You Can Create the Art You Were Born to Create

This may be my first not square art on my blog. That already is weird. I signed on for a watercolor class for September 2013. Had supplies in satchel as I was on my way out the door and my father was on the couch breathing funny. I called 911 instead of leaving for class. I called the only number I had to credit my absence. A couple days later, another artist called to tell me I had some options: 1) join the artist's class in another city, 2) wait until next year, or 3) she'd teach me what she'd learned in individual sessions at the art center I belong to. I am still overwhelmed at her generosity. As serendipity goes, I owned two watercolors painted by this artist proposing. I've been afraid of watercolor all my life. Talking with a friend today I realized and confessed that art was something I came up with to do instead of finishing writing. Third grade, 4th, I had a play produced in school, and then 5th grade I was done. There are studies about this phenomena, 9 year old girls get whacked in the world. Back to art: at 9 I started winning art awards. Art, write, art, write, different art, different write. So. Afraid of watercolor. And now I'm not. Not at all. It's expensive, but not as expensive as oil which never suited my hurry up and dry sensibilities. I like acrylics because of the control. You put down, it stays there. It is always the color in the tube. Dries fast. To do anything else with the color, you have to add mediums, which are varied and crazy. Float. Matte extend. And it has black and white, which should have indicated to me that it didn't suit me. I am so watered mystical indefinable, black and white are not in my vocabulary, and...what was I thinking? $20 for a float medium? $30 for something to make the whole expensive mess....me? Watercolor has no white. Nor black. When you look at the sky in life, it has clouds with varying shades of gray, palish blue, white. When you look at the sky as watercolor, there is no black, no white. The blue is the piece you need to focus on. The paper is white. Lordy, lord. And flow. I'm a paddler. Water rules. You lose focus with water in a white water river, you die. You lose focus in a watercolor painting, you live. My teacher is Barbara Weisenburg. One of her teachers is Nita Engle.
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Published on October 25, 2015 21:50
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message 1: by Laura (new)

Laura What a pretty painting! I haven't painted in watercolor for a long time. I used to worry about watercolor and painted my share of muddy efforts that were more of a fight to tame it than to learn what to do with it. Watercolor is easy once you realize the key is the water part...it doesn't lay down like oil or acrylic, it has a mind of it's own and often takes the path of least resistance, and it certainly will give you and the brush the finger and do whatever it pleases. Then it dries and leaves these awesome tide lines and sprays, blots and swaths...lush and gorgeous. I learned to lay in wait for it to be not quite dry, wet enough to accept a rage of splatter or the gentle drag of a dry brush for more textures, layers...or dang, I should've left it alone.

I spent my share of time on the art and writing teeter-totter, balancing the two is much like watercolor painting, I go with the flow, whatever I'm doing, it's the right time to do it.

:D


message 2: by Linda (new)

Linda Robinson Aren't we lucky, Laura? We can switch up when the creative fire feels banked. One of the things I love about watercolor is if I try to control, push, erase and redo, it's a mess. Like life, I suppose. My beautiful friend who has moved on told me a thousand times the only thing you give up when you give up control is the anxiety. I'm a slow learner, but I'm learning.


message 3: by Laura (new)

Laura We are very lucky!


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