Monday, May 24, 2010

"Vessel"



My new painting is titled "Vessel." I began this piece during my oil painting class, and my students commented on how the under-painting looked like a ship. This was complete serendipity. As I have spent so much time drawing and painting boats in the course of my graduate work, the structure of the boat unintentionally manifested itself into my under-painting of trees.

I, unfortunately, did not get a good picture of this under-painting as I was anxious to finish the work. If you look at the overriding structure of tree trunks and branches, though, they kind of resemble masts.

When I started thinking of this image I was on a walk through the woods contemplating the power of becoming a vessel, of allowing yourself to step aside and let higher powers move through you. It is counter-intuitive that, in relinquishing your own ego and sense of yourself, you become more powerful. You allow yourself to become more than you can possibly be just on your own two feet. The trick is in getting yourself out of your own way!

Thus "Vessel" is a play on words but is very much on my mind on all counts.

The piece is an oil on canvas, 24" x 48" in size, and my ego is allowing me to sell it for $995.

Happy painting, walking, and contemplating to you as we head towards June!

Dawn

Sunday, May 2, 2010

The Birds Go Pirate




Well I tried, but the the birds have their own agenda. After painting them and drawing them in their little canoes repeatedly they decided they wanted to evolve in the grand scheme of nautical history.

They pirated these ships.

I am not proud of this, but they are particularly driven in their need to find and claim new migratory routes. Plus these boats are more stylish.

The first image is the first pirated vessel. The pieces that follow are part of a series depicting the fleet. You will not see the birds on these ships as it is an issue of scale. The boats are huge, the birds are busy.

What I like about these two ensuing images besides the conceptual component are the lines and the flat washes. Frankly, they remind me of the children's books I grew up with in the days before full-colored illustrations were affordable. The fresh linear elements excite me. The layered sense of space came about through transparency, as if you could see through all the ships to the horizon. It is meant to create a sense of limitless space and ships innumerable. All of these pieces are mixed drawing media and tempera paint on watercolor paper, 22x30" in size.

I am a bit afraid of what the birds will make me do next. At the moment they are in their pilot quarters pouring over maps...