Tuesday, July 28, 2015

What Will Art Be Like In 100 Years?


Red Rock Beauty  18 x 18 Wrapped Canvas Available


Slow Down for Wildlife!

Everything slows down in the summer.  As uncomfortable and even dangerous as the heat may be, the cycle of slowing down is one I’ve always thought we should obey. 

One of the joys I have is associating art with walks and rejuvenating vacations. I recently saw the sign, “Slow Down for Wildlife” in a county park.  I know they meant it as a safety warning, but it’s good advice for painters. When we were walking the desert paths in Arizona, we might have missed the beautiful blooming cactus tucked in the hillside if we’d hurried by.  I’m glad we slowed down to find this cactus I painted and named Red Rock Beauty

Slow Down to Paint!

It seems lately every art-related email I receive is about “speeding up”.  “Quick draw” competitions and “paint-outs” are very much promoted during this time of year.  These events require artists to paint outdoors for controlled time periods. The emphasis on painting quickly seems to be gaining momentum as a standard for painting, emphasizing that capturing a “singular moment in time” is superior to studio painting.—or superior to that of developing a painting outdoors over several days.  These events have many positive aspects, but I consciously work to overcome the frenzy I feel and strive to restore the meditative quality that is so special about developing a painting.  Do I really want to paint fast?  I keep reminding myself: a deliberate, thought out stroke is preferable to three impulsive ones.  

Industry Is Primary 8 x 8 Oil on Panel Available

Slow Down to Experiment!

Another joy I have in painting is the freedom to experiment.  When I try something new, I learn things about myself. I develop a language for expressing my experiences. After many miles of painting, my experiences are leading me to focus and simplify, as you can see in this latest painting Industry Is Primary.  I am increasingly moving toward a strong abstract quality in my representational work.

Experimentation demands breadth and scope.  Frequently marketers and art consultants tell artists to limit and narrow their work to a singular medium, singular subject, singular audience, etc.   If the limitation is done too soon, it prevents an artist from developing an authentic and personal style. In the course of investigating here and there, an artist may, indeed, eventually come to concentrate on a single subject or medium, but it will be “natural” (based on discovery), not engineered.

Lately I’ve been fortunate to view the works of Picasso, Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, and our native North Carolinian Claude Howell. They all investigated different art materials and painted varied subjects; they painted both in the studio and outdoors. They traveled and studied.  I believe this is still a model for the future.

So, what will art look like in 100 years?

Technology will undoubtedly speed up reproduction, distribution and access.  I hope there will be more profound discoveries in chemistry and in light and color which may lead to new pigments and materials; maybe there will be art that extends our physical and sensory knowledge; maybe there will be more interactive art.  I believe, regardless, that it will be achieved through the old model by artists who have a need to slow down and take a diverse and creative path.

What do you think?

A portion of my sales go to support bee/pollinator conservation.  Why?  Because I add beeswax to my oil paints, paint and consume the beautiful flowers, fruits and vegetables that bees and other pollinators provide.
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My paintings are available at my studio in Cary, NC, online at Sheffield Art Studio and at my Daily PaintworksGallery (see also clickable link above right) 

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Tuesday, June 23, 2015

How I Came to Love that Three Letter Word


Lilies for Diego 16 x 16 cold wax and oil Available here

W-A-X.  Specifically beeswax.  I’ve experienced the world of hot wax (encaustic) painting and am now diving into cold wax. I now routinely mix cold wax with my oil paints for traditional painting on panels.  Hot or cold, wax is a blast! 

Fireworks Encaustic. 6 x 6 Available here
 
I have a preference for working with cold over hot.  It’s 100 degrees outdoors! Working with cold materials in summer is preferable to working with hot materials.  Setting up with cold wax is also quite simple compared to encaustic. Painting with encaustic materials requires hot plates, electric blowers, dishes of hot pigments, gloves, and a vent system. Cold wax merely requires a tub of prepared beeswax paste and a palette knife for mixing it with your tube pigments.


In either case, beeswax imparts wonderful qualities to the paint. The translucent quality it lends to the pigment is immediately apparent.  It changes the consistency of the paint so that the artist can manipulate the paint to achieve different textures and edges. And the cold wax mixture, non-toxic, sets up faster than oil alone. According to an article at the web page for Cold Wax Painting, there’s no need to worry about the traditional oil painting rule of “fat over lean” (for non-oil painters all that means is how much oil your paint has in it—for drying and cracking reasons, the oilier paint goes on top of paint that is less oily or thinned paint.)  When the paint is mixed with cold wax medium the wax equalizes the ratios of paint and oil that necessitate this rule. Finally, the wax gives a soft matte finish to the painting, but one which may be buffed to a low sheen.



Test tiles for painting with cold wax and oil.  See below for explanation


The medium provides great freedom of expression.  There are frontiers to explore:  new objects to use as tools for mark-making, new ways to create textures, and new mixed media techniques (collage) to bring more excitement and interest to my work. 



I made a few test tiles and here are some of my early test explorations above: left: palette knife and embedded tissue collage; top center: stencil first then sgraffito marks into wet paint; top right: sgraffito only; bottom center: sgraffito very pronounced; far right bottom: two layers of stencil



Think “Madame Tussaud”, anything’s possible!



And that’s the buzz about beeswax. Thank you little worker honey bees!


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Thank you for reading. If you enjoy my essays, please share with your family and friends.  I’d like to hear from YOU!  Please leave comments and questions. 

My paintings are available at my studio in Cary, NC, online at Sheffield Art Studio and at my Daily Paintworks Gallery (link above too!) 
 
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Tuesday, May 26, 2015

What the Beach Breezes Stirred Up



Palm Breezes. 12 x 12 oil Available here

Tropical Storm Ana was forming in the Atlantic, but things were calm in Ft. Lauderdale where we’d driven to visit our son’s family, especially his beautiful new daughter. A walk along the Ft. Lauderdale waterfront under palm trees and clear star-filled skies should have been serene. But things were stirring within me. We’d spent the afternoon at Nova Southeastern University Art Museum  at two of their exhibits:  Kahlo, Rivera and Mexican Modern Art Exhibit and Pablo Picasso: Painted Ceramics and Works on paper, 1931-71.
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The Mexican Art exhibit included a wide variety of vibrant expression, including surrealism, abstract, fantasy, and realism in a wide range of materials. The Picasso exhibit was similarly invigorating with the range of elegant, animated, and humorous drawings presented alongside the ceramics.  I felt all the works were similarly bold and direct whether they were about private or civil statements.

Seeing these paintings was like having the sea breezes reach right into the building and blow away cobwebs. I became excited to try new subjects and new materials. Since returning to my home studio I’ve been inspired to work with materials languishing in my cabinet (oil pastels, cold wax and gouache/opaque watercolor.)  I’m especially strengthened in my resolve to work on issues in my own style that I have long wanted to achieve, such as a bringing to it a more linear style with direct and simplified form and color. I was impressed by these shows how the sense of line and volume filled up the space. Finally, I’m encouraged to get more personal--to dig back into my own heritage and see what I can put into my future work. I’ll be trying new themes and subjects, maybe Celtic folktales and dreams. I may do more urban and industrial subjects (remember, I’m a Detroit “girl”.)  

 
Service Is Our Business #2. 12 x 12 Oil and Cold Wax. Available here.



And playing more!   

 
Cabana Life 7 x 5 oil Available here.

   
Art is fun when it’s about evolving and exploring  . . .that’s what's blowing in the wind!

 
If you want to be the first to know about exhibits and discounts, sign up for my NEWSLETTER email list on the home page of Sheffield Art Studio.

Thank you for reading. If you enjoy my essays, please share with your family and friends.  I’d like to hear from YOU!  Please leave comments and questions. 

My paintings are available at my studio in Cary, NC, online at Sheffield Art Studio and at my Daily Paintworks Gallery (see also clickable link above right) 

Please LIKE me at my FACEBOOK Fan Page.

Fine Art America FAA link to bottom http://1-sarah-sheffield.fineartamerica.com/

Sunday, April 26, 2015

4 Ways to Restart Your Engine



We all have dry periods--times when we just don’t seem to produce much or even have the impulse to participate.  Call it what you want: depression, distraction, a creative block.  I hit a long period between December and April where I found it was very difficult to do many paintings. Much of this was due to personal and family illnesses. Most of the time when I feel this way, “just showing up for work”, as they say, has been sufficient to get me over the hump.  What I mean is that just going to the easel and the process of starting a painting has been enough to get me going. It wasn’t working this time. So I had to come up with some other ways to motivate myself, to “rev the engine”.

Here are some practices that helped me:

  1. Play with something new that doesn’t require much planning.  Don’t place any obstacle in your way.  Get out what you have easily available.  I got out tissue paper, glue, a board and a little fast drying acrylic paint.  I just started pasting down colorful torn paper. The results- two collages based on an egg theme (It was around Easter, so the theme came easily.)
    Fresh Eggs 8 x 10 mixed media Available here
  1. Doodle or sketch in a small notebook with just charcoal or pencils or markers.  Be a surrealist!  Draw things from your imagination. Keep it simple, no pressure.  This can be right in your own home.  It’s about seeing and dreaming, not producing.

This is a sketch that resulted in the painting "The Original Nook"

Unplanned doodling

  1. Make jewelry.  Jewelry is good because it’s small and you see progress quickly. I started another copper link bracelet.  You can congratulate yourself on a few inches of work. Honestly, I haven’t gotten much more accomplished since last month, but I’m not worried.  I’ve got my enthusiasm back! 

You can make a lot of different costume jewelry with collage materials or by reassembling scrap jewelry. You’ll be calling on many of the same art principles you use in other work, but doing it on a small scale.


The beginning of a flower chain bracelet.

  1. Visit galleries and museums and allow other artists to stimulate you.

I can’t say I enjoy these fallow periods, but I often come through them into a more creative period afterwards.  I am grateful for the renewal.



If you have ways to restart your engine, please share them with me. 



If you want to be the first to know about exhibits and discounts, sign up for my NEWSLETTER email list on the home page of Sheffield Art Studio.

Thank you for reading. If you enjoy my essays, please share with your family and friends.  I’d like to hear from YOU!  Please leave comments and questions. 

My paintings are available at my studio in Cary, NC, online at Sheffield Art Studio and at my Daily Paintworks Gallery (see also clickable link above right) 

Please LIKE me at my FACEBOOK Fan Page.

Fine Art America for prints

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

How to Travel in One Place



This has been a long, hard winter for many of us.  I’ve been suffering from cabin fever. We've had to be creative to overcome being cooped up. Travel can be a mindset as well as physical movement, so even though we are at the beginning of spring with more opportunities to get out, I offer these suggestions for ways to travel in one place:
  
  •  Interior paintings/sketches/photos.  I’ve looked around my house and found indoor scenes within my own home that were paint-worthy.  This could be a den or dining scene, for instance, a person reading in an easy chair, a dog by the fire. I’ve also set up my own scenes, like a bathing suit hanging on a door to remind me of a beach cabana.  I’m instantly transported back to vacation spot! Be creative with these interior scenes.
Cabana Life oil Available here

  • Still life paintings.  I set up objects from souvenirs of travels, collectibles or buy flowers at the grocers that are reminiscent of places I've visited—did you visit lavender fields in France or roses in England or just violets in your grandmother’s garden? Travel back with those happy memories!  The painting, Pop One, below, has double meaning--it reminds me of vacation refreshments, as we really only drink soft drinks on vacation, and because Walt's grandfather managed a Coke plant.
Pop One oil Available here

  • Explore an area of your own town or neighborhood.  Look around and talk to people. Or sit still and just take it in. In Cary and Wilmington we enjoy farmer's markets and especially like trying restaurants based on different cultural traditions--Mediterranean, Indian, or Italian.  This could open up many cafĂ© and market scene paintings. Here is a little market scene I did from France.
Pommes de Terre watercolor Available here

  • Reading always transports me to far-off places and sparks my visual imagination. I especially like books set in definite places.  If you like action mysteries, I highly recommend Dana Stabenow’s Kate Shugak’s series based in Alaska.  Each book gives you a different understanding of Alaskan life.
 
  • Try a new experience.  Well, how is this travel?  Maybe it’s stretching it a bit, but a new experience IS like a vacation!  Refreshing.  In art it could be trying a new technique, or just experimenting.  For me presently, it’s chain maille copper jewelry.  This is an unfinished flower  chain bracelet.  Do you see a rose in the basic shape? 
 


Spring is here, hooray!  But next time you find yourself a little housebound, I hope these ideas help.

HAPPY TRAVELS!


If you want to be the first to know about exhibits and discounts, sign up for my NEWSLETTER email list on the home page of Sheffield Art Studio.

Thank you for reading. If you enjoy my essays, please share with your family and friends.  I’d like to hear from YOU!  Please leave comments and questions. 

My paintings are available at my studio in Cary, NC, online at Sheffield Art Studio and at my Daily PaintworksGallery (see also clickable link above right)

Please LIKE me at my FACEBOOK FanPage.