In my last post I was talking about my earliest encounters with real artists who knew the value of earth tones. The other night when I should have been sleeping I was instead loitering about on Twitter. I'm in a process of amazed discovery as to what an astonishing resource that app is for artists. I came upon an artist called Murat Kaboulov and opened his site (run by a relative as he sadly died in 2010). I was immediately not only entranced by his pictures but catapulted back in a kind of eureka moment to the unswept floor of a studio in Beaufort Street Chelsea where flakes of oil paint and toast crumbs stuck to my four year old knees as I played at my mother's feet while she posed for a portrait.
The beautifully presented website www.muratkaboulov.com even uses a version of the divine sludge colour as its background. But the paintings ...what a joy to behold....take a look at these ... I can't show you a picture because they rightly have the images protected from download but here's a screenshot you can click through on which I hope will entice you to visit and enjoy this inspirational work:
www.muratkaboulov.com/figurative
So in my dream painting Murat Kaboulov shall now be one of my guides. Each of those paintings is worth hours of study and each demonstrates masterfully how vivid colours need earth tones to work. In 60s psychedelic and pop art bright colours were allowed to stand alone but even then it was rare. A quick search of Google images for Peter Blake, that quintessential artist of the Kings Road era, revealed the use of the Divine Sludge time and time again. For just one example you might remember this piece for its bright colours but look carefully - it depends wholly on its earth colours for its impact:
I have painted pictures in the past, I'm proud of a few and not shy to sell them but I've hardly begun. I learn as I go, I try and look deeper, I know what I want to do. I'm going to have to live long I think.
The Paintbox Cafe
An artist's blog by Luigina Ware
Monday 3 September 2012
Thursday 30 August 2012
Creating Rainbows
"The existence of the rainbow depends on the conical photoreceptors in your eyes; to animals without cones the rainbow does not exist. So you don't just look at a rainbow, you create it."
Now this idea really struck me. When I was a little girl I was fascinated by the idea that we have no real way of knowing if we see the same world around us as other people do, especially in the case of colours. As long as our personal colour scheme is consistent we are fine. You say it's 'Pink' and as long as I am seeing the same thing as all the other instances of hearing something named as 'pink' you could be seeing one thing and I could be seeing another altogether.
This line of thinking arose because there was an old lady who used to help take care of me. She loved Red and hated Blue. I loved Blue and hated Red. I believed deep down that the only explanation must be that the thing she saw as Red must really be Blue if you catch my drift.
I no longer have a favourite colour. I love them all. I may be slightly synaesthetic because the experience of colours is more than visual for me, there are all sorts of other sensations, often to do with the taste of drinks in particular but also to do with quite specific sensations. My most special and valued experiences are very very multicoloured but not just any mix - it has to work. It sure isn't any old color-mess that gets me going. This painting by acclaimed Ugandan artist Eria Sane Nsubuga really got me there today:
Sunday 12 August 2012
Something that puts the Life into the Living
Golden Ferris Wheel at www.anotherlight.co.uk |
Someone just posted this lovely quote on my Facebook page...had to share:
When you buy from an independent artist you are buying more than just a painting or a novel or a song .
You are buying hundreds of hours of experimentation and thousands of failures. you are buying days, weeks, months, years of frustration and moments of pure joy.
You are buying nights of worry about paying the rent, having enough money to eat, having enough money to feed the children, the birds,
the dog.
You aren't just buying a thing. you are buying a piece of heart, part of a soul, a private moment in someone's life.
Most importantly you are buying that artist more time to do something they are truly passionate; something that makes all of the above worth the fear and the doubt;
Something that puts the Life into the Living.
Rebekah Joy Piett
I went looking for Rebekah Joy Piett on Google but no luck. She nailed it, whoever she is.
Please drop by my websites and see what this independent artist has for sale!
www.anotherlight.co.uk
www.aegean.ight.co.uk
Making ACEOs: Choices and Experiences
Gloss Print ACEO Art Cards drying after being pasted onto the passepartout on my studio table |
My ACEO project has been a hugely steep learning curve. It's not that long since I first heard about these little 2.5 x 3.5 inch paintings and caught the bug. I've produced heaps of them. There is a lovely set of painted ones that I have posted here http://paintboxcafe.blogspot.gr/p/my-first-aceos.html
Those ones were created using a digital print taken from one of my original works which you can see on my websites:
www.aegeanlight.co.uk
and
www.anotherlight.co.uk
and painting over them. The print is effectively the underpainting and each one is a new painting in its own right not just a print with a few brush strokes added for enhancement.These artworks are all individual pieces with a fresh interpretation and development of the original painting or digital artwork on which they were based. I'll be blogging on each one with a little background and story to it as I go.
I've also made a great batch of gloss print reproductions of my work in ACEO format - that means they are each only 2.5 x 3.5 inches. I've aimed to make a really gorgeous and luxurious little product. I chose this fabulous black Passepartout Mat Board, the sort that is usually used as a surround mount for framing, fantastic quality. We have a couple of good framers in our town and one of them offered to cut the pieces for me. Can't wait to go back to show her the results.
I edged each piece with permanent black ink and I edged the prints themselves too. All this edging of both the card and the print or painted canvas piece as well is time consuming in a sense but it really improves the look. I didn't count the time doing this on the whole as I just sat in a lovely cafe in the port in Ermoupoli for a peachy hour or so with my pen and a pile of mat cards and prints. Soothing work. I absolutely love this card, love handling it - sounds mad I know but I know I am not the only person in the world who walks into a good stationery store and sighs with joy!
The gloss prints are really vivid and sharp printed on excellent quality photo paper. These are just stuck to cards, a little certificate I have designed is pasted to the back and signed and dated. Each one clearly indicates what sort of ACEO Miniature it is. These will sell at £5 each. I'm very proud of them, they look so juicy and wantable!
The Paint over Print Originals - I have coined that name, to be shortened to PoP Originals as a convenient way to describe these pieces which I think have a valid claim to be a style of their own - have me seriously excited. When you hold them in your hand you will see them as paintings. They vary a bit, some are complete repaints with the underlying print gone from view. Others take advantage of the print more and I've gone a different route, using the mellow surface of the printed silk canvas and working into only parts of it in paint to achieve a really 3D affect and stunning jewel-like colours.
Northern Lights Fox, a PoP (Paint over Print) Original based on a detail of my painting Northern Lights. If you go and look at the original painting you will get an idea of the relationship between the original and the PoP ACEO. |
The opportunities this process presents are myriad and I am raring to produce more and develop the possibilities. For customers they will provide and affordable way to own a real painting. I'm pitching these first ones at £40 each.
Best of all is that I am painting again. There are a small set of originals in the making. With all that has happened in the last year or so it was feeling like I never would get back to it. I'm inspired, feeling confident with my brushes and FULL of ideas to take this further.
Stress Artist
Well here I am again. What a few weeks. It was going so well. And then the Law of Sod took hold. My hard drive failed taking with it weeks and weeks of work that hadn't yet been backed up. The circuit board is currently en route to the other side of the world where some clever chaps reckon they can put the right chip onto the right new board and send it back to me so I can talk to my life again. All this going on with temperatures in the high 30s/90s which doesn't turn anyone in my house into a saint believe me.
I've also been researching like crazy to try to make the right decisions about how to sell my work, I'm extremely serious about it at this point in my life and on a mission. Things are pretty bad in Greece. About the only hope is to look to overseas customers and artwork is a perfect product from a country whose greatest gift is beauty.
But what a nightmare jungle it all is. Ebay? Etsy? Half a dozen other sites? Or just rely on my site, good SEO and social networking to build the traffic? I am sorely tempted by the latter I really am. I am trying to keep in mind that I am starting out and it might all get to be easier and faster but honestly I feel like I will never be liberated from filling in forms and reading dense rules and regulations not to mention having to serve rookie time virtually giving work away on these sites in order to get established. Trouble is for an artist like me is that I don't do things by halves. I take time and really want to make a product that is a joy to hold in your hands let alone look at. I also don't do cutesy which seems to be the style with the Wow Factor that attracts the collectors but I wonder if I am right about this. Will collectors like my work too?
All the same, meanwhile I have been painting furiously making these great little miniature ACEOs...I've taken to it like a duck to water. I like painting big and loose but there is almost a whole separate stream of my art consciousness that really gets off on tiny brushes and intricacy. I've been loving it and finding the tiny format oddly liberating. I'm very happy with the results too, I'm dying to do more.
But what to do to sell them? These painted pieces are worth I think at least £40 each. I've never done an Ebay auction and the whole idea fills me with terror to be honest.
I've put a page of them up My First ACEOs. I wonder what other people think.
Labels:
ACEO,
ACEO collectables,
art,
art collectors,
art prints,
Artist Trading Cards,
Ebay.,
Etsy,
Luigina Ware,
studying paintings,
Syros
Saturday 4 August 2012
The Right White
Such a useful article here on how to choose the right white pigment. My advice? Buy the best quality Whites that you can regardless of whether you are looking for lightening or high pigmentation. Even the best are seldom that expensive. You won't regret it if you do but very likely will if you don't. It can make such a huge difference to your painting experience.
How to pick the right white pigment : Artists & Illustrators
Mixing with white can be deceptive. It is always good to remember that a colour mixed with white will look lighter when wet, and definitely on the palette than it dries. It's a tricky job getting exactly the right mix but it's also precisely the point where you need to sit down, breathe and remember you are an artist not a factory hand. Slow down, think, look very carefully at what you are doing (that's what this process is about after all!) and be prepared to experiment and discard quite a bit until your colour for a particular purpose is just right.
How to pick the right white pigment : Artists & Illustrators
Mixing with white can be deceptive. It is always good to remember that a colour mixed with white will look lighter when wet, and definitely on the palette than it dries. It's a tricky job getting exactly the right mix but it's also precisely the point where you need to sit down, breathe and remember you are an artist not a factory hand. Slow down, think, look very carefully at what you are doing (that's what this process is about after all!) and be prepared to experiment and discard quite a bit until your colour for a particular purpose is just right.
Tuesday 31 July 2012
My Very First Handpainted ACEO Prints
Agios Antonios HandpaintedACEO Print Copyright Luigina Ware 2012 |
Fishing Boat at Syros Handpainted ACEO PrintCopyright Luigina Ware 2012 |
Lalakia Garden Handpainted ACEO PrintCopyright Luigina Ware 2012 |
Wave: Handpainted ACEO PrintCopyright Luigina Ware 2012 |
I spent last weekend on an experiment, albeit one that I thought would succeed. Here are the results. These are my very first efforts at ACEOs* (see below for an explanation of what an ACEO is). ACEOs can be made in any media but they must be right size - these are quite tiny - only 2.5 by 3.5 inches. I had a particular aim with these ones which was to see what I could do with an image by painting onto a canvas print. I chose these four as they each offered a particular challenge - some like Agios Antonios and Lalakia Garden were originally paintings and Fishing Boat and Wave were both digital art. I originally got into making these digital pictures when exploring photographs I had taken in Photoshop with a view to painting them. They then became digital artworks in their own right. Now I am painting over those prints so I suppose you could say these images have come full circle.
I have tried to photograph them so that the very nice zingy sharpness and vivid colour come out well and also so that you can see the scale - there's a 1 euro coin in some of the pictures. They are still sitting on my chair in the kitchen in the afternoon sun and I just went to have a look to see how accurate the colour reproduction is. Hard to tell what you are seeing - always be aware when viewing art online that different monitors and computer equipment display colour somewhat differently. But I really don't think anyone buying these would be disappointed in the contrast between these photos and the actual objects. I am really pleased with them and they were great to work on. I'll photograph some of the print ones later, they also look pretty far out.
The little canvases are mounted on good quality mat board, the edges are all blacked and they are gloss varnished.
I've made up my mind to put them to auction on Ebay and see if I can catch the eye of some collectors. Might work, might not...let's see what happens!!!
Click on the images to visit the relevant pages on my websites where you can buy the full size prints and read something about the original artworks.
*ACEO is an abbreviation for Art Cards & Editions, sometimes also known as ATCs - Artist Trading Cards - other people might just call them Miniatures. The rule with them is that they are made on card and must measure 2.5 x 3.5 inches - no more no less. They are loved by artists for the scope they give to experiment without the commitment of a major piece and because there is a certain amount of craft in them. It also means you can offer customers a genuinely affordable artwork.
Labels:
ACEO,
ACEO collectables,
art,
art print,
artist,
Artist Trading Cards,
ATC,
colour,
Ebay.,
Garden,
Greece,
Greek Church,
Greek Islands,
painting,
Syros,
vivid colour.
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