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Artist Perpetually in Progress

Lady in Red and Green

I expanded on the pattern on the dress of this lady cut from the collage sheets that come with Somerset Studio to create this piece, another 8"x10" on watercolor paper.

I chose the yellow paper to blend into the background of the dress and moved those two pieces around until I was pleased with the placement.  I adhered them and used watercolor crayons to draw in the red and green triangles.  I wet my brush to turn the scribbles into paint, then started poking holes for adding stitching. 

I found out that the green blended in too much on top of the dress, which inspired the extra small red triangles, to make it obvious that the pattern overlapped the dress.  I also needed to add the stitching on the blank paper or the whole thing looked too abrupt.

This was where I intended to stop, but the big white space in the upper right was just too overwhelming, so I took a grey pen and did some scribbled storytelling there.  I like the look of the writing now that it's there.

Overall, though, I'm not thrilled with the piece.  It's too involved to be minimal and yet not layered enough for my taste.  It would look so much better on a complex cream background with different textures and colors peeping through.  On the other hand, I fulfilled my objective of developing a work by extending a pattern from a collage image, so it was a worthwhile exercise.

Ripples Sketchbook Spreads 16 to 18

I decided to try another page where the ripple pattern was contained within a shape. The butterfly worked really well, especially since I carefully chose where to put the origination points.  Then I wondered what would happen if one ripple set off the other ripples as it expanded to touch the origination points.  This page was my first try and I wasn't pleased with the effect.

ripples_s16.jpg

For the second try I only expanded one origination point at a time, switching to a new one as the ripple I was working on touched it.  The pattern turned out very different than the rest of the sketchbook and more appealing than the first version.

I visited the Michener Art Museum and took a closer look at one of the geometric based pieces of modern art.  The patterns could have been used to fill the entire picture plane, but instead it made an irregular shape with less detail at the edges.  I decided to try a version of that with the ripple pattern.

ripples_s17.jpg

I thought the result was interesting enough that I tried two other variations, creating blank space in different parts of the picture to change the visual emphasis.  I think I like the third one best, especially since it seems to have a three-dimensional effect to it.

ripples_s18.jpg

See the previous three spreads.

Three Arches Background Painted

bluebackdone.jpg This was so easy and worked out so well! 

I started with a soft rubber squeegee applicator and made vertical streaks with liquid acrylics, some transparent and some blue.  Then I dabbed in just a few touches of green and magenta with a paper towel.  The papers took the paint differently, as I had intended, but the whole thing was a little too bright and still kind of choppy.  It was going to overwhelm the elements I wanted to place on it.

My hand happened to brush over a bottle of titan buff, which I hadn't tried yet, so I dripped out a little and rubbed it in.  It seemed to work, so I kept going.  I was kind of afraid that it was going to run everything together too much, but instead I got just the right level of blending.

It reminds me of the backgrounds that I see in the magazines and I'm absolutely thrilled that I created it.  Next I'll be adding the lace...

Art-o-mat at the Library Redux

Woohoo!  The Art-o-mat at the Doylestown library has been cycled out from when I first blogged about finding it last year.  The current machine has some nifty gears and shiny bits in with the robot that don't show up well in the photograph.

artomatjuly.jpg

Of course, I had to buy a bit of art.  I chose a mini art quilt by Nikki Wheeler and a collage by Rachel Freeman.  Both are nice pieces and I'll store them with my atcs.  As a bonus, Rachel's collage has a neat paper hinge so it will stand up on its own.  I had to jiggle and fuss with the machine to get it to accept the tokens but it was a great deal of fun.

artomatart.jpg

Ripples Sketchbook Spreads 13 to 15

Color again - but this time colored pencil instead of markers.  I love how this medium lays down on the paper of the moleskine sketchbook.  It gives me a lot more room for shading if I want to make the pieces appear more three dimensional than the overlapping does on its own.  The design element of having one circle be squiggly lines instead of smooth also seemed to work well.

ripples_s13.jpg

I couldn't continue with the color because we were traveling, so I did another divided field, this time varying the size of the circular ripples for each function.  This page took me longer because of the small circles, but I really liked the effect.

A friend who saw the sketchbook at this point liked the page with ovals and circles and suggested I add triangles, too.  So I gave that a try.  I'm not particularly happy with this incarnation.  I think the shapes get lost in the other similarities.  It needs a focal point or difference of some sort.  But that's not the fault of the combination of shapes.

ripples_s14.jpg

At some point it occurred to me that the ripples looked something like the contours on a map, so I did a page emphasizing the similarity.  I used the smallest pen point I had and deliberately held the pen differently for this one so as to get more irregular lines. 

I was a bit bored and didn't know what to do next, so I gave myself freedom to deviate further from my doodle algorithm.  I drew one curvy line and continued until I had a horn, after a fashion. I confined the usual pattern to one small section, but referenced it with the circles elsewhere.  Not bad, but I think I can do more with the concept.

ripples_s15.jpg

See the previous three spreads.

 

Latest Activity

Beth Robinson commented on the photo Trooper close Jun 19
Beth Robinson commented on the photo Humphrey Jun 19
Deb and Beth Robinson commented on the photo Two Trees by Deb Ratcliffe Jun 16
Beth Robinson left a comment for abstract4art Jun 16
Beth Robinson replied to the discussion Lin's Four Faces of Mother Nature Jun 14
Beth Robinson replied to the discussion Barb's Four Faces Jun 14
Beth Robinson replied to the discussion Thank you, FaceMakers! Jun 13
Beth Robinson replied to the discussion Beth's Merfolk Jun 12

Profile

What's Your Favourite Way To Create?
collage, stitching, blogging
Favourite Artists (in ANY creative medium)
Dali, Klee, Rauschenburg, Johns for the more famous ones. mlee and intotheblystic for two of my fellow etsiers. I'll need to go pull up some more names...
Greatest Creative Moment You've Had?
It's really more of a flow than a moment...
What's Your Biggest Creative Dream?
A large complex piece of artwork with layers of imagery and meaning.
Your Website:
http://www.artbybethrobinson.com
Your Blog:
http://www.artbybethrobinson.com/journal
Additional website/ blog:
http://inventingelephants.com

Beth Robinson's Blog

Happy to Join You Here

I've been lurking for the last week and am impressed by how active and interesting this network is. It's going to take me weeks to look into every corner that intrigues me at first glance! I'm looking forward to it. I'm a product development chemist during the day. I'm a new mother - my daughter was born on Christmas Eve 2007. I read voraciously, going through phases of themes. Lately a lot of it has been business related as I'm an MBA student. I'll be halfway done in just a few weeks. In 2004… Continue

Posted on May 4th, 2008 at 2:25am — 4 Comments (Add)

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At 12:41pm on May 4th, 2008, RobynG said…
Hi Beth, I have been reading with enjoyment your "Artist perpetually in progress" posts. I love your felt and bead butterflies.
At 5:23am on May 4th, 2008, Mary Hicks said…
Hi Beth, I just checked out "Keys To Drawing With Imagination" and ordered a used copy. It sounds like it's right up my alley -- something I can carry with me and open when time allows. Thanks for that plug!
At 2:08am on May 4th, 2008, Jules said…
Welcome Beth!
I adore your tiny butterflies!
Feel free to join any groups or add to conversations. Our doodle group has been doing similiar things as your taking a line for a walk exercise!
Hope I see you around - Jules
 
 

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