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Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Oyster

The oil spill has also affected the local menu in this area. Some restaurants no longer offer oysters entrées, appetizers nor sandwiches. In making my dot painting, I decided not to show oysters on the half shell. Instead I just depicted an oyster outer shell. I painter purple for dark parts and the same purple added to white for light areas.


acrylic on canvas, 6" x 6"

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Pelican

Of all the photos from the oil spill, the ones with brown pelicans have hit home for me. They are the state bird and appear on the Louisiana state flag. Years ago they were on the endangered species list. So, seeing images of them covered in oil has been upsetting. To create my dot painting I just made it “oil free.” I stuck to purples and pastels.


acrylic on canvas, 6" x 6"

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Sea Turtle

For the last few weeks I’ve had creative block. I’ve been stuck – not deciding how to go forward with my oil spill theme. Finally I decided I should simply work with images of animals affected by the disaster. I didn’t want to depict oil-covered animals. Brown colors would take me away from the pastel colors I prefer. Anyway, here is my painting of a sea turtle.


acrylic on canvas, 6" x 6"

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Leak

The one image that has been seared into my brain is the underwater video of the continuous oil leak. I’ve been mulling over how to depict it. Finally I decided it best not to be bound by the colors. I chose a yellow-orange background. Then I consulted my color wheel to determine a compliment. I began mixing blue and purple to make some blue violet shades. The result is an abstraction of the oil leak.


acrylic on canvas, 6" x 6"

Friday, May 21, 2010

Coffer Dam

What is it? Well, it is the shape of an object called a “coffer dam.” When lowered over an oil leak, it is supposed to help contain the oil. The local newspaper showed a white painted coffer dam being used in dramatic night photos. So, I used bluish white dots contrasted by blue and purple dots over a yellow background. Yes, my painting vibrates visually.


acrylic on canvas, 6" x 6"

Monday, May 17, 2010

Boom

Looking at newspaper photos of Louisiana marsh with lines of orange booms inspired this dot painting. My image is right at the edge where water meets land. I’ve indicated the orange boom with orange dots and the marsh grass with dark green dots. Blue water dots follow the curve of the boom.


acrylic on canvas, 6" x 6"

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Slick

Each day The Times-Picayune has provided a forecast maps for the oil spill’s reach off the coast of Louisiana. It details different bands of thickness in the Gulf of Mexico. The forecasts inspired my dot pattern in this painting.


acrylic on canvas, 6" x 6"

Sunday, May 09, 2010

Surface

The oil spill continues to fill my local newspaper with photos and graphics. An image of rusty orange oil floating on top of Gulf of Mexico water caught my attention. I chose a yellow-green background canvas I had painted already. The colors reminded me of the BP logo colors. First I added orange dots, for the areas of the spill, and then filled with blues and purples, for water. The painting is quite bright.


acrylic on canvas, 6" x 6"

Wednesday, May 05, 2010

Explosion

Since I can’t get the Gulf of Mexico oil spill story out of my mind, I turned to color photos of the initial explosions. I concentrated on fiery colors on top of blue. Orange is a complementary color to blue. They vibrate when placed together. Anyway, that’s what led to the image below.


acrylic on canvas, 6" x 6"

Saturday, May 01, 2010

Spill

Here I go again. I’m painting another series of dot paintings. For the moment I’m not quite sure where I’m headed after making my first painting. But I do know I want to break out of what I did the last time – in The Alpha Series.
I felt a bit boxed in by my designs. So now, the journey begins.


acrylic on canvas, 6" x 6"

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Sketch Process Part Deux

In round two I thought I had things figured out, but then I went to paint. My painting went a different direction. It’s been a while since I created the “Alpha Series.” So, I guess I’m relearning what I did first. Then I I’ll work out where I go next.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Sketch Process

Here’s round one of sketches for the “Beta Series.” After drawing them, however, I’m not sure I want to use them. The mandala design has started to bore me. So most likely I will be aiming for something different. For the moment I'm just not sure I how I will accomplish a change.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

ze

The idea for my final piece, in this batch, came from the light on my external hard drive. When I turn off the ceiling light, the blue light haunts my computer room. When I first purchased the drive, its blue light distracted me. It has taken some for me to get used to it.


acrylic on canvas, 5" x 5"

Again I began with a diamond shape on my canvas. I painted it blue surrounded by a darker blue. I then played with variations of light and dark blue to create the beams of light emanating from the center of my design. And thus, I conclude the “e” Reaction Series.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

ye

In recent years, while visiting some people’s homes, I’ve noticed a lot of interiors decorated with earth tone colors – especially in some abstract artwork. My palette usually consists of pastel colors. Thus I figured I ought to give the earth tones colors a whirl. My previous painting “ve” was a trial run for this one.


acrylic on canvas, 5" x 5"

The first issue I ran into was communicating painterly expression using dots. The large abstract paintings that inspired me had very loose brush marks on them. I achieved a loose pattern by applying the dots irregularly. Also I thought about what colors go forward and backward in space. The finished image looks like some ancient symbol.