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Sunday, September 30, 2012

Sunflowers


Sunflower--watercolor and ink

Sunflower--watercolor on poured background

Both of these sunflower paintings were composed from a photo of my daughter's lovely sunflowers that she grew in a pot in her yard.

Mixed Media Bookmarks





      
          #8                        #9                        #10                     #11                       



     
         #14                   #15                    #16               #17                     #18



    
        #19                      #20                    #21

Here are more bookmarks made from strips of unsuccessful watercolors and donated mat board embellished with ink, stamping, markers, foil, and stained paper.  They are being sold for $3 each and many have sold.  If you want to purchase any, contact me and indicate the identifying number beneath each bookmark.  If it is still available, I will ship it to you for $3 plus postage.  We will work out the details via e-mail.

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Mixed Media Collage Bookmarks

 #1

 #2

 #3

 #4

 #5
 #6

#7

Each of these bookmarks is a small piece of real art. Each one is layers of old watercolors cut into strips, mounted on hand decorated mat board.  Then each one is embellished using ink, stained paper, foil,  paint, stencils, and stamps.  The neutral background that is shown here is for photo purposes.  Each bookmark is edged in ink so that it has a nice finish to it.

When I showed these to art friends they were really enthusiastic and immediately bought some!  That's very encouraging so I have now made over  40.  Each is different because each comes from a portion of a watercolor so no two can be alike.  Each presents a challenge to me and it usually takes me 20--30 minutes just to figure out how to design each one.



Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Sunset Layers 1
This is an abstracted  image of water, waves, sky and clouds painted in watercolor with accents of ink.  Painted in the elongated style, this 9" x 20" painting is beautifully framed in a shiny 
ebony /brown frame.  The mats are the soft shades of aqua and soft green.  It demonstrates the colors of tomorrow.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Marianist Environmental Education Center Exhibit


This series of photos came from the Marianist Environmental Education Center annual exhibit.  The show is always on some aspect of nurturing our environment.  The theme this year was "Living Green."  The gallery is Gallery St. John located in Beavercreek.

This striking assemblage claimed my eye immediately.  The spectrum appeared to be slim cylinders of color held together and displayed as a unit.  In actuality, it was edges of cartons of food from cereal and various fast serve cartons.  I believe the title was "Not Enough Greens." 

 This blue and green "chandelier" looked at first glance like fine blown glass suspended from the ceiling.  Instead it was plastic bottles, painted with transparent paint and cut so as to look like spirals of glass.  Believe it or not, this came from the second grade class of a local elementary school.
 Here are my four little entries (behind the plastic spiral).  They are posted elsewhere on my blog.  Each said, "Live Green--Grow Your Own" with various vegetables.  Two sold and two more will travel with the show to another site in Dayton.







This final shot shows some of the dynamic work displayed.  It was the best show ever!  Here we see a bright acrylic painting with lots of green, a very fine wall hanging on the orange wall, and in the distance some very lovely Asian pieces of ink and color mounted on silk. 

Friday, June 15, 2012

Monoprint Layers==Poppies

 Step 1 of making this monoprint of poppies was to make a film of vertical lines, paint the background blue and then adhere it to paper.
 Step 2 was to make another film with red, yellow and various colors of dots and circular shapes.  This is the artist's view of the painting but it will be reversed when printed.
 This Step shows the red and yellow shapes printed on to the original print.
 This is the third film (or plate) of painted poppies seen from the artist's view of painting.  It will be printed in reverse with the other side of the film showing.

This is is final print, made of 3 plates or films.  Each was painted, transferred (printed) onto paper. Then the next film was printed on top of the first one.  Then the third film was painted and transferred on top of the same print.  Thus the final painting is three layers of printmaking.

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Dogwood Acrylic Monoprint

Dogwood

This acrylic monoprint required two plates of paint.  First the abstract background was painted, dried, and transferred to printmaking paper.  Then the dogwood flowers were painted on another film, dried, and then transferred to the already existing abstract print.

This painting (8"x10" also looks very good in a vertical format.