Friday, January 29, 2016

Untitled boat

Untitled
 30" x 40"  oil on canvas

“The seed of your next art work lies embedded in the imperfections of your current piece. Such imperfections are your guides–valuable, objective, non-judgmental guides to matters you need to reconsider or develop further.” ~David Bayle
Some paintings take longer than others to produce and you never know when you start how the process will unfold.  A painting may almost fall off the knife or I may have to paint and scrape and repaint ad infinitum until that moment arrives when it starts to come together.

Working through what seems like a horrible session only to see that glimmer of recognition of the vision that you originally had. Its oh so easy to give up and try something easier, but there is no learning in that.  Speed and ease should be removed from everyone's vocabulary when painting.  Yes there will be times when both are there, but there will be more times when they are not.

This boat took a fair bit of working and reworking to get it to where I wanted it to go.  I accept that not everything in the creation of art is easy and that's a major step in forward movement.  Instead of abandoning a piece that isn't working as I want it to, I look at why it isn't working and fix those mistakes. Isn't that true of most of life and how to make it more pleasant?


2 comments:

Jennifer Rose said...

your water always has so much movement to it, even when its flat it looks alive :)

I try to fix things that might be wrong, but end up getting annoyed and often just end up putting a piece away until time has passed and I am not as annoyed at it :p

Jeanette Jobson said...

There are so many values and colour in water. That's its appeal to me. And yes, even in flat water, its a constant shifting surface to try to capture.

I get fed up with some pieces too and put them aside til they call to me again. :)