the skyline by dividing it in thirds and using an “L shaped” armature to add to interest.

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I’m not sure it was completely successful but I was reasonably pleased with the value masses.  It is interested that when I “applied the rules” the picture was improved.    I still think this needs a little drawing help but I’m using this study from my travel journal as a stepping stone for a future painting.  I hope to be able to show the progress.

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Boston from our boat in the harbor
Boston from our boat in the harbor

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Donnas Blog 80609Today, I find myself in the beautiful NorthEast Kingdom, to be specific, just outside the village of Barton in northern Vermont, looking out over the incredible horizon dominated by Jay Peak in the distance.  My broken ankle has proved a blessing in some ways.  It’s forced me to take on a more measured pace, for one thing.

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In this retreat-like setting, I have been thinking of my education as an artist. I’ve been deeply influenced by The Art Spirit by Robert Henri.  A font of inspiring philosophy and practical counsel, he advises that regardless of the quality of the school, artists’ educations are, at base, in their own hand.  Basically all education must be self-taught.

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This is deeply reassuring since so far, I’ve been largely self-taught.  I’ve read a number of books and have taken some courses at the Delray Beach Cultural Center, including basic and landscape drawing.  I found the outdoor class to be most beneficial.  One of the primary benefits was the opportunity to work with other artists and to get feedback from Ralph Papa, a fine artist and dedicated educator.

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Another book I’ve been reading is Juliette Aristide’s Classical Drawing Atelier.  She discusses the resurgence of the classical tradition of  students going into the studio of a successful artist and “learning from the hand of a master.”  However, while I find the philosophy attractive, it doesn’t seem something that I can do in the here and now.  It must have been wonderful for a Venetian youth, but I’m a married American woman.  It’s just not practical.  Taking courses or having the opportunity to be in a studio seems to be much more “do-able.”  This has led me to explore artist’s residencies.  Indeed one of the reasons for this trip was to visit the Vermont Studio Center, which is less than an hour’s drive from where we are staying.

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The Center offers four-or-more week residencies for visual artists and writers and is the largest artist-in-residence program in the country.   The founders’ original hope was for a few summer residencies, but now they host upward of 50 residents a week and 600 a year.  A single fee includes room and board in a semi-retreat-like setting with a private, 24-hour-a-day studio.  What seems most valuable to me is the opportunity to interact with the many other artists-in-residence as well as the many visiting artists.  They have a burgeoning calendar of well-known artists who give talks and consult with the students.

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When we visited the Studio Center, the experience really reverberated with me.  Both staff and temporary residents seemed very happy and relaxed and were certainly very welcoming.   We were shown some of the galleries and visited the communal dining hall.

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The Center has taken over much of what was “down-town” Johnson.  Beginning with an old mill, 25 years ago, a husband-wife team of an architect and a painter expanded through both what were private and public buildings while retaining the rural Vermont ambiance.  For example, when the town replaced the aging fire station with a newer one, the original one, underwent a renaissance as “The Fire Station Studio.”  The town just bustles with artistic energy.  Adding to this delightful atmosphere is a plethora of outside art and sculpture in almost every park and open-space.

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This was an inspiring visit for me, particularly because John and I have spoken often about escaping the boiler-room heat and humidity of Florida’s summer.  I will certainly be applying for next year’s admissions. Also because Johnson State College is nearby, I’ll be looking forward to interacting with the students and faculty there.  I hold a B.S. and an M.S. in the sciences so I’m certainly a fan of formal education and have occasionally considered an M.F.A., one of which is offered by JSC.  However, for now, The Center seems to offer just for what I’m looking.

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A lovely drive over scenic roads, wonderful welcoming people and a glimpse at an artistic heaven, a perfect day.

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In popular literature, the artist is an ethereal being, unconcerned with the crass and material world.  Last Sunday, this illusion was rudely shattered, along with my ankle (in three places).

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I was innocently showering, in preparation for departing on a journey of artistic discovery including, I hoped visits to numerous museums and much time spent with my beloved brushes, when a slippery floor and gravity transformed the museums into Delray Medical Center and the brushes into the full panoply of the surgical suite.broken leg bear

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Now, I’m hopping about with a walker and riding in a wheelchair… and still in Delray Beach.  Fortunately, I still have my reading and am drawing inspiration from one on Monet.  You see, Monet found his artistic calling during a period of medical convalescence.  The then lawyer Monet was given a present of painting materials from his mother while he was recovering from appendicitis, and the world lost a lawyer and gained an artist….  a double gain in most people’s view of society.

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Maybe I’ll find my muse amid the continual frustrations of being a one-legged woman in the land of the fully-abled.

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While Monet made a huge change in his life, I don’t feel that I’m really making a big one in mine,.  I’ve always found beauty in things like gardening and cooking, the science of the recipe and the art of the multifaceted presentation.  The connections, the parallels, are there for anyone to feel.

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I’ve been pondering more and more the fusion of art and science and wondering why for most of my life I’ve seen my course to be mainly within the sciences.  I don’t view this with regret, only with a kind of bemused realization as the connections fall together.

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My inspiration is Leonardo da Vinci, the true master of combining art and science.  He was the one who changed concept of “artist” from “mere craftsman” to “genius.”  However, the process was a gradual one, changing only as brilliant historians, capable of thinking out-of-the-box, came to realize his notebooks contained scientific as well as artistic musings.

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This sets me wondering, in The Great Scheme of Things, what is the relationship of art to science?  Leonardo’s paintings don’t overtly trumpet scientific principles.  They are Art; they are Beautiful; they nourish the Soul.  However, I wonder if I can find a way to make scientific principles more “real” to those who simply experience it rather than formally study it, in much the way they experience gravity in much the same way I experienced it in my shower.

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I have an intuitive, gut feeling that it can be done.  I think that art can illuminate what it is that our world is manifesting.   Art reflects more than the society and culture of which it is part.  I see it reflecting all of the elements of its era and world.

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I’m struggling with this concept, but some images have come to me, and as I struggle to translate them into my work, I hope I’ll be able to bring some clarity to you… and to me.

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Recently, I had the opportunity to look after my great-niece for a week.   Since she likes to paint, we made a Father’s Day gift for her dad, my nephew.  While I had my own ideas about what she should paint, I soon discovered that she had her own ideas.

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She was insistent that she wanted to visit an art museum; however, in talking with her, I soon discovered that she thought the museum was a place where she’d get to display her own art, sort of a brick-and-mortar public-access cable channel.  After I showed her a video of an actual art museum, she was disabused of this notion and decided that such a trip could wait until later in her career.

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Lessons:               You have to believe in yourself.

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Don’t let the “common wisdom” deter you from your artistic freedom.

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Yielding to her six-year-old force majeure, I gave her some paints and paper and she immediately set out following her own vision.   When I asked what she was creating, she replied that it was a picture of the ocean and some fish, a topic with which she is very familiar having an avid fisherman for a father who enjoys her company on his expeditions.  She was amazingly accurate in showing the physical details of the various aquatic species.

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When I asked her about the colors she was using, she replied that she likes turquoise because “it has all the colors in the ocean.”  It was quite impressive to see in one so young that she could convey “the experience of the ocean” as she perceived it.

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Lesson:

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Don’t be afraid to use bold colors.

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She was using watercolors from my set, but I also gave her some gouache paint because it was an opaque paint that gave her the ability to paint over previous strokes.  Her style, it seemed, was to use bold colors with an overpainting.  It was a revitalizing experience to see her enthusiasm and uninhibited style.

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Lesson:                 Don’t let a canvas limit you.

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Instead of living with the frustration of running out of room, this mini-Matisse, presented me with the unfinished work and demanded that I append another sheet of paper to the edge of the one she had filled in.  This yielded a panoramic view of the ocean and fish that was 22 inches wide.  Some of the fish were shown swimming freely and others could only be glimpsed behind camouflaging seaweed.

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She had seen that many of my pictures had been framed by my husband, John, and asked if he would make one for her picture.  Naturally, he concurred.  What man can resist a six-year-old’s pleading eyes?

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That was my final lesson:            Promote yourself as best you can and make the work as appealing as possible.

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The overall thing that I learned from this experience was to be free… just be free.  Your spirit, desire and voice will come through.

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