Friday, April 19, 2013

Excited to receive a Merit Award for "Johnstone Park"

I was pleased to receive a Merit Award for my acrylic painting "Johnstone Park" at the Bartlesville Art Association Spring Show last Friday, April 12, 2013. The show features over 100 pieces of work in various media (oil, acrylic, watercolor, pastel, sculpture and fiber) by Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri artists. The show hangs until April 27th, 2013 at the Lyon Gallery, Bartlesville Community Center, Bartlesville, OK.

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Paint Along Class is coming up this Saturday



This is the demo painting that I did a few weeks ago in my 2 day acrylic workshop. I wanted to demonstrated aerial perspective; as objects move back in space they become cooler, muted and less defined. As things move forward in space, they become more detailed, and more colorful and brighter.
This Saturday I am offering a 3 hour paint-along class. We will begin with a short 30 minute exercise, and end with a group critique. I will be working on some new pieces during the class. Painting together provides an opportunity for everyone to learn from each other's work.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Now offering workshops and classes


Last Friday and Saturday I held my first workshop at the Art Center in Johnstone Park in Bartlesville, OK. I demonstrated mixing paint, color theory, composition and painting surfaces suitable for acrylic paint. Students did a warm-up exercise then practised painting simple landscapes in acrylic. 
In February 2013, I will be holding a Paint Along Class for students to paint along side. Check out my website for further details!

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

SEE Solo Show at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center January 4-27, 2013



 
I am excited to be exhibiting "Landscapes from the Heart" at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center for the month January. Over 50 pieces of my work are on view for sale. The TPAC gallery is a bit of a hidden gem in the Performance Center; take the ramp down from the main foyer, but it is well worth seeking out. Intimate in feel because of the low lighting, it showcases artwork beautifully! Viewing hours are M-F 10 am to 5:30 pm and during Chapman Music Hall events.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Thermal Activity accepted into Concept/OK Exhibition at Hardesty Arts Center

So... this is my painting that was juried into the Inaugural Exhibition at the Hardesty Arts Center in Tulsa. I am one of 38 artists that have been selected to be in this show, so I feel very honored! The opening reception for the public is this Sunday, December 16th  from 1-5 pm. The Arts Center is located in the Brady District at 101 E. Archer St. Tulsa. The show hangs until February 16, 2013. If you have not been down to the Brady District lately, you must go! Once made up of old, unused warehouses, this is a district that is renewing itself.
 
 


Thursday, March 8, 2012

Back in the studio again!

My studio...minus the packing boxes!
I like the storage area for completed paintings

The control center...palette, brushes, easel and lots of paint!

 

The play area...where I work out compositions, colours & contrast

 

My favourite part of the studio... the light
I get great natural light with these big windows

So... it took a lot longer to get settled into my studio than I imagined it would. Opening and unpacking all of the boxes was a big job and necessary before I could get down to painting. I have been painting regularly in my studio since January, preparing for a solo show at the local community centre. Watch for new work to be posted soon...

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

The State of my Studio


 

This is what my studio looks like currently. Having just moved 2 weeks ago from Denver, Colorado to Bartlesville, Oklahoma has really put a crimp in my painting! I keep reassuring myself that it is only a matter of time and it looks worse than it is...RIGHT?! Another week and I will be back to work painting ferociously!

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Saturday Pastel Workshop


Last Saturday, I participated in a one-day pastel workshop led by local Colorado pastel manufacturer Terry Ludwig. There was one thing that I learned very quickly....one can never have TOO many of those little coloured sticks! Unlike with painting, where with a certain amount of skill and patience I can mix any colour I desire to apply to my canvas, pastel painting is limited to the colours in your box. For Christmas I received a 30-piece pastel landscape set, which I HAD thought would be adequate for a newbie such as me...but NOOO...for one who loves colour, I felt that I was on a diet - 30 colours - no more, no less. To be fair, the instructor brought oodles of sticks available for purchase at $3 bucks a stick, and generously treated all students to extras sticks to try out. I snapped up the free sticks, but didn't purchase any additional. I kinda felt that part of the experience of working in pastel is recognizing that sometimes you have to "make do" with what you have. I "painted" 3 landscapes on Saturday. Posted above are two that I was reasonably happy with.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Zion in the Snow






We just returned from a trip to Zion over Thanksgiving weekend. It seems to be tradition for us to visit a national park during the holidays. Last Thanksgiving, we visited Yosemite National Park. In other years we have been to the Grand Canyon and Arches in Utah.

Zion was spectacular! The night that we arrived 8" of fresh snow fell, which made hiking the next day a little challenging, but the quality of the light on the red formations was magical. We ran about with cameras in our hands, (along with everyone else that was in the park) snapping pictures of one stunning view after another. We bought Yaktrax to slip on the bottom of our hiking boots to navigate the icy slippery terrain and hiked the Emerald Pools trails and the Canyon Overlook trail. It is definitely a national park that we would like to return to. I had on my bucket list that I would like to visit ALL of the national parks, but NOW but I would like to see each of them in the different seasons; fall, winter, spring and summer!

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Daytripping @ Kenosha Pass

  


Today we drove up HWY 285 to do some leaf-peeping at Kenosha Pass. The Aspens were glorious, some of them covered in leaves a delicious shade of lime green, some aspens had leaves that had turned golden, others more orange in colour. We walked through a grove of aspen, their tall spires rising up on either side of us; I felt like I was in a cathedral as their trunks rose up and formed an arch over our heads. We passed other leaf-peepers with smiles pasted on their faces. There is nothing like a walk in the aspens in the autumn!

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Summer Hike in Poudre River Area

The photograph (top) shows my husband and daughter on a meadow hike in the Poudre River area. (they are both way ahead of me, of course, while I try to shoot every thing that I see with my camera). The lower image is a 9" x 12" acyrlic painting on standard width canvas that I completed last week. It is ready to be framed.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Finally Finished!

This is a larger painting (18" x 24") that I have been working on for a while. The top photo I shot back May. Then, I put the painting aside for awhile. When I finally looked at the painting again, I was able to see it with fresh eyes. In the top photo, I felt that the bottom right corner was too busy. I kept removing blossoms until I was happy with the movement through the painting. I also increased the colour saturation of the background and added the impression of a flower on the right middle edge, to redirect the viewer's eye back toward the centre of the canvas. I like the contrast of the bright lime green background with the purply colour of the flowers. At LAST I think it is finally finished!

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Painting "down the road"



Notice the similiarities? The first painting I did many years ago, when I had first started painting. The second painting I finished last week. I like the exuberance of the brushstrokes in the second piece. In the first one, the strokes are laid down in a more slow, careful manner.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Great Sand Dunes National Park


Last weekend we drove to Great Sand Dunes National Park. The dunes are the tallest in North America. We climbed to the top of the tallest dune for a view of one of the most unusual landscapes that I have ever seen. When painting,  I look for repetition of shapes and patterns. I found the shapes and patterns of the sand fascinating!

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Solo Exhibit at Aurora's Municipal Center

Canyon Approach is one of twelve pieces of work on
display at the Aurora Municipal Center now until August 13th.
Finished in gallery wrap style the paintings vary in size from
12" x 12" to 24" by 36". The images range from landscapes of
Colorado to more intimate portraits of flowers.

See Deana Miller's article in the HUB for more information.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

"If we did all the things
we are capable of doing,
we would literally astonish ourselves"

THOMAS EDISON

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Fall Rhythms




These are four little paintings that I created to hang as a group.
Each of them measures 5"x 5" and they are all edge-painted.
I added bits of copper leaf for shine. The challenge was to make
each piece work individually, but also as a group.
Okay I know that two pieces together is a diptych,
three a triptych, but what do you call four?

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Mixed Media Weekend Workshop


Last weekend, I attended a mixed media workshop. It forced me to break out of my comfort zone! For support we used MDF board, (which is new for me). MDF is a  piece of pressed wood board that can be picked up at Home Depot inexpensively. They will even cut it to size for you! We gessoed and then textured the support with "custom patch" which is also available from Home Depot. The instructor supplied us with US Post mailer envelopes made of that plasticky paper. These we painted with acrylic paint, then ironed until they shrunk up and became bubbly. We adhered the shrunken bits of plasticky paper to our support with YES, which is an archival glue that can be found at Michaels. We also added metallic finish to our work using metallic paint or paper, thin pieces of copper, gold and silver leaf and grommets and nails. Lots of experimentation and lots of fun! Above are some materials used. Below is one of my finished pieces that I titled "Ribbons of Gold". I am looking forward to creating more pieces using these new techniques!

Thursday, April 15, 2010



"I try to apply colors like words that shape poems,
like notes that shape music"


JOAN MIRO