01/26/12

New Projects and Drawing Tablet


I am working on this painting for a group show at a local hospital, and I’d say it’s about 1/2 done. It also looks far less dreary than this  (I took the photo with my phone). It is called Rio On Pools and is based on a photo I took of the Rio On Pools in central Belize, in 2007. The first time I went to Belize we looked for these pools and couldn’t find them, but two years later we looked harder and found this magical place — or at least I think that’s what happened. They did seem to appear out of nowhere.  (It might have been a sort of Brigadoon situation.)

I’m about to put the paints away and get out the pastels to finish it up. Meanwhile I’m working on my other series, especially the Endangered animals one.  I have a larger abstract watercolor that is nearly finished and it’s at the point where I need to decide what to do with it to finish it up.  I am also doing a lot of looking at other artwork. Where I live, there are no local galleries that show a wide variety of art so I need to look at galleries online as much as possible! Two magazines that I love with artwork I love to look at (and I subscribe to both of them) are Hi-Fructose and Blue Canvas, and I recommend all artists have a look at those excellent websites and publications.

I also recently bought a copy of Painter 12, a painting software program that I have wanted for a long time. Here’s a video about it.
Continue reading “New Projects and Drawing Tablet” »

10/17/11

Feminism and Women Artists

This painting is new, starting out as one thing and ending up as something entirely different. That’s not unusual for how I work and can lead to some strange surprises. Now that it’s done, I’ve named it “Sacrifice”. It’s not meant to be literal. The wolf represents American culture, and the woman represents being a woman in America. If you want to be considered a “normal” American woman, you have to give up certain elements of who you are, and pretend to be a certain way, and act a certain way, and accept things (like lower wages and being taken less seriously than a man) and live according to society’s requirements. As an American woman who is a feminist, this makes sense to me, but I admit many people won’t get it, which is fine. (I don’t really care if people understand my paintings, which is why I usually tell people to just get out of them whatever meaning they want.)

I’ve written about gender and art here in the past, and now I’ve just joined WARM, a group of Minnesota female artists based in St. Paul. I found the following article linked to on their website: Why Have There Been No Great Woman Artists? The obvious answer is: There have been a lot of great female artists, what are you talking about? But maybe that answer is from my own personal perspective, as a female artist. I equate all artists as equally worthy and judge their work, if I judge it at all, without regard for their gender. But I’m not sure the general public does that, and according to this article, they don’t. Here is a small excerpt:

“Why have there been no great women artists?” The question tolls reproachfully in the background of most discussions of the so-called woman problem. But like so many other so-called questions involved in the feminist “controversy,” it falsifies the nature of the issue at the same time that it insidiously supplies its own answer: “There are no great women artists because women are incapable of greatness.” . . . .

08/10/11

San Jose Shoppers

This is a downtown, San Jose street scene, from a photo taken in November 2010.  I would love to go back to Costa Rica. It’s an amazing country and incredibly beautiful. The people are wonderful and friendly and I have to say, though you can’t tell it from this painting, they are very style-conscious and into fashion.  Probably more so than Americans.

By the way, don’t skip the city if you go to Costa Rica, like so many websites recommend.  San Jose a beautiful city full of parks and museums and great pedestrian traffic, with lots of gorgeous architecture.  The one drawback of walking around in San Jose is the auto and bus traffic. There is too much of it, and everyone drives super fast, and the congestion makes for some serious air pollution. 

As soon as you get out of the city, the traffic is sparse and the countryside, with its many coffee farms, farms in general, and rain forests,  is amazingly beautiful. I mean to do several watercolors of downtown, but I can say for sure there will be two more at least.