Saturday 30 March 2013

Colour Wars

I am still in the middle of my quest to produce the strongest, brightest colour mixes I can - starting off with my favourite palettes, though I will move on! I noticed that all my water colour gear was on one side of my desk, and all the markers on the other - still linked to the wonderful Joanne Sharpe Colour Love course I am doing online. So I decided to see which came out best! The colours lined themselves up into two armies and we went to war!...though I still can't decide, I definitely have more fun, and more potential with the water colours......



Friday 29 March 2013

Journalling on Good Friday

What's a girl to do on a holiday when there's a cyclone raging? Portugal has been battered lately with wave after wave of torrential rainstorms and gales which make the windows rattle and roll, thus forcing an art-crazed soul like me to stay cozied up indoors and get out the bright colours. Today I 'm showing another picture from the Joanne Sharpe course - not the most original but I was practising trying to get the brightest colour possible and am pleased with the result. The other sketch speaks for itself.



The cats are so frustrated at the moment that we have had some 'incidents' - a bad case of bathroom mat rage from Diana, and a rather nasty outburst of litter tray rage in the garage best left to the imagination.  So what is a cat to do on such a day? Sleep, of-course, and let themselves be looked after.







Monday 25 March 2013

Last days in Moab

My last few days in Moab were exactly what I was seeking. Hot, scorchingly hot, but full of excitement, adventure and wondrous sites. No photos can accurately show the vastness panorama that is the view from Dead Horse Point - hand up to shield from the sun to gaze upon escarpment upon escarpment in a never ending staircase of time as far as one can see. Look down into fathomless depths of time, see the white rim, entrenchment within entrenchment, gorge within gorge. Twisted pines give shade to lizards and snakes, while tourism is organically controlled and as fully-informative as ever. I wished I were younger and fitter, and could explore the labyrinth of canyons and cracks hidden away in a secret dimension. I could stay there for weeks and still have more to see and explore. My photos were a bit disappointing but the memories are vivid and focused.





On the way to Grand View Point, we passed on to the "Island in the Sky" This, in evolutionary terms, won't exist much longer as the road passes through a narrow isthmus with steep slopes on each side. Nature will, of-course win, and bridges will be built. I stopped at practically every viewpoint in my desperation to see everything, every layer, every nook and cranny. I was intoxicated with the place - just one more view, just one more photo, just one more for the road!


The narrow pass onto the 'Island in the Sky'.




My last park was Arches. I was SO glad I chose to visit at sunset. The park was bathed in golden light and the rocks looked as if they were on fire. I went on a small tour - the guide was brilliant and explained the geology and ecology of the region brilliantly. He encouraged me (not the fittest of souls) to make a real effort and climb up to the last arch as he had timed it to co-incide with sunset. I puffed a bit but made it. I sat alone with my thoughts, a blissful moment. Hard to imagine that my holiday was nearly over.....






 A final jet boat ride up the Colorado and a night time light display on the canyon walls. Time to go home. I absolutely loved every minute of this amazing adventure and can't wait to come back one day.







Sunday 24 March 2013

Towards Moab

The first thing I did today was read the papers.......





(They were just a little out of date)

Another day of geological wonders and awesomeness. The nearer to Moab I got, the more the excitement rose. I got just a little taster today on quite a big detour down a huge canyon (Indian Creek)  to see 'The Needles." All of these places are so satisfying to visit, not just because of what you see, but also because of the high quality information always provided. Plaques, display boards and wayside posters. Visitors' Centres with exhibits, films shows, rangers and guides and endless shelves of information and books. It's a huge learning experience, too. Everything is explained. Anything can be identified. This SO appeals to my left-sided brain.......

Can you see 'The Wooden Shoe'?
The Needles

Indian Creek


Journals - some recent classes



Just finishing doing some online classes with Joanne Sharpe - mainly using bright, vivid colours and using our stashes of markers for lettering. Usually I study the techniques used in the class and then make something completely different, but this time I loved the idea so much that I made one for me!!!

Friday 15 March 2013

Journey into the hot, dry desert.......


When I visited Monument Valley the year before, everything was as I had expected - dramatic landforms, memories of John Wayne and herds of cattle and horses, amazing skylines and a feeling of insignificance against all this power from the past. Other things were not so predictable. The weather was awful - a cold front had moved in, bringing a dark, menacing sky and biting wind. We were on a small tour bus, getting up at six in the morning in our lovely hotel in Sedona (most fantastic place anywhere but don't go there if you don't like red)  - the driver/guide must be up there on the list of 'most boring commentaries ever given' His voice droned on and on throughout the journey, mostly uninteresting snippets from his life on the VERY edge of the glamorous film world (I think he walked their dogs!) - and full accounts of the geology of the area - I would normally be very excited and interested but in his hands, he made the great land movements, mountain folding and the coming and going of mighty seas and oceans as interesting as my grandmother's accounts of her knitting circle days.



This whole area is not the United States at all. Anywhere past the edge of the road belongs to the Navajo nation, and as such it is a precious and interesting area. Quite rightly, the Navajo want to protect their land and their people. But this makes for a very bad marriage with the tourist trade! We were lucky - we managed, almost wrecking the people carrier, and bouncing like pebbles in a tin can, to get to the end of the rutted track to see a few very sad native people, a very tired horse and wonderful landscapes. Other tourists, including thousands of Japanese in coach parties, were ushered onto very old, converted trucks on hard seats and given plastic macs (the kind that went out in the sixties), as some sort of feeble protection against the wind, and, by now, freezing, driving rain. I felt so sorry for them - it must have been an unforgettable experience for all the wrong reasons.

Dust devils at Monument Valley

Valley of the Kings



On this journey it was so different. Baking hot, dusty and a hot, dry wind lifting sand and dust. I thought I was in the Sahara.....Then I spotted a mini-tornado, a dust devil, twirling its way across the scrub. Later in my travels, in the very heart of Portugal in August, I was to see much the same thing. A sudden gust of wind and much shaking of trees in one very specific spot, a howling noise, then great tufts of dried grass and hay twirling high in the sky above - lasting only a minute or two but very dramatic. I drove on and on, through the valley, but then passed another intriguing place. I didn't have time to explore - but I will do one day. From the road, in the heat haze. I could see great stacks of red and orange rock, golden cliffs, and a sense of mystery so tangible that I could feel it a couple of miles away. It is called 'The Valley of the Kings.' It's on the list.....

After a long but glorious day, I finally arrived in the small but perfect settlement of Bluff, back in Utah - an oasis in the desert. At first unpromising, but with a historic cavalry fort, amazing restaurant and Navajo Trading post (Twin Rocks, very suggestive formations...), I couldn't believe my eyes when, opposite my lodge hotel, was a sign welcoming me to a coffee shop with, yes, EXPRESSO coffee. Also with an amazing array of Indian crafts, local artists' paintings, sofas and all kinds of quirky stuff. The guy said the mighty Eric Clapton came there to buy stuff! An oasis indeed. I still found it hard to believe that the best part of the trip...was yet to come!!!


COFFEE!!!!!!

My bedtime reading!

Sunday 10 March 2013

More journaling

Here are a few recent pages and snippets from my small by-the-bed journal. I find I can write in a small journal much easier than a large one - I have tried a few times to go bigger but the intimacy is lost - so the big one is for grander stuff! This is a lovely hotchpotch of scribbles, comments, book of days and lots of sketches and photos - some work out better than others! But I love them all! It is quite hard to publish these as they are personal - and journals record what you are feeling at that moment, not how you may be feeling now, which I find quite interesting. As I write, I have a whole pile of bits from today that are going in tomorrow (today is a Headache Day).....this is the best medicine for anyone's daily life - it's fun, therapeutic and you get a real sense of achievement. It's a record and a place for reflection, for ideas and for grumbles. It's what you want it to be and it's all yours.



I LOVE drawing faces and people and am gradually getting better. I have to force myself to keep practising!


Above is a small copy of a big drawing I did (on the right) from my favourite rock - a lump of Chrysocolla) which I incorporated into a smaller page. It's fun to recycle.

I HATE MY LEGS!!!!!!!!!!!


I do some colour pages, too, but not many as these are usually in the bigger journals. Here are some more typical pages.........


Whatever you write or draw, it doesn't matter because it's the PROCESS that counts, the doing. These kinds of pages aren't for judging...I am just trying to show the fun that went into them. This works better than my migraine medicine!






I have a big stash of bought journals collected on my travels, which must be used - this one is covered in marbled paper from Florence - but I know that I would have even more fun if I made the journals myself, which I will do once the other pile is a bit smaller! My friend and teacher, Gwen Diehn, has written a wonderful book on journal making, which I am keen to explore much more.

Saturday 9 March 2013

Journalling and the quest for my imagination

 I wish someone out there would help me in my quest for my imagination. I am so rooted in my left brain that I can't seem to break free. I love being creative, love practising art and making bright visual journals but I am still unsatisfied. I spend hours looking at other artists' work and then slip into the black pit of despair where the words "Why can't I think up these ideas?" spinning round looking for the answer. I've read countless books on creativity - all of them making the point that we all have a fertile, creative imagination locked inside of ourselves and that we just have to do this or that exercise and the ideas will flood in. Well, after many exercises, the floodgates are still tight shut. I don't want to copy anybody else....so I sit and my table and wait...and wait.......However,....

on the positive side, I do love certain activities which help. I have quite a few journals on the go at any given time - but the main ones I use every day are my 'day' journal, A5 size which lives by my bed, and my 'big' journal (even the names lack originality!) Size is the key here. My A4 size journals are for the odd moments when art inspiration strikes, for working at length or in layers on techniques and making bold statements, while the smaller journals are picked up almost every hour and are full of writing, notes, sketches, drawings and much more musing. Apart from these, obviously, are my shelf-full of my favourites, the travel journals.  Here are a few recent pages from my latest big journal (number 6).......

The strata are angry
Man in Albuquerque with big earring at sunset



mesh2

I am finding it very hard to move pictures around in blogger - I may have a bug in the system. It has taken me hours of repeating and re-introducing photos and I still can't get photos to sit beside each other, like the two above. Sometimes it works, often the photo disappears or tags itself onto another. IT is definitely not user-friendly!




















































Something very useful I did learn was that you have to put some effort into thinking about what really inspires you to the point of wanting to express your feelings about it - thinking hard about what impacts upon you. For me it was simple...I am not turned on by florals, pretty patterns or whimsical cliches. What does inspire are dramatic landscapes, landforms and rocks, the sun, unusual people, portraits and all kinds of abstraction. There are others on the list but I come back to these every time. Instead of books on how to draw, I have now bought some wonderful books of photos and art of these topics - stunning books on mineralogy and geomorphology. Colour is another huge source of ideas - pink, obviously, but it has to be stark and bright! I have 30000 photos of my travels round the world. It is not hard to take a wander through the files - India for example, and an idea takes hold. So, the answer to finding your imagination must be two-fold - follow your interests and passions - and keep practising as you do get better!!! (slowly!)

Here are a few more....I'll do my small journal in a different post. I hope to attract some fellow journalers with these posts - all comments welcome (well, maybe not all!!).

She sees the world through.........
colourisme


You can see I like trees....