Finished a couple more today - I always have a few on the go, as they take a while to dry before I can do the next stage.
This peacock was done in acrylic ink - Bockingford half imperial (56x38cm | 22x15") NOT surface, 300gsm
I was a bit nervous of doing this one, as I wasn't sure how I was going to approach the wonderful tail feathers. In the end I just went for it (after all - it was only a piece of paper!) I do love the colours of peacocks and the acrylic inks match them very well.
I then decided to do a pheasant - which I see quite often on the fields (and sometimes in the garden, when my dogs aren't chasing them....)
Done in acrylic ink - Bockingford half imperial (56x38cm | 22x15") NOT surface, 300gsm
Again, I was concerned as to how to portray the numerous feathers on the body. In the end I went for an impression of them, using watercolour techniques - giving them a texture rather than detailed feathers, which wouldn't suit the style.
Tomorrow I'm back upstairs to finish the drawing stage of the kingfisher in flight - fingers crossed.
Thursday, 22 May 2014
Monday, 19 May 2014
Quirky - but great fun....
I have loved secretary birds ever since I saw them on safari. They are crazy looking birds but have the most amazing plummage, so of course I had to paint one of them!
Don't you agree - what a mad headdress!
My friends had told me that I needed to do my next paintings on larger paper - so this was done on 1/2 imperial Bockingford NOT watercolour paper - and I still filled the page. They are now suggesting that I go up to full imperial. I'm not sure about that, as, after mounting and framing, that would made an absolutely huge picture! These fellow artists however did get one thing right - get the eyes and the beak in detail and frankly you can go completely mad with the rest of it. Birds of prey definitely have the most amazing eyes, really piercing, and it works really well with this technique. I am going to have to get to the local zoo soon (which specialises in endangered animals and birds) and have a sketching day, as I can't rely on my photographs from safari etc all the time - sometimes they just weren't zoomed in enough or in good enough detail.
Right - back to the drawing board for more....
Don't you agree - what a mad headdress!
My friends had told me that I needed to do my next paintings on larger paper - so this was done on 1/2 imperial Bockingford NOT watercolour paper - and I still filled the page. They are now suggesting that I go up to full imperial. I'm not sure about that, as, after mounting and framing, that would made an absolutely huge picture! These fellow artists however did get one thing right - get the eyes and the beak in detail and frankly you can go completely mad with the rest of it. Birds of prey definitely have the most amazing eyes, really piercing, and it works really well with this technique. I am going to have to get to the local zoo soon (which specialises in endangered animals and birds) and have a sketching day, as I can't rely on my photographs from safari etc all the time - sometimes they just weren't zoomed in enough or in good enough detail.
Right - back to the drawing board for more....
Tuesday, 13 May 2014
Cambridge Open Studios promote my Open Studios Exhibition
Cambridge Open Studios have just posted the following on their Facebook and Twitter pages. Please have a look and I'd love to see any of you, if you happen to be in the Cambridge area on the middle two weekends in July:
Meet the artists - Meet Lynn Norton, mixed media artist from Huntingdon
"The acrylic ink work is very loose, letting the medium choose its own path. The inks call for dramatic shapes and the natural world provides these in abundance.
My pastel work is realistic - viewing the subject more closely. In this respect I have been influenced by Georgia O'Keeffe, where I home in to the object to look at the hidden beauty."
Please visit the COS website for more information about the artist
"The acrylic ink work is very loose, letting the medium choose its own path. The inks call for dramatic shapes and the natural world provides these in abundance.
My pastel work is realistic - viewing the subject more closely. In this respect I have been influenced by Georgia O'Keeffe, where I home in to the object to look at the hidden beauty."
Please visit the COS website for more information about the artist
Monday, 5 May 2014
A few more for Cambridge Open Studios
Sometimes things just don't work. With the technique I use with the acrylic inks, there is a lot of spritzing with water and sometimes I end up with mud as the two (or more) vibrant colours decide to mix completely! This is what happened with the kingfisher I was doing a couple of days ago. I love the subject - such beautiful colours - but in this case less (acrylic ink and water) is more! I was at a party recently and met a lovely gentleman who works in the art business (as in selling). I told him that you can't do really detailed work with the dropper on the FW acrylic inks. He mentioned a product - which they can no longer get in the UK - that is a empty bottle with an 18 gauge (0.8mm) applicator. He believed that he might have one of these left in stock - and bless him - he has sent it to me. This means that if there is a particular colour I want to do a really fine line with, I just pour some of the colour from the original bottle into this and off I go. Will try it out and comment on it in another post.
Now on to the few that worked....
I have been to Africa on safari quite a few times - always taking numerous photographs (over 1,000 each time). Looking through them recently, I came across some lovely bird photographs. This crowned crane was spectacular - an amazing head-dress. I used masking fluid to do the head feathers - although I may have been a little too subtle with the white? Again acrylic ink on Bockingford quarter imperial NOT with a small amount of soft pastel on top.
I wanted to do a guinea fowl for two reasons - I saw them in Africa outside our tent, as well as other places, but also because a friend has them (raised from eggs by her). They are ridiculous things really - the painting ended up more cartoon-like than I wanted. Can't decide whether to keep it as a quirky one, or to ditch it. Jury is out on this one! Maybe I should do a series of cartoon-style paintings. I could add the ostrich (looking straight at me) for a start, along with the water buffalo, giraffe and a skinny hornbill (looks exactly like Zazu from the Lion King!)
I am hoping to do some landscapes soon - completely different style and medium. I was inspired by my course with Sarah Bee at West Dean College where she used soft pastels on top of textured acrylic. I already paint with pastels on occasion and this would be an extension of that. If you go on her site and look at the gallery, the painting she was working on during my course is the last one on the second section - called "Warm Rocks and Cool Water at Haytor Quarry". We didn't see it finished at West Dean, so good to see the final painting now.
The other person who is influencing me at the moment is an American lady called Karen Margulis who does pastel painting as well, but underpainting of either watercolour or pastel, diluted with alcohol. When she described the alcohol method, I really didn't understand what she meant. I have now found a brilliant YouTube video by an Australian lady, who actually demonstrates the alcohol underpainting technique - which can be found here: Leesa Padget demo I never cease to be amazed at how generous artists are when you ask them a question. I posted a message to Leesa on the YouTube video site, saying I found it extremely useful and now understand how to do the technique. She immediately came back to me saying that not only can you use the same small pot of alcohol for the whole of one painting (starting with the lightest colour and going through the tones to dark), but that you don't have to throw away the alcohol afterwards. If you let it settle, the pastel particles drop to the bottom and you can use it a few times, as long as you don't disturb the sediment. I am assuming a tall bottle is probably the best thing to use for that. Anyway, that is for the future - need to get a few more acrylic ink paintings done first.
Obviously all this is for the forthcoming Cambridge Open Studios. This is a huge event in July with over 300 artists in and around Cambridge - and Nina Sage and I are joining forces to exhibit together on the middle two weekends. Both of us are working hard to get new work and are really excited about our first Open Studios event. COS is working hard promoting the event on their website Cambridge Open Studios, as well as Facebook and Twitter. Luckily we have done a couple of exhibitions already, which means we feel relatively under control - at the moment! Hopefully that will continue....
Now on to the few that worked....
While visiting a garden last year, I took photographs of some lovely roses. The modern type are no good for my technique, beautiful though they are - the petals are too close together and it doesn't make for an interesting painting. However, the old style, with the open aspect and wonderfully interesting stamens, do work very well. The rose was actually white - well, that wasn't going to work, so I added a few "subtle" colours! This is just the acrylic inks (no pastels this time) on Bockingford quarter imperial NOT. I decided that although I like working on the half imperial, with the mount and frame it makes for a very large painting - so for this coming exhibition I am trying a number of smaller ones, which may fit in peoples houses a bit more!
I wanted to do a guinea fowl for two reasons - I saw them in Africa outside our tent, as well as other places, but also because a friend has them (raised from eggs by her). They are ridiculous things really - the painting ended up more cartoon-like than I wanted. Can't decide whether to keep it as a quirky one, or to ditch it. Jury is out on this one! Maybe I should do a series of cartoon-style paintings. I could add the ostrich (looking straight at me) for a start, along with the water buffalo, giraffe and a skinny hornbill (looks exactly like Zazu from the Lion King!)
I am hoping to do some landscapes soon - completely different style and medium. I was inspired by my course with Sarah Bee at West Dean College where she used soft pastels on top of textured acrylic. I already paint with pastels on occasion and this would be an extension of that. If you go on her site and look at the gallery, the painting she was working on during my course is the last one on the second section - called "Warm Rocks and Cool Water at Haytor Quarry". We didn't see it finished at West Dean, so good to see the final painting now.
The other person who is influencing me at the moment is an American lady called Karen Margulis who does pastel painting as well, but underpainting of either watercolour or pastel, diluted with alcohol. When she described the alcohol method, I really didn't understand what she meant. I have now found a brilliant YouTube video by an Australian lady, who actually demonstrates the alcohol underpainting technique - which can be found here: Leesa Padget demo I never cease to be amazed at how generous artists are when you ask them a question. I posted a message to Leesa on the YouTube video site, saying I found it extremely useful and now understand how to do the technique. She immediately came back to me saying that not only can you use the same small pot of alcohol for the whole of one painting (starting with the lightest colour and going through the tones to dark), but that you don't have to throw away the alcohol afterwards. If you let it settle, the pastel particles drop to the bottom and you can use it a few times, as long as you don't disturb the sediment. I am assuming a tall bottle is probably the best thing to use for that. Anyway, that is for the future - need to get a few more acrylic ink paintings done first.
Obviously all this is for the forthcoming Cambridge Open Studios. This is a huge event in July with over 300 artists in and around Cambridge - and Nina Sage and I are joining forces to exhibit together on the middle two weekends. Both of us are working hard to get new work and are really excited about our first Open Studios event. COS is working hard promoting the event on their website Cambridge Open Studios, as well as Facebook and Twitter. Luckily we have done a couple of exhibitions already, which means we feel relatively under control - at the moment! Hopefully that will continue....
Friday, 2 May 2014
Trying out new subjects
I've been experimenting with different subject matter - wanting something new for the forthcoming Cambridge Open Studios in the summer. Some worked - some haven't and it is back to the drawing board with them....
However, I am quite pleased with this peacock. Firstly they have such wonderful colours - just right for the acrylic inks I have. I also love the feathers on the head - very quirky.
I have tried a few other birds. Decided that I need ones with interesting head feathers or lovely bright plummage to make it work in this style.
Jury is out on the guinea fowl and the stinky turkey (which I saw in Ecuador this February - amazing plummage on that). I'll see if I can improve them before uploading on to this site.
I had forgotten that I had picked up some peacock feathers from the garden centre. Thought it would be fun to do a close-up of one of them. Just had fun with this one - lots of ink and water. I started off choosing the typical "peacock" colours and thought it needed something vibrant in there. Looking closely at the feather one discovers other complementary colours lurking in there. I accentuated these and it really brings the picture to life.
I've been going through all my African photographs - you never know, I might end up trying this technique with some of the wonderful animals I saw there. Same goes for the ones from the Galapagos - for example, the iguanas had some wonderful colours....
Anyway - back to work in the studio. Really enjoying having everything in the right place in cupboards and having running water up there - what a difference it makes.
However, I am quite pleased with this peacock. Firstly they have such wonderful colours - just right for the acrylic inks I have. I also love the feathers on the head - very quirky.
I have tried a few other birds. Decided that I need ones with interesting head feathers or lovely bright plummage to make it work in this style.
Jury is out on the guinea fowl and the stinky turkey (which I saw in Ecuador this February - amazing plummage on that). I'll see if I can improve them before uploading on to this site.
I had forgotten that I had picked up some peacock feathers from the garden centre. Thought it would be fun to do a close-up of one of them. Just had fun with this one - lots of ink and water. I started off choosing the typical "peacock" colours and thought it needed something vibrant in there. Looking closely at the feather one discovers other complementary colours lurking in there. I accentuated these and it really brings the picture to life.
I've been going through all my African photographs - you never know, I might end up trying this technique with some of the wonderful animals I saw there. Same goes for the ones from the Galapagos - for example, the iguanas had some wonderful colours....
Anyway - back to work in the studio. Really enjoying having everything in the right place in cupboards and having running water up there - what a difference it makes.
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