11.16.2015

lost & found -kes

Last year an abandoned artist book was discovered in a vacant studio space. The book is small and unassuming with glow-in-the dark-stars on the outside of its otherwise plain blue cover.

 The original book designers created indigo pages the color of the night sky, printed with stars and subtle accompanying color. They also printed blue text on each page, re-inventing the childhood wishing poem:
star light star bright  
first star I see tonight 
I wish I may I wish I might, 
have this wish I wish tonight


Upon receiving the wayward art & verse trash gift, graphite drawings were added. The pages were hungry. 'The book of dreams' was born.

Thanks to Andrea Silver & Karen Tribul for making the book. Thanks to the Universe and Andrea Zimon for bringing a lost wishing palette to this dreamer to create new life.


'The book of dreams' will be on display in Dream Weavers.

11.10.2015

Color Mixology 101(SKF)

 Hello Everyone,
I promised my dad that I would send him a color lesson. I thought maybe others would benefit from my little diatribe.
The most important color concept is how to mix them. Sounds simple, right?
On the left, for example are a couple of primaries mixed together to produce some pretty boring secondaries. These dull mixtures can be improved upon by knowing which combinations will create the more luminous outcome.The second color wheel demonstrates alternative choices resulting in more saturated colors.
If you "map" out generally where your pigments are  on the color wheel your choices will be improved.
Always ask yourself "Does this color lean towards a cool or a warm color?"
For instance, let's take Lemon Yellow and we would like to make a green. Is this yellow "cool" or more towards the orange(warm) range?  For green we want two "cool" colors. Now, we need to pick a blue. Is it towards red like an Ultramarine or towards a green like Manganese Blue? On the right you can see a nice green over the duller original choice. This is Lemon Yellow and Manganese Blue. Try other pairs keeping in mind that the colors will be more resonnating in the mixture if they lean towards each other. But they don't have to, you are experimenting so you can utilize both( dull and bright) to your best advantage.
  If I had choosen the Ultramarine Blue, which tends towards purple, this reddish blue mixed with a greenish yellow would have acted as if it were mixed with its complimentary color( the color that lies directly across on the color wheel). This is a classic way of quieting a color by adding it's opposite. Color will gray up as it recedes in space so the dulling of color is as useful as the brightening. Think of your picture as a symphony and you are the conducter. Pull up the brass section! And shoosh the violins.
      So below is a map of some of my  acrylic colors. Try making your own. Squinking helps to see the overtones in the pigment. Is it warm or cool?

Next, is the relative "weight" of color. When you compare colors they are highly affected by the surrounding tones. You can make a gray dot in the middle of a purple field look yellow. And, the reverse is also true. This whole business is so subjective. Here's a little trick from art school. Look at your painting in a mirror. It will double the veiwing distance so you can see what is standing out the most in a painting. Is it unbalanced? That's your call. It might be part of an effect.

Lastly, my crudely painted leaf is one example of how to use
  color for spacial effects. In the background, the blue is brought closer to the green range blending with the back of the leaf which is painted a bluish green. The two hues almost overlap each other creating an atmospheric feeling. Viridian green for the back of the leaf and Cyan Blue behind it.
The front, I added the Hansa Yellow to the Viridian. The smallest amount of any color can overpower alot of yellow, so go cautiously. At the front of the leaf, I put the complimentary color under the yellow green.This drives this edge forward and sharpens the difference between them. My blacks are never a straight black . I always add a dark rich compliment to exploit the tension between the hues. One of the laws in landscape painting is "The Law of Contrasts". The closer an object is to the veiwer the more definite edges it has, shown either with color and/or hightlights and shadows. The further back in space the less definition there is.
I used an Ultramarine Blue with a smidgen of Alizarin Crimson for the violet. Then I blended the two blues with a Thalo Blue to smooth out the background.
Any combination of red and blue paint will work. Your choice is a preference, not a rule book of right or wrong. This leaf could have been painted hundreds of ways.Over time some combinations become very pleasing. This is the beginnings of STYLE, in particular YOUR STYLE. And when you discover that, you have gone from walking to flying.
Happy Take Off !
 I hope this was useful.
SKF

11.03.2015

Frankenstein - az

This piece is a page out of my art journal celebrating the Halloween spirit. One of the rare pages that has a title, Vessel was inspired by the work of the same name by the art Eloise Pickard Smith. The two pieces have little in common other than being collaged. It was called Vessel because of its three bowls but it really should be called Frankenstein because the body is really just pieces and parts of artwork. The original page had a failed drawing, but there was a part of it I really liked so I gessoed what I did not like in black which added mood and a workable surface. The abdomen is part of the original page along with the Elvira hair. The claw-like hand was added later. The face was next to be added. I added a new pair of eyes and stitches on the mouth to complete my mad scientist machinations.