Showing posts with label acrylic inks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label acrylic inks. Show all posts

Monday, February 25, 2019

It's all about the journey...

It's a new year and time is flying.  I usually start the new year off ahead of the game.  This year I am behind due to some health issues (now resolved), but am working on catching up without feeling like I have to do it all.

My last post was prior to going to The Biltmore with my niece and sister to see the Chihuly exhibit and visit some art galleries.  We had a wonderful time and it was a perfect get-a-way.  







In October, the Sanford Brush and Palette Club had its 54th Annual Art Show.  I think it was the best show so far.  This was my third year to participate.  I had been to the show about five times prior to becoming a member.

This year, my painting Rise Up and Shine received first place in the abstract category.  We are encouraged to write a statement about paintings that we submit.  You can read my statement about this one below the painting.


Rise Up and Shine
42"x29"x1"

Rise Up and Shine was inspired by the song Rise Up by Andra Day.
  
When painting abstracts, I often do not have a message or theme in mind.  I am more likely to listen to music while painting, and sub-consciously this affects the outcome of a painting.  Such is the case with this one.

Rise Up and Shine has seven layers of resin with a painting on each layer and a final topcoat of resin. I gave this one a final layer of gold and resin to bring out the shimmer.  

We rise by lifting others. Robert Ingersoll



I submitted a coffee table titled Contemplate It! for the sculpture category. It received first place in that category as well. And most importantly, it found a home!  This table had about 12 layers of resin with a painting between each layer.


Contemplate It!
40"x30"x21.5"

I also submitted the first painting from a new geometric series that I am working on.  I am enjoying this process of working on it as it is different that my usual method o painting. This painting received an Honorable Mention.  My statement about the painting is below.


Threading Geometry
24"x18"x1.75"

My favorite abstract artist is Kandinsky.  His work has influenced my paintings even though I had never worked in geometrics in the manner he did.  

I was fascinated by how he was so prolific and how much music influenced his art, and that he never repeated a painting. Only when I decided to put a different spin on my geometric paintings by doing the elements in layers so they appear dimensional did I realize that I could make thousands of different paintings, but with my spin.  

Threading Geometry is the first in a series along these lines. I chose the needle and thread as a symbol of the line that makes up all of the elements and pulls the individual elements together in this painting. 

Each of my paintings will have a theme unlike many of his and will be dimensional.  When wearing 3D glasses, the elements dance across the board just as the elements reverberate in my other ink paintings.  Without the 3D glasses, it is still easy to appreciate the layering of the elements.

I hope you enjoy a different take on my paintings!

Mighty is geometry; joined with art by a thread, resistless.
Euripedes   


I am now on my fourth painting of this series.  I will be revealing the remainder when I complete the series.

I entered two other juried exhibitions in the past couple of months.  The Fabric of Our Lives was selected for the Finalist Award for Circle Artist of the Year for 2019.


The Fabric of Our Lives
20"x20"x2"

I received a Special Recognition for the 2019 All Women Art Exhibition for The Mystery of Locus


The Mystery of Locus
40"x30"x2"

These competitions have hundreds or thousands of entries so any placement is a wonderful accomplishment.

If you are interested in any of my paintings, please feel free to contact me by email.



Wishing you an art-filled year!

Sunday, September 16, 2018

My Art Process and the Fluid Painting Process

I often receive a dozen emails in a day asking about my painting process and how I get some patterns that are not easily obtained with fluid, flow or accidental painting.

There has been a tsunami of acrylic pour paintings and fluid art painters in the past five years. Acrylic paint pouring was originally known as Accidental Art or unintentional art. There is a discussion on Quora on whether any art is intentional or can be accidental. This blog post is not really about that, but is focusing on the differences of my ink painting process and Accidental Art or acrylic fluid painting techniques. 

If you are not familiar with Accidental Art, you can get a good overview here. I must say that once most people try it, they are hooked on it!  This includes kids, people who have never painted, and people in their nineties.  I demo and teach acrylic pouring to mostly kids. Here is a photo of the kid's pours of the last demo that Elena and I did at the Chavis Community Center for the Carolina Mixed Media Art Guild.








For my process, my only pre-planning prior to painting is to have my studio clean, assemble my chosen colors, and choose my panel size. I use  Ampersand Claybord™ almost exclusively which requires no prep except for masking the sides of the cradle.

I am primarily working with the chemical and physical properties of the inks and paints to create the patterns.  The viscosity and chemical composition of the inks, the porosity of the substrate, the humidity, and the temperature in the studio affect the patterns.  I often say that how I hold my tongue in the process also affects the designs.

I rarely use a paintbrush, but instead drop, dribble, float, pour, splatter, or splash onto the substrate. However, this is not just throwing paint or ink here or there and hoping for a good composition. It is choosing the spot to drop the ink, choosing the ink that will be changed to a new color when the next ink is added, choosing the chemical compositions and the viscosities of the two inks to push the previous ink to obtain a particular pattern, and all at the same time paying close attention to how the first layer of paints or inks have begun to dry. Seconds will affect whether the intended results are achieved and which patterns are obtained. The inks must have some wetness or the second ink applied to the first drops will not allow the inks to spread to form patterns. During the process, I am continually analyzing how one area is changing and attempting to place the next inks where they do not interfere with the first inks.  This is the biggest challenge of the process. 

Some patterns are happy accidents, but I have been doing this so long that I know how many drops of one ink will force another type of ink to spread and the patterns I will get. I embrace the happy accidents and am quick to change where a painting was headed if necessary to get a good composition. Sometimes there is a point with a painting that I say to myself that this one is a lost cause.  However, one more layer and then it may very well be my favorite painting. So I don’t give up easily.

Most of my paintings feature circles. It is the creation of these circular patterns that is so intriguing to me. I occasionally paint with no circles, but my work is known for its circles, and the layering of circles upon circles. 

I usually work in color, size, or composition series.  I have several different styles—some with lines, some with up to ten layers of painting and resin that give the paintings a dimensional quality, and some with metallic or mirrored leafing. 

You can view samples of my ink paintings on my website. Here are a couple of paintings that show how one element or pattern is obtained by dropping one color into another color of ink. No tools are used except an eye dropper.  







Acrylic pouring has a few similarities to my work, but still it is as different as painting with watercolors compared to oils. The similarities are that fluid acrylic artists usually work without brushes, and most often they float and tip to spread the paint.  They most often use silicone (which I do not use in my ink paintings) that makes it easier to create the cell patterns that many desire. However, these are still uncontrollable to a great extent—esp. the size, shape, color, and where they manifest in the acrylic pours. My paintings on the other hand have each major element as an intention or a deliberate action, and I choose the colors and the location of the elements.

Here are a couple of acrylic pour paintings that I have done.  You can see the cells that formed just as the patterns formed in my ink paintings. I did nothing except mix the paints and layer in a cup and flip it onto a board. It is very easy to see the difference in the effects as most of the designs are not symmetrical and most of the cells are small.





It is next to impossible to get a single symmetrical design element that is very large with acrylic pouring using most of the techniques that acrylic fluid painters use. 

You may have seen the videos of a variety of colors of paint poured through a kitchen strainer to obtain a flower or blooming pattern.  Except for a few designs such as those made by pouring one color of paint on another into a strainer or over a bottle, most acrylic pouring cellular patterns are anywhere from a few centimeters to an inch or two unless a tool such as a strainer is used to control the mix of the colors.  The ones that are larger tend to be one circle of one color paint poured into another circle of paint and on and on, but perfect circles are not the most often obtained patterns. One can get large areas that are flowing with acrylic pouring, but this is not anything like my paintings. I have been able to make a 24” in diameter circle with interesting symmetrical designs within much like a mandala. This is difficult with most acrylic pouring techniques. My large circular designs are caused more by a chemical reaction than the circles made with acrylic paint pours.  I do not use a strainer or any special tool to get my designs.

Yes, we are all masters by accident of acrylic pouring!  Even my two year old granddaughter’s first painting would have been considered a masterpiece.  ;)  However, there are those who have made their acrylic pours as backgrounds for their previously developed art style and their pours are now a signature part of their recognizable style. 

I do not want to make it sound like there is no control over acrylic pouring. To become good at it consistently, one has to do many pours. An acrylic fluid painter can work at developing paint formulas and color palettes that become recognizable as the artist’s work.  But it is very, very difficult to get to that point with acrylic pouring as there is so much left to chance.  I can name fewer than ten acrylic fluid painters out of the 25,000 acrylic pour artists in one forum I am on that I can put an artist’s name to their paintings the moment I see their paintings. So it is a real challenge to make a style one’s own with acrylic pours due to the lack of control with the process.  

I had made a post about eight years ago on artists who worked in similar processes as I work.  It is here if you wish to read it.  My next post may be on artists who work in a similar style as mine and have made it their own.



Saturday, January 6, 2018

Studio News

Jeanne Rhea Studio News

January 2018

53rd Annual Sanford Brush & Palette Club Art Show

I was thrilled that Cosmic Kaleidoscope was the winner of the abstract category for the Sanford Brush and Palette's 53rd Annual Art Show. It is alcohol and acrylic inks, and 

resin on Ampersand Claybord™.  The competition was stiff so I am beyond ecstatic to 

win this category again this year.
 


I also entered the oil painting below, World Within, in the abstract category.  It received 

third place.
 



New Paintings


Portal to Infinity
Each panel is 36"x18"x1".


Clockworks VII
24"x18"x1.75"




In other news

I took a trip to Alaska to install some paintings and to visit family and friends.  While 
there, I had two Accidental Painting classes-one for adults and one for kids.  I don't 
think I have ever taught any art that is as much fun as acrylic pouring.  It is rare for 
a participant to not want to do it over and over.  Below is proof that it is fun for young 
and old!

This is my two year old granddaughter pouring her chosen colors into her cup. She is already an artist!
















Lots of fun making gingerbread houses with the little ones for Christmas. 
Always fun to see them make their own decisions on how they want their 
houses decorated.



If you are interested in an acrylic pouring workshop, please email me for available 

spots.



Happy New Year!


For 2018, I decided that I would enter one juried art competition each month.  It is difficult
to decide which Calls for Art to enter.

My alcohol and acrylic ink paintings have a high gloss resin for the final coating, and in
real life, they show their dimensional quality.  It is very difficult to obtain photos that
show this dimensional aspect, that  do not have hot spots, and the colors are true.
These challenges have been the reasons that I have not entered competitions when
judging is from photos.

I entered Frenetic Energy and was informed that I placed tenth in the painting category. What a surprise to start the New Year!  I can hear the thoughts a-whirring, "Tenth Place! That is not worth mentioning!" But I'll take it! There were thousands of entries and there were three categories.  There were ten awards and ten honorable mentions for each category.  So I am very happy to place in the top ten of the painting category.

This is Frenetic Energy in the All Women Art Exhibition by Light Space & Time Online Art Gallery.   To view other entries, click on the first link.

I look forward to submitting more artwork for juried shows.

 

2017 just flew by.  I am looking forward to 2018.  Each new year I reflect on the previous year and make a path for the New Year.  I have not made major goal changes for this year.
I want to continue to do my art, continue to improve, learn more, and hopefully, make this world a little better place for each of us.


Thank you to each of you who has offered kind words of encouragement, purchased my paintings, talked art with me, and shared your lives and passions. I appreciate every one 
of you!

If I have not met you in person and you wish to see my work in person in my studio, 
please contact me by email. I will be happy to set up a time and talk and show art!  If you are interested in attending a monthly Open Studio, please contact me by email for date and time.

Featured Artist at Artsy Shark

I was so happy to be the featured artist on Artsy Shark in July.  Such good company.  

Artsy Shark features a couple of artists each week, and also has very informative newsletters for artists and collectors.  

If you are an artist, it is a great resource with articles on the business of being an artist along with many other topics. If a collector, you will find lots of information on collecting art along with features on the artists who specialize in every type of art imaginable.  


NOTE:  I started this post July 12, and just realized that I had never published it along with two others. This is probably old news to most of you!