Wednesday, July 28, 2021

Have Fun

 Have fun with art. I have learned this valuable insight as I have aged. I spent many years worrying about being taken seriously as a painter. I didn’t realize that fun makes me a better painter. 

 

About two years ago I started doing paintings on tea bags, archival paper, and mini art card paintings at my design table. I have had a lot of fun, and they are wonderful regular practice. I started making hand made paper about a year ago, using it for a variety of projects, including embossed note cards. It has all been a wonderful addition to my job as a landscape artist.

 

Every bit of fun art I do, adds to my experience as an artist and gives more depth to my learning journey.

 

Art is fun for country painters…… 



Wednesday, July 21, 2021

Career Choices

There are two basic paths with offshoot variations, to a career as a painter. I chose path one as a young painter out of art school. Art school teaches you nothing about business. In fact they steer you toward building prestige and elitism for artists.

 I spent the first part of my career entering competitions, getting to be listed with auction houses, Who’s Who, etc. I worked very hard to be one of the known Florida artists. I did museum shows, art center shows, building my resume, bio, and statement. Later, I did all the big Florida Paint Outs. I consulted on all of them, and I was the project manager for the Epcot Artists in the Garden paint out for 10 years. I belonged to all the southern plein air organizations, Florida, Georgia, and Alabama, of which there were many at the time. Path one is climbing the ladder.

 About ten years ago, I began to despise all of path one. It takes a lot of pointless energy to walk on path one. You do it because you have the false sense that it is the only legitimate path and that you will be marginalized without it. I woke up one day and said I’m done!

 I stopped doing paint outs, stopped doing shows where you must pay to play. I only do invitational exhibits now. I stopped caring about building resumes, bios, statements. No one has asked me for one in 10 years. 

 Path two is very different. It is cozy and very kind. I no longer compete with other artists. Instead, I began to learn to cheer for their successes. I began to make friends with my collectors instead of the artsy-fartsy community. I didn’t need to run around hoping to be seen with the cool people. I began to put my energy into my paintings instead, spending my precious time learning how to paint. 

 Perhaps I have become marginalized by the art community for stepping away, but I’m a better painter now and I have a lot more friends, both artists and collectors. All the paths we take, make us what we are. I wouldn’t change any of it.

 Life is wonderful for country painters.....

 

READ MORE



Wednesday, July 14, 2021

Thinking Too Much

 Sometimes thinking too much is dangerous. I have spent a lifetime of thinking about the business of being a painter. I spent years trying to figure out how to sell, how to market successfully and worrying about being marginalized by not hanging around the right galleries, museums and arty people.

 

 I spent years building up my teaching business, running all over the place teaching workshops, teaching locally and coaching students online. Writing tutorials and so forth.  I've been asked many times to write books about painting, plein air painting, and marketing. I even seriously made the effort to sit down and write a painting book but I got too distracted by it and gave up.  I just couldn't settle down to it long enough. My best writing has been on blogs because I think in an adventurous sense. I like to write a few paragraphs and be done. As an ADD artist, that's about all of the attention span I possess as a writer.

 

 After all of this busyness, I find that I like to spend my time painting and hanging around my studio and my nature trail now. I've spent a lot of years acquiring information and learning to paint and I'm far from through acquiring knowledge. In fact I am just getting to the stage where I can study in earnest.

 

 I won't make the mistake of wringing my hands and saying why did I spend all of those years doing all of those busy things? I can accept the fact that they were important at the time and I actually cared about being a known painter then. I've been very lucky to have a good career and to be known to the people who support me in so many ways. I've learned that they are really the only people who I should care about pleasing with my work other than myself. I have learned the art of study and passion for my work as an artist. I'm excited every time I step up to the easel and see that new canvas. The masterpiece painting is just around the corner for me every time. I trust that I will do it someday.

 

 

 Once I began to give up the clubs, organizations, the competitive world of juried competitions and shows, the teaching, I began to have time to focus on the fields and trees, the cattle, rivers and marshes that I love to paint. I stopped worrying about what other painters were doing, what they were painting and where my next collector would come from. I trusted that they would arrive, and they do. I still believe in serious marketing, which I do regularly, but my approach is more focused and toward others who love the same subjects I do.

 Life is good when you are a country painter………

 

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Paper Making Growth

 My paper making growth continues. Today I made a batch of 12 pages, 5x7. That is the size of my usual batch. I filled the blender with old papers and newsprint and a bit of white latex paint, making a nice light grey. I did 6 sheets that color and then added a bit of orange dye, which turned the pulp to a tan color. After two more sheets, I added more orange dye to make a warm tan. At the last two pages I added cherry red dye to make a brick colored paper. Nice! The grey of the pulp neutralized all the colors, making them more subtle. I am learning as I go. 



Life is fun for country paper makers….