© 2008 -- 2011 the Grandpa at The Word Mechanic. All rights reserved.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

My first acrylic on canvass or why I like to paint

As a preteen and adolescent, I drew and painted pictures with chalk and with pastel. As an adult I've painted with watercolors and used charcoal and pencil. A couple months ago, S and I took a one night "class" on painting with acrylics. It was really more of a social night out. Everyone in class followed the teacher's instructions and painted the same picture. We had stuffed mushrooms and martinis and wine and cookies and cake. At the end of the evening, the teacher took our photos with our pictures and put us on her mailing list for future such events. It was fun and totally relaxing. But I didn't get anything I wanted to call my painting out of it.

I had been thinking about painting with acrylics for some time. Not because I'm a visual artist. I'm not. My father was, but I didn't inherit that particular gene. I'd been thinking about it because I enjoy painting, and when I was working regularly with watercolors, it gave me a way to relax and forget whatever was stressing me. I wanted to try acrylics because the stuff I'd read about working with them sounded interesting.

My father had used them, but that's because he used everything, even some media he invented himself. When he painted, though, he generally preferred oils.

The one night class, at least, gave me some basics about handling acrylics and how to start working with them. So when we went to California this past summer, S bought me a basic set of acrylics and a few canvasses for my birthday. I thought about using them there, but didn't. When I got home, though, I selected a few photos I'd taken to use as subjects while I learned about the medium.

OK, drum roll, please.......................................................



I call it Path at Pine Cove, Twilight. I'm probably not going to frame it and hang it, but I'm not unhappy with it.

Since the photo I painted from is a twilight shot, the foreground is supposed to be dark. But the flash on the camera washed out the color. So I tried to take the picture without the flash and got (another drum roll please ).......................



If you look at the photo on the easel above the picture, you'll see this is actually the way I envisioned the picture turning out -- wonderful what digital photography will do to your work, but it isn't an accurate representation of what I'd done. So I took another photo. This time I got (you know, drum roll)............................




....the picture I wish I had painted!


WHY I LIKE TO PAINT

I like to paint because I'm not a painter. There is no pressure. I don't have to be good. If I'm going to get something out of it I need to try to be good. But there's nobody standing over me saying I should do this and not do that.

My father would do that when I was a teenager and later when I'd show him some of the drawings I'd done as an adult. But that's what fathers do.

And there's no gate keeper judging me in terms of whether I get paid or whether anybody else gets to see my work or even whether I'll get more work from them. So there's none of the pressure I feel -- regardless of how much I like my work -- as a professional or a poet. When I paint, it's my time for me. It relaxes me, and that's good for my blood pressure and my soul.

Just me, thinking about what I see.

But something more happened with this painting. Something I hadn't expected.

When I work with watercolor, I do a painting, sometimes two paintings, in an evening--most of which paintings I don't keep. But it took me weeks to do this first acrylic. That's partly because I wasn't sure all the time what to do next and partly because of time. It was also partly because I wanted to think about what I was doing and about the mistakes I made so I could learn from this experience.

My "studio" is set up in a section of my office, which occupies the entire third floor of our house. The table where the easel sits is about fifteen feet away from my desk. The whole time I was painting the picture, the canvass stayed where, as I worked during the day, I could simply turn and look at it any time I wanted. I also saw it whether I wanted to or not whenever I'd get up from the desk or simply turn in my chair to think about the next paragraph or prospecting letter.

Every time I saw the picture, I saw something different. The mistakes I made, I would stare at for days. I was clueless how to fix them. But when I would figure it out, just by looking at the painting so often I would wonder whether I could mix the colors again so that the correction would fit with what's there. Then, I would simply look at the painting and know what to do. Sometimes I'd get up from my desk right then and spend maybe 10 minutes painting, clean up, and go back to my desk and back to work.

A couple of days ago, I figured out how to do a key part of the picture I was having trouble with. At dinner that evening, I asked S if she wanted to see what I was doing. When she said yes, I went up and brought the painting down. I was excited and started explaining what I'd done that day but soon began chronicling the entire process I'd gone through. I'd point to something in the picture and talk about how I did it or about a mistake I'd made and what I'd done to fix it or how the mistake had actually worked out better than what I had intended to do. And I'd explain what I had learned from that and what I would try to do with the next picture.

As I explained these things I realized something. I was looking at the picture the way my father looked at pictures -- his own and his students. I was solving problems in one of two ways. I was either calling on the advice and critiques he had given me over the years, or I was solving them with what I remember seeing him do or hearing him talk about doing while I watched him paint.


Sure. My painting is for me, and I'm learning about painting and about seeing. But a big part of why I like it is I'm also learning about my father's painting.

13 comments:

  1. Nice job, Grandpa! Thank you for sharing this art with us!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Your lovely spirit loves to sport with words, pictures.....
    So wonderful to see your process & blooms


    Aloha, Friend!

    Comfort Spiral

    ReplyDelete
  3. Painting is a lovely connection between you and your dad.

    And acrylic is a great medium choice because you can keep blending over your mistakes until you get it "right."

    It's a lovely picture. And interesting in all the ways you captured it.

    <3

    S

    ReplyDelete
  4. I like this painting, and I like that you found another way to learn about your dad. I suppose that's part of art's beauty (or at least, part of the beauty in the artistic process): it gives us new and unexpected ways to connect with the world.

    Your office sounds pretty amazing, by the way. I think it might be bigger than my house!

    ReplyDelete
  5. I like these! Thanks for sharing them with us, Grandpa.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Your first go is pretty impressive, GP. Well done.

    Acryllics are fast drying and easy to clean up, but you should give oils a try, too. I think you'd like them.

    ReplyDelete
  7. .....and he paints. What next? :)
    I loved it....

    ReplyDelete
  8. Nice post, i hard to try painting like you, because i don't have great imagination

    ReplyDelete
  9. Nice post, and very nice paintings, let me leave you here a scientific/evolutionary comentary about art, hope you like it:
    Unlike Gould, Dutton Argues that humankind's universal interest in art is the result of human evolution. We enjoy sex, grasp facial expressions, understand logic and spontaneously acquire language—all of which make it easier for us to survive and produce children. He thinks that the interest in art belongs on this list of evolutionary adaptations.

    Dutton states that the type of painting that is preferred by most people around the globe is, of course, the landscape, and a very particular landscape — one with water, food sources, trees, hiding places, and a path to perhaps another source of food or comfort. It is, in short, the savanna, the home of our Pleistocene ancestors during the period in which we became recognizably human. Our preference for this environment is wired into our brains for "savannas contain more protein per square mile than any other landscape type" as well as offering protection from predators (quickly climb up the tree).

    ReplyDelete
  10. Love the painting. I'm looking forward to sharing this post with my kids. I'm no good with a paint brush, but the two of them have talent and will relate to your thoughts on this.

    ReplyDelete
  11. That is a very cool reason to paint.

    My grandfather loved to paint, too.

    I wish I had one of his paintings.

    ReplyDelete
  12. What a beautiful post.. and beautiful paintings...
    thank you

    ReplyDelete
  13. That painting of yours moved something in my heart. It filled my eyes. I can't explain that, except when I see something unusual, beautiful or which strikes my heart there is a sharpening focusing feeling in my eyes--it kind of tickles. The only way to describe it is to say that what I'm looking at fills my eyes.

    And it is the greatest compliment I can give. Also...

    WOW!

    ReplyDelete