Saturday, December 1, 2012

Daily Sketches: House of the Rising Sun


Here are a couple of the sketches that are inside my current sketchbook/studio planner.  I've incorporated a daily sketch or drawing as a means of warming up to the day ahead or studio session.  It began as a morning activity, but sometimes it's fun to see what the day presents for inspiration.

Elton John sings, "Sad songs say so much."  Well, I say coat racks say so much...
or they are a fun contorted mess to try to draw.
 
 
 

This house sits across from us and along the front it has a labeled sticker that says
"House of the Rising Sun" (Great song, though we're not in New Orleans).  There are also psalms from the Bible written out on poster board that are posted on the entry gate to the driveway, in addition to a no trespassing sign.
It's nothing to judge, I just simply am confused by the combination of the three and curious as to what personalities live inside.  It's a daily puzzle as I ride by on my bike and it's become a habit to imagine possible characters who would live inside.



Wednesday, November 28, 2012

A Lesson in Action: What an Art Teacher Does

Today I was confronted with being a butt of a joke for dedicating my life to art and art education.  It is awful (and hurtful to those of us who are artists and art teachers) that there is so much continued misunderstanding concerning what an art teacher does and why art education is important.  Evidently we have left some gaps of information and it has created a stumbling block that we keep coming up to over and over again.  Art Education is no longer the glue-macaroni-to-a-piece-of-paper activity that some may have experienced.  It has changed and progressed dramatically.  This is my brief attempt of filling in some of those gaps of misunderstanding by means of sharing a typical art lesson from inside the classroom.


Example of Student Work:  Hope Tiles
 
 
 
Planning:  Before the school year began, I spent my entire summer writing curriculum for the grades that I taught.  Think all teachers have a carefree summer?  They seldom do.  This particular lesson was planned out under an overarching theme of "Persuasion and Visual Culture" that I chose based upon the 6th grade Visual Art State Standards and their level of development.  I chose this due to the need for the students to recognize and question the messages and visual information popular culture is sending them through symbolism, especially since they are becoming a prime target group for advertisers and the media.  The lesson covered seventeen state standards complete with vocabulary, mathematics, hands on learning with clay and the process of ceramics, art history, current news topics and social issues, as well as whole class and small group discussions, group critique, and written self-evaluation.  I broke it down into days so it wouldn't seem so overwhelming - the whole lesson is eleven pages long.  I was glad that I planned it out into day by day progress due to the necessary notes of revision I scribbled across the printed pages as we went along.  The point is is that art takes what students have learned in the other subjects and outside of the school walls and allows the student to deepen their understanding and gain mastery.  In order to do this, I need to be on top of my game with art history, current topics, different art processes and media, and the core subjects.  I need to be able to research all of these subjects and creatively put them together to provide a solid, effective unit that is cohesive.  I need to be on my toes and be able to revise or completely change the curriculum from year to year in order to stay relevant and best serve the students and their educational needs.
 
 
Covered Subjects in a Single Lesson:  It's easy to see that the students had a wide array of interests and the results of this project are not cookie-cutter, but instead reflect their individuality.  This is important!  In so many other subjects, there is only one correct answer or one correct format that is important to a successful outcome.  Discussions in the classroom were lively and interesting as the students talked about current issues that were important to them in brainstorming sessions with their class of peers for this project.  Above we see their unique symbols about animal care and rights, taking care of the environment, creativity and energy, and the global community - and that's just four responses!  They learned more about themselves and using visual communication effectively, as well as each other's interests.  As a result of engaging the students' interests, they were motivated to spend much more energy on the clay project and researching their subjects outside of school.  Motivation was not an issue.  In fact, this project acted as a catalyst for family dinner discussions for several of the students, which only helps to support the powerful communal effect of art and its impact.
 
 
The Process of Creating:  It's important to encourage the students to experiment and take risks with their projects.  So many students would begin this project with timid, shallow carving and very little building up of the surface. They were doing great, but needed an extra bit of encouragement to go further with it. They were afraid of messing up.  When in the classroom, any of my past students will tell you that I was rarely standing still. Instead, I was continuously making my way around the room to meet with each one of them as much as possible to encourage, guide, and support them during a work session.  Some of the materials they may never have used before and they need to be encouraged to go for it and test out different ways of using them.  So many students are afraid of messing up, but mistakes are sometimes the most powerful teachers by providing extensive use of creative problem solving.  They can become happy accidents too!  This idea is the very backbone of science and invention.  We have to be willing to risk failure in order to progress and we need to nurture this philosophy of mind every chance we get with the future generations. 
 
 
In-Process Critique and Fine Tuning:  We are a learning community.  In-process critiques were good experiences for the students to relate to each other's creations and provide constructive feedback while establishing a respectful, trustworthy learning environment.  Craftsmanship and attention to detail were incredibly important to the success of their tile and were important in taking their designs to the next level.  After guided small group critiques, the students knew what to strive for and to see their own progress.  They gave helpful tips to one another as well - some were irritated with the fussiness of the clay surface, but through experimentation with the carving tools and water, they came up with successful approaches for clarifying their artworks and would share this with their group.  Several professions rely upon craftsmanship and/or attention to detail.  It's not uncommon for those going into forensics or into the police force to take art classes in order to improve upon their observational skills and attention for detail.  We use craftsmanship everyday through our handwriting, in addition to cooking a good meal, knitting a sweater for Auntie Fay, building cabinets, rebuilding a classic car, cutting hair, the list goes on and on in everyday life for everyone, not just artists.
 
 
Evaluation and Reflection:  It doesn't mean anything without evaluating and reflecting.  What one did successfully or what one would change provides fodder for moving forward and gaining knowledge.  Often I would have the students self-evaluate their work, after all, who has a better vantage point of effort and intent than the creator.  This would count for a percentage of their grade.  One would ask, "Well why wouldn't everyone give themselves an A+."  You would think they would, but they don't.  Actually, more often the opposite is true - they grade themselves too harshly due to either humility or feeling insecure.  The students who do this are often times brilliant students who put in tons of effort, but they cannot see their own brilliance.  It's my job to ensure that they see it and encourage their confidence in themselves.  Now art teacher turned counselor?  Haha.  Well, really, any teacher would tell you the same.  We do this a lot.  We need to not only improve the students' cognition, but also support their emotional well-being.  Since creative fields yield countless right answers,  students tend to doubt their confidence and skills.  The rest of their grade is my responsibility to give them feedback over their result, the art elements/concepts/goals, improvements, and participation according to the rubric specially made for that given project.  The students are made aware of this grading rubric from the beginning so that there are no surprises.  Yes, art is subjective, but with reflective and responsible rubrics, it can be evaluated successfully.  Just because art itself can be playful and fun doesn't mean that it's not hard work.  It is hard work that requires perseverance and the students should be rewarded with the grades they earn.  This again allows for feedback for the student to build their confidence and allow them to see how to get to the next level and ultimately, mastery.
 
 
In summary, I do not teach art for arts sake.  I do not teach art in order for students to just scribble upon pages, or color neatly inside coloring book lines.  I do not teach art as just a fun thing to do to pass time.  I do not teach art in order to offer an "easy A" class, and waste student time and tax payer's dollars.  I do not teach art in order to provide classroom teachers with state mandated plan time.  I do not teach art in order for it to be considered a "special" class that is the equivalent of indoor recess.
 
I teach art education because I am an artist that wants to give back to the community by guiding young minds to think critically about the world around them and be active in solving complex problems.  I passionately believe in the power of art to incorporate all topics and subjects as a means to develop a better sense of connection and knowledge about our world while fostering communication and understanding.
 
Though hard economic times have gave way to cuts to art education programs, that does not mean I am any less of a professional than any other teacher or business professional.  I have worked hard and am still learning.  Absolutely everything I do in a classroom is founded in educational research which is constantly improving as we learn more about our cognitive abilities.  I know that there are a trillion things that I did in the classroom that are all just parts of being a teacher that I did not mention (classroom management, motivation strategies, establishing learning community relations, etc.).
 
If you're a fellow art teacher, please feel free to add to this about what all you do on a typical day in the classroom.  I would really love for this type of mentality about teachers, and specifically art teachers, to be stomped out.  We shouldn't be treated as anything less than hard-working professionals who have worked hard to achieve what we have and will continue to do so.

Monday, November 26, 2012

A Work in Progress





In the studio the other day - a work in progress for "The September Issue" series.
 


Saturday, November 24, 2012

Coming Out of Hermit Blog Status

It has been quite awhile since I have posted.  I feel that this year has been one to be quiet and just do the work, so that is exactly what I have done.  I'm looking forward to begin sharing again on this blog, as well as on my facebook artist page.

"Drama at the Bus Stop" 2012
Krystal Booth
Oil and wallpaper on canvas
24x18"
 
 
This is a very recent work that was finished and placed upon Etsy.  I'm moving forward with this series - "The September Issue" - and have accumulated a notebook half full of the idea development so far in addition to laying down the prep work for the works to come.  This obsessive planning was done while completing a commission, and so when the time came, I was able to dive right in.  More will be on the way in addition to the quick sketches and drawings I have incorporated into my daily practice. 
 
I hope this post finds you and your families well in this holiday season, and thank you so much for reading.  I'll be posting on a consistent basis again, and am looking forward to hearing from you!
 
Love to all!

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Embracing Mess and Cleaning a Palette

Over the past year I have improved upon cleaning my paint palette after every couple of sessions instead of once a month or after a painting was finished...or so I thought.  Somehow, I don't know how, but I found my palette looking rather filled with hardened clumps and mixed swatches of paint.  Someone was painting without cleaning up...was it me?  Yuuup.  So this is how to clean a pallete that is ridiculously coated and could be an abstract painting all on it's own.


1.  Assess the damage.  Pretty bad, indeed.  You could at this point cry about the loss of paint, or you can embrace the evidence of working.  You have overcome resistance and have shown up and created!  You are alive!  You are creating!  You have a mess!  Now, clean it up for crap sake.


2.  Get a couple of papertowels and your palette knife.  Begin scraping off the paint and then begin wipe it on the papertowel.  Reflect about the paintings you created with these colors if it brings you comfort.  Were they failures or successes?  What did you learn?  What would you change about them if you did them again?  Or you can do what I usually do and just go brain dead by looking at how pretty the colors are.  Oh, so pretty.


3.  Usually I like to get more paint up by scraping it, but this time they wouldn't budge.  So onward to this step:  put a healthy amount of dish detergeant around the surface.


4.  Fill with hot tap water and allow to soak for about 5-10 minutes.  You can use this time for sketching out a new idea, singing at the top of your lungs to Seasons of Love on the Rent soundtrack, country line dancing with the random people who just let themselves into your home, steeping tea, or playing fetch with your cat.


5.  Part the bubbles and admire the color.  Good.  Now continue scratching them off calmly.  Don't go all crazy going back and forth with your palette knife here.  That will get you nowhere.  Just be as calm as an archeologist uncovering years of dirt from a relic.  Don't worry about fishing out what you scrape off - you can skim the water out while carefully getting the flakes to stay in as they will gather on the bottom of the palette (don't let the oil paint go down your drain for multiple reasons).  Then wipe out with a papertowel or cloth.  Repeat steps 3-5 until it is clean.




6.  Voila!  A clean palette ready for use.  Usually this is a good time to make a resolution to never let it get that bad again, but it will.  In the grand scheme of things, who cares?  You're working and beating that monster of resistance who can have so many excuses for you.  Messy or clean, whatever gets you to the canvas is a good thing. 



Enjoy your day and thank you for reading!  If you have any other tips for this process, please comment and share.  Thanks!

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Photo Montage of Playing Hooky

It has been a whirl wind of a month and a half!  I can't believe that it's been so long since last posting, but I have something to show for it!


A great college buddy and fabulous artist, Steve Blume, came to stay with us for week from Indiana.  This is Steve.




This photo was taken at a Korean Barbeque place in Beaverton.  I believe that our photos are by the entrance now labeled "People not to serve at the grill tables" now.  All staff is now warned about us.  This is why.


We killed the grill.  Oops.  In all seriousness, we felt bad about it, but we didn't realize how bad it was until we were done.  I wonder how many hours were spent cleaning it?  Horrible us.  On another note, I quite enjoyed the scizzors that they gave us for the Bulgogi, and decided that the scizzors alone were worth the visit.


The blurriness of this photo has nothing to do with the fact that Steve indulged in a little Saki.  Well, maybe it does, but it was a freaking blast!


The three of us did some site seeing together inbetween Matthew's and my workshifts -


 Chinatown in Portland, Oregon -


 Looking out at Portland from the edge of Washington Park.
Our dream house of a four story villa style home on the edge of Washington Park, Portland, Oregon.




Matthew and Steve inside the Arboretum in Washington Park.  We loved the scenery around the trails and it took us a long time...try walking this with two other artists and you'll understand.  We stopped nearly every minute in order to take a photo or two for future references.  Really loved this place!


The following week led to the Undressing Room exhibition at Froelick Gallery.



The Preview Show and First Thursday were back-to-back fun.  I met a lot of fellow artists featured in the show (such as Suzy Kitman in the photo above), enjoyed seeing our great friends and meeting new ones there.  The turn out was absolutely amazing, and I was so happy to be a part of it.

Next up, Matthew's parents were coming to visit us for a week and we did tons of sight seeing together.  So great to see them!  This is a beautifully posed family photo at Cannon Beach.


This one is not posed.

From Cannon Beach to Cape Meares...




and then from the Japanese Gardens in Portland to the Multnomah Falls...






we had a lot of laughs.  This is my view from the bridge looking down to see Matthew's Dad and then of the falls.


The following photo is my favorite though.  We were parked in at the falls.  Yes, it was our own fault for using a bus parking space, but there were no buses anywhere and all the others were filled with cars as well.  (Yes, we jumped off the cliff, just as our friends did.)  Anyway, this photo is right before the Great Incident of 2012.  After waiting for 20 minutes or so, Matthew's father took the matter into his own hands after much debate.  He jumped the curb, drove over the grassy knoll and miraculously got the car to the exiting road without any damage of any sort.  It was the most awsome moment seeing him drive across there in the white rental car...I completely wish we would have captured a photo of that, but at least I burned it into my memory.  We ran across the lawn, fanatically waving our arms and laughing to greet him and get our behinds in the car.  Perfect family moment in my book!


Since then, it's been back to the studio!


 
 Also, it is the rebirth era of my Etsy shop, OnePebbleStudio.  New logo, new banner, and new works!  I've decided to list at least one new work at the end of every week.  Instead of prints, I am now selling all original works.  Have a visit at the new shop http://www.etsy.com/shop/OnePebbleStudio



All of these images and words may be just one big blur, but I have enjoyed all the experiences and felt this post was necessary.  It was a time of enjoying others and gathering and exploring new experiences and images for future works that I really am looking forward to creating.  I will be back to posting more regularly and I look forward to hearing from you. 


Thanks for your patience and reading!  Hope you are enjoying your summer!

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Good Empty Advice

Use your own path, thoughts, and words.  This is the advice that I would give to artists struggling to write an artist statement or lacking ideas for blank white surfaces surrounding them.  It sounds as if I'm giving empty advice, however it hints at what it is meant to be an artist, and what is expected with the label of "artist".

K.Booth, An ink drawing in progress. 2012


So many times when teaching, students would ask on the first day of a project, "What should I make?"  They were seeking a direct answer, but I never gave them one.  It wasn't because I didn't care, or didn't want to help them.  I did want to help them, but the best way for me to help was to ask them questions.  It depended upon the assignment what questions I would ask in order to activate their minds towards a brainstorming session.  Simple questions of what was important to them often lead them to their own conclusion.  The conclusion often resonated with them so much that it lead to great focus, motivation, and fantastic results.  Why?  Because it had meaning to them.  Suddenly a truck was not just a truck made out of pencil lines, but stood for their Uncle Bob's shop and how they loved to visit that place and aspired to learn more about machinary.  They would go beyond what they thought they could, and began to believe in their own voice and what they could accomplish.

The truth is that no one else can give you the answers, and it is your responsiblity to come up with your solutions.  Other people may be helpful guides, but their answers are probably not be your own.  Each of us already knows what to do, we just need to retreive it.  Listen to your thoughts and concerns.  One way to do this is to journal.  I'm not saying you need entries like, "Dear Diary, Today I went to work and scraped gum off of the floor.  When I came home I ate spaghetti.  Love, Krystal"  Although, yes, even really good ideas can come from the mundane, but I'm talking about recording your thoughts of what's important to you or what drives you crazy.  Has any new information opened up your imagination?  Record it!  What's important in your daily life?  What are you seeking?  The list of questions you could ask yourself goes on and on.  Don't rely on yourself to think that you'll remember your answers - you probably won't.  Time changes perspectives and answers.  Write it down so you can come back to it later to reflect, choose what to build upon, and then work your tail off.

After the work, artists are struck with the responsibility of composing an artist statement.  (I just heard artists cringing around the world).  However, if we change our attitudes about them, there is much to gain.  We are lucky to have yet another way to express our work to the viewer.  Seize that opportunity and use it!  I have seen advice in which artists will tell each other to copy from another's statement or a variety of statements and then make it your own.  I would like to slap these "advisors" across the face...or just tell them them kindly that we are all better than that.

It is okay to read others' statements to get a better idea of what is expected and how they used this to further engage the viewer with their visual work.  However, I have found that sometimes the artist statement is wrongly treated as an artist biography.  It is not a bio, and the work should be the primary focus of exploring the hows and whys of the work.  Some biographical elements may come in, but only if they serve the work.  The work is the focus. 

The simple solution is to journal about the work, or review the writings that you wrote before and while creating it.  It can be a challenge sifting through the information and thoughts, but these writings will help you get at the main ideas.  You are more knowledgeable of the intent of your work than anyone else.  The answers will not be found in someone else's artist statement, and quite honestly, your more creative than that.  Stop selling yourself short.

There are plenty of sources that can help one compose an artist statement.  The one that has helped me the most is a book by Ariane Goodwin titled Writing the Artist Statement: Revealing the True Spirit of Your Work (Infinity Publishing, 2002, ISBN:  0-7414-0843-0). 

I realize that this is a loooong entry, but I felt this post as a necessary one.  Artists go through periods of inactivity and difficulty with ideas, and this is normal.  Struggle with converting visual ideas into nice, less-than-one-page statements is normal.  All of this is just a part of the overall picture, but I don't think originality needs to be willingly sacrificed by copying others statements or ideas for a blank canvas.  The cliches of "all artists steal", and "everything has been done before", should not prevent us from trying to find our own voices and trying to do what we were put here to do.  The responsibility comes with the label.




Tuesday, April 24, 2012

You Are Invited!

The envelope arrived today.  My painting Object was invited to be a part of the exhibition titled Undressing Room at the Froelick Gallery.  I am elated and so happy to share this news with you!  Froelick Gallery has been one of my favorite galleries in Portland and I'm absolutely honored to be a part of this.

The exhibition will go on from June 6th through July 13th with two 1st Thursday Receptions on June 7th and July 5th from 5pm-8pm.  I hope to see you there!

Froelick Gallery 

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Our Art Space - A Spring Cleaning!

New leaves are being born from the branches that a month ago were bare, and the day was beautiful in Portland today.  The sun and 80 degree weather seemed to get me going on a spring cleaning kick.  The studio area is now organized and ready to mess up once again with paint, ink, charcoal dust and random pencil shavings that somehow escape.


Our Art Studio.  Ivan insisted on making a cameo pose on the drawing table.



So for now, my brain sought some order and recieved some today (referring to "My Secret Obsession").  I enjoy our art studio being in our home.  It makes it easy to create on a whim and whenever we please.  No one cares what we wear while getting there either which saves us from a lot of judgemental stares and sideways glances if we happen to get lazy about finding a matching pair of comfy shoes.  Last week I wore a monkey slipper with a plaid slip-on.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

An Unfurling

This is the drawing that is now finished, and I'm kind of struggling with a title.  For now I'm calling it "The Unfurling of Eight".



The Unfurling of Eight, 2012, Krystal Booth
Ink and watercolor on paper collage, 18x24".


I am pleased with how the drawing and layer studies have combined.  During one of the last posts, I wondered if and when these experiments would combine - little did I know it would be this week!

The oil painting series - "Object" - is going to be an ongoing thing, I've decided.  Time needs to lapse between the works for content reasons.  In the meantime, I'll be making horrificly arranged chicken scratches in the good ol' sketchbook to figure out the next drawings in this series.

Not to mention, I'm still wanting to do some more landscapes.  This is getting to be ridiculous!  I'm putting too many things on my plate at once perhaps, but I just would really love to work on all of these.  Is it possible to be too greedy with ideas?  I know that there are two more ideas waiting in the wings as well that I have put on the back burner for more development in the future.

Sometimes ideas are difficult to come by and those times are frustrating.  However, when the ideas are too many to be carried through all at once, it can become equally torturous.  I am on an uncertain time limit and I have to choose somewhat wisely while still allowing for creative play.  Ever since I turned thirty-four I have felt more urgency.  Is it an age thing, or just part of a creative cycle?  Perhaps a combination?  Do you go through this?


 

Monday, April 16, 2012

I Feel Good!

I believe I'm having a break through of some sort with the developing series and it's feeling good!


I'm at a point where it can go either way with the step I'm about to take next.  I'm moving out of a comfort zone, and I am hopeful.  Enjoy your day and enjoy some Muse!

(I swear, someday I will do an ice skating routine to this...I fantasize about the spins and jumps everytime I hear this song!)

Saturday, April 14, 2012

A Violent Pillow

The following sketch was done in about 5-10 minutes last night.  I drew Matthew when he was sleeping (he unknowingly determined the time limit by rolling over, darn it).  We laughed this morning because the pillow looks like it is punching him.  It is very forceful pillow evidently.



I don't think my painting was accepted for the group exhibition.  They stated that the accepted artists would know sometime after the 10th, and I'm kind of losing some hope.

Onward to the Next!

What is that saying about losing the small battles and winning the big ones?  We'll go with that.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Lines and Laughs

This week has been busy with sketching and planning.  This is part of one of the sketches on an 24x18" piece of watercolor paper.


I'm making an attempt to be more expressive with the line quality than I have been in the past.  This is possibly one of the things that have lacked in prior works.  Today, developing this drawing further will be the priority, and maybe integrating layers of color/texture.  It's difficult to tell at this point, but I'm seeking some way of integrating the layer studies with figures.  I feel that once any color is added, it runs the chance of overpowering the delicate lines and unraveling the composition...or maybe that's the answer.  The year-long experiment is still underway afterall, so why not?

I hope you've all had a great week with your loved ones and those around you.  I know that I did - I laughed daily (not hard to believe), with a highlight of Matt dancing in the kitchen changing crazy faces with each wave of his hand (laughed so hard I had tears in my eyes), and coworkers who crack me up.   I hope you have a some great hightlights too and continue to by making your weekend count! 
Love to all.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

The Unanswered Nude

Last Saturday was a studio scurry that brought about a lot of firsts.  I found out about a juried group exhibition at one of my favorite galleries in downtown Portland late on Friday night.  The deadline was Saturday.  Did any of my existing works fit the theme?  Unfortunately they did not.  The theme is The Undressing Room.  The following is the top third of the 24x18" oil painting on canvas that I created and titled Object.


I thought about posting this work in its entirety, but thought better of it since it is such a personal work and I may have past students who happen upon my little blog.  Uncomfortable.  Awkward.  Not a great professional situation or decision at this current time.


I have painted other nudes, however I have never painted any of myself in this vulnerable manner.  It is only of my torso, but it is still extremely uncomfortable to be so entirely bare upon a canvas.  I could get into my intention and meaning of the piece, but I think that I can't answer those questions fully yet.  There's a lot of tensions in this work that perplex my mind, and I'm happy about that.  While this work puts me in an uncomfortable place mentally, it intrigues me enough to want to continue along this vein.  I have plans of creating another similar work this weekend.


This was also the first time that I had made myself finish a work of this size in a single day from start to finish.  It was a great exercise that forced me to prioritize the compositional features.  It made me omit the unnecessaries and be more bold and intentional.  I didn't have much time to second guess my marks under such a time restraint and it was a refreshing challenge.  It also allowed me to finish the thought in the moment instead of coming back to the canvas the next day and losing the train of thought, or muddying the expression with other thoughts.  I plan on executing the next work under the same time restraints - one day and no more.


The panel of jurors are making their decisions and I'll find out after the 10th.  Instead of worrying if I will be standing beside my boobs for the world to see in an amazing gallery or not, I will be busy following this unfinished thought.  I don't know if it will be a series or not, but for now the ideas are unanswered and so I will continue.  As with some ideas, they die before they make it upon the canvas, or after the first work.  This one is still alive for now, so I have some work to do.



(Details of Object, 2012 by Krystal Booth)
Oil on canvas, 24x18"

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Awful Online Critique

I joined an online art forum recently, and last week I met the Grand Jerkface of the site.  This is the awful critique he gave a beginning painter such as himself.

"I say...what are you trying to prove? Sloppy painting doesn't a fine piece of art make. The oranges look like oranges only because they are painted orange and surrounding them with their compliment only makes them stand out as carelessly done."

Needless to say, this made my blood boil.  How dare he, especially since the painting he was referring to was not half as bad as what his harsh negatives implied.  In fact, I would say that the painting was similar to works we saw in a contemporary gallery last summer that were selling for nothing less than $1,200...(I remember because the 6x6" painting was this price).

Today my curiosity got the best of me again and I browsed the forum.  One artist was criticizing another for unclear light source of a beautifully illuminated still-life, meanwhile the criticizing artist posted a work of their own, and it had no indication of light upon the surfaces of things.  Go figure.

Of course we all have different goals, and different personal aesthetics.  It's easy to see just how different with a quick browse upon Pinterest.com.  So when it comes to answering questions and critiquing works of others, perhaps sometimes it's best to be open to what they are trying to accomplish first.  It seems that many of the posts only serve as a slaughterhouse where people with their own narrow view of what art should look like use their own goals as cutlery for others' works.

Perhaps an online forum is not the best place for critiques. 

If you want some entertainment and are thick-skinned or want suggestions on how to turn your donkey into a blue spaceship, then go for it.  However, if you want a serious constructive critique, ask people who are familiar with your work and whose opinion you respect artistically.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

The Plunge of Icarus

I would have forgotten about the Greek legend had it not been for Pieter Bruegel's green water.  I was given a book with his painting "Landscape with the Fall of Icarus" in it, and the yellow light reflecting upon the blue water creates this beautiful mysterious green that attracts my eye everytime I flip through the pages.

Landscape with the Fall of Icarus, 1558
Pieter Bruegel the Elder
Oil on Wood, 29x44"


This image of the painting above is a bit different in color from the image found in the book.  I wonder what the truth of the colors really are and if perhaps the image found in my book is prior to be cleaned.  I guess I'll find out if I ever get the opportunity to go to the Musees Royaux des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, Belgium.

Besides enjoying the green water, I also adore the story of Icarus.  Upon first hearing the story, we all like to laugh at Icarus's foolish ways and tragic end.  The lesson is clear.  Think before you act and listen to your elders...at least that's what I got from it in my youth.  However, now I see it differently.  I think many of us have been like Icarus.  Rebellious, and learning our lessons the hard way.  I know I have been this way many times and I think my parents would vouch for that, as maybe many of your parents and teachers would for you.

Stubborn or determined is only differentiated by perspective and sometimes it pays off and other times it doesn't.  Think of the explorers in the days when people thought the world was flat.  Imagine what would remain yet to be discovered if people had just followed without questioning.  There are of course countless other examples in every facet of our human history, but the flat world came to mind.  In their minds and others, they were sacrificing their lives to find the answers.  They were fools flying towards the sun with wings of feathers and wax.

Alice in Wonderland - if she had never followed the white rabbit out of curiousity and gone down the rabbit hole, her tale would have ended as soon as it began.  Who would want to read that?  Yes, she did get herself in quite a mess, but it was all worth it.  The stories she could tell up at a tavern in old age that would put local fishermen to shame. hahaha

The painting I have in the works is based upon the fall of Icarus, and is almost finished now.  It is an underwater landscape with the residual bubbles flying up from Icarus's plunge to further depths. 


The Plunge of Icarus, 2012
Oil on canvas, 24x18"
Krystal Booth



Cheers to your weekend and I hope all your risks will bless you with richness of tales to tell, lessons learned, and blissful endings.



Monday, March 19, 2012

Ready To Go!

I finished the landscape painting and now looking forward to placing the two canvases in their new home at the Sherwin Williams at Orenco Station tomorrow. 

Out West, 2012
Oil on Canvas, 20x32" (Two 20x16")
Krystal Booth

 
(Left-hand side Canvas)
(Right-hand side Canvas)



Perhaps we will need sunglasses for this one.

hahahahaha!
Hope you have a great week, and thank you so much for reading!

Friday, March 16, 2012

Secret Obsession

I have a confession to make.  I have a secret obsession with looking at artist studios and how they are organized.  I am fascinated. 

I know this may sound especially lame.  It's not sexual or romantic or exotic.  It's not super weird like an obsession of sleeping with a hairdryer or drinking gasoline.  However, I think an artist studio is highly personal and an intimate way of seeing how different brains work.

Here are some artist studios that caught my eye online (the last one is of Francis Bacon's studio in London):











Some of the studios are tidy with clean surfaces all around.  Others are messy and cluttered.  When I look at these images, I think about the way the artists work and think.  It's easy to spot those who work in a soothing, calm manner and others who prefer a more rapid speed teetering on the brink of chaos. 

Looking at artist studios is going beyond looking at interior design.  Interior design can tell a lot about what people enjoy and what moods they favor, but any space that one creates in tells more about how their mind actually works.  It can tell a great deal about how they organize information and what comforts and inspires them.

It doesn't have to be an artist studio either.  Any space that one creates in can tell a story of how their mind works - my Dad's garage (organized logically, with a bit of clutter on the workbench, but he always knows EXACTLY where to find everything!), my Aunt's Connie's Kitchen (designed with an amazing organizational system with everything having it's own space - it's absolutely amazing and I've never seen any other space better organized anywhere!) and my Great Grandfather's pole building (perhaps could have been seen on hoarders, and yet, the man was able to find everything with amazing efficiency).

What does your creative space say about how you organize information or the way you work?  Is there an enviroment where you have trouble creating?

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