fbpx
Poured Acrylics Experiment, "Walk in the Fall Colours,"10 in x 12 in Poured Acrylics Experiment, "Walk in the Fall Colours,"10 in x 12 in Julie Drew, original available
04 Nov
2024

ElkIsland Hayburgertrail watercolor 7x9in

Fall is such a rich time of year. For nature it is a time of change, of letting go, loss, and even death as we move toward winter. Yet the changing colors of the leaves shows us each year that there is beauty and wonder even in these parts of life.

Did you take some time to enjoy the fall colors and the dancing leaves? In September and October, I enjoyed getting out to catch the marvelous colors in the river valley with my students. 

;North Saskatchewan River in Light Rain, ink sketchSketching the North Saskatchewan River with beaver passing throughSketching flowers at Yorath House in the rain

And, I kept thinking that this time next year I will be experiencing another flavor of fall. I will be in Italy teaching sketching and painting of the Italian countryside around Montelparo, Le Marche.

This is Montelparo, Italy: 

Montelparo4H min

More images of Hotel Leone and Montelparo can be seen here. Would you like to join me? There are still spots open on this weeklong painting retreat Sept 26- Oct 3, 2024 (for more information).

Some artist friends of mine from Edmonton (karenbartist, zheliskoart, daveshko)  have taught at Hotel Leone during their own retreats, and their pictures are amazing! I can’t wait to experience it with my own students!

...

My family experienced an additional season this fall, renovations. We just finished six weeks of chaos in our home, while the contractors tore apart rooms and put them back together. It all started with a leaking pipe and water damage in our basement bathroom. Then, since we were doing one room, we decided to include a few more that were long overdue. We added our kitchen and upstairs floor. And, for once, we didn’t do the work ourselves, for which I am thankful. The noise, the dust, the displacement of moving out our things, plus creating a temporary kitchen in the living room, and the never ending decisions we had to make all contributed to weeks of extra stress and chaos. I really appreciated the comment I received when I shared this on Facebook, "It is worth it."

 demolition of kitchen and the new cupboards being built20241102 091841Now we have a beautiful new kitchen, floor and basement bathroom. Standing in my new kitchen I can attest that it was indeed worth it. I love the colors, the smooth, granite counter, and the additional counter we put in to replace a cabinet. We even have four working burners on our new stove. And I can get back in my studio to work now. It was one of the many places that we temporarily stored things. The next stage is to sort through things as we put them back where they belong.

Painting can be like the renovation process. The stages of painting are sometimes messy and feel like chaos and uncertainty. I like to call it experimentation and play, and I try to give myself grace when learning something new and to take it one step at a time. (Notice the acrylic pouring painting at the top of the page, which I call an experiment.)

It takes patience to practice the techniques, to learn to mix colors and to learn to see. It takes time to build the layers of a painting. The painting doesn’t go as you hoped, so you rework a part, then you step back and look at what needs to be done next. And then when the final details get into place -- the last shadow, edging or contrast-- you step back and see it has all come together. You persevered through the chaos and the result is beautiful!

I love helping my students work through this process and create wonderful paintings. Here is some of their work.

20241024 205050paintingbotanicals week2poinsettias and northernlightspoinsettias and northernlights

Tagged under
More in this category: « Summer sketching

Leave a comment

Make sure you enter all the required information, indicated by an asterisk (*). HTML code is not allowed.