Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Acrylic Recap


Learning is a process and I definitely learned some new things last week.

1. Remember to check the opaqueness/transparency of paint! Some paints are solid, without any amount of transparency. Others are transparent, having more of a stained glass effect when it dries. Others are halfway between opaque and transparent-translucent. There is a dark purple color that I dribbled on top of the blue base...which I had originally planned to be a bright magenta-ish purple. But when it dried it darkened because it was translucent and the blue underneath darkened the color. Also, the extra water I added to make the paint more fluid, thinned out the color. I still wanted some bright colors to capture the spontaneity and excitement of splashing in puddles, so I added the orange and yellow.

2. Acrylic paint darkens when it dries. I had lots of surprises with colors this week! Haha..never quite knew what to expect.

3. How fluid mediums work. You can't just add water to acrylic paint to thin it, because it affects the amount of pigment in the paint. So, in order to thin or thicken paint, you can buy different types of mediums to adjust it accordingly...and it doesn't change the quality or the pigment of the paint. You can do so much with the medium, and I've only just scratched the surface. I'm excited to try different things!

4. I love texture!
See the white triangular tool on the very right? That is a palette knife. You can use it to scoop up paint and put it onto your pallet. But you can also use it like a paintbrush and smear on the paint onto the canvas with the pallet knife. That's what I did for the dark blue base. You can't really tell in the photo of the piece, but it adds a certain texture and variety that cannot be achieved with a brush. I absolutely loved using it!

I decided to use cardboard for the footprints to make it seem like the bottom ridges of rain boots. It was kind of therapeutic scraping off the layer, row by row. Some brainless activity-not having to think about what colors to use, how to mix the paint to get the right color, etc.


Anyway, it was a learning experience and I am excited to have started this project! I've come up with an idea for this next week's project and went shopping for the materials today. Subject is dandelions! :)

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Project 1- Puddle Splashin'


 Size: 16 x 20,  Materials: Canvas, acrylic paint, cardboard


Having started this goal half way through the week, I only had a few days to start and finish my first project. I decided to use acrylic paint for this week. I like to play around with colors, forms, and textures and to capture certain feelings using those three things.  I looked up some pictures online under "puddle splashing" and I came across some pictures that helped me to capture a certain feeling about splashing in puddles. Then I brainstormed some ideas about how I would express those feelings and this is the end result :)


Thursday, October 21, 2010

Vision

This blog is for my art adventures- "splashing in puddles" and getting messy!

I have always loved arts and crafts and I have finally recently been able to pursue this interest actively. I've taken a few drawing classes and am now taking a ceramics and painting class. I hope to one day become an art therapist so I can be a part of seeing people grow and finding hope, freedom, and joy.

To increase my interest in art and my experience with a variety of mediums, I am making a goal to make at least one project per week starting this week until the end of December. Part of this journey is going to be about exploring what art is. Is it the skill that is put into it, or can anyone do it as long as they express themself though it? If it is about expression, I want to learn how to express who I am. How colors, shapes, forms, figures, objects work with our heart and soul. I also hope to discover who I am as I look at the things I make. I want to learn to manipulate colors, shapes, forms, figures, medium, etc to communicate something to viewers. I also look forward to finding that others will respond differently to the same work of art and will see things that I didn't see.

I hope that this blog will motivate me to do what I want to do!