Monday, December 10, 2012

One painting at a time - my grumpy "X"

As a young fledgling artist I don't remember frustration and art in the same thought - I was pretty much happy with my results. Besides, I'm not sure as a kid I had a reference of good or bad. Today I do.....so when  I mess up something that was right....you know a bit of diddling on a good passage or someone asks you to repeat a good comment and you can't with the same clarity - I get annoyed....that's what I call frustration....not because I couldn't but because I didn't!

Venetian Gods was one of those moments where good sense goes out the window. Normally when that urge comes on it's time to stop - take a break or end the session. LOL....Well I did end the session with a big nasty "X" across 4-days work....my frustration was gone and it felt good too:=) Imagine, a temper tantrum at my age...you gotta love it:=)

Then remorse took over; good thing too because I had the good sense to remove the big "X" and scrape the messed up passages off - in this case the gondolier, my star.  

Oddly it remained on my easel untouched for almost a week - normally it would have disappeared, but I wasn't in a painting mode. I had other things to do so it didn't have my attention, or did it?  

Yes, I think it did. I also think my week long break saved it...It was unfinished business and needed to be resolved before starting a new one. Removing the damage was the first clue I wasn't done with it. If I hadn't removed the "X" it would have been finished with no regrets and nothing to stop me from starting a new painting, which I had no desire to do....even after a week.

I think working on large multiple projects most of my adult life taught me to finish each stage before moving on or changing directions. In other words, complete the thought. In my mind, a painting is not a long term project and deserves my attention until its resolved one way or the other. It keeps the mind free from a lot of unresolved clutter.....like my grumpy "X"

 End of day 4 - before grumpy "X" was removed and Gondolier scraped smooth

DAY 5 #759

  #759 Venetian Melody (renamed) 30x30 oil on linen (12-8-12)

DETAILS

 Detail of Gondolier - this whole section was off and over cooked

 Detail of final Gondolier and oar - I got carried away and decorated his oar - one of my favorite details....I'll do it again too

Much the reason for the grumpy "X"

Final Venetian God 

I'm good with my results and decided to do another Venetian God, only this one will be 48x44 - Yesterday, I stretched the canvas for an early start today.......well see 

Later....

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Learning curves - distance and art

Getting any painting done over the last week was tough with the WOAS show charging in fast. I'm in good shape tho...my shipping and framing is done and will be in Vegas next week....it was quite a learning curve for me but not the pros at JFM who got it done!

My everlasting appreciation to Pat, the JFM staff and Barry the art dealer, a total stranger on his way to Atlanta who agreed to meet me at I-81 & I-64 to deliver my paintings to JFM the following day.

Today with that behind me, I'm a happy camper; so maybe a few paintings will emerge, like another try at my failed Venetian Gods..LOL

Even with a failed painting, I actually had a good last week. I also spent time on the packing and shipping thing because it's become problematic, especially as my paintings get larger and galleries get further away. FedEx has worked exceptionally well as long as I can do the packing. I can handle singles up to a size myself, but it's not practical for large paintings or quantities of art. 

It costs about $600 to $1,000 to ship and crate a large framed painting (58x54) via most art shippers. If it's a sold painting perhaps OK but this is not the case in Vegas where I'm sending (17) paintings...some very large ones too as in this one below. No doubt a specialty art shipper could do it but could they frame it too?



WOAS is a 3-day show and I could easily be faced with return shipping. How would you like this one coming back...LOL

Framing and shipping is a big deal, costly and time consuming, taking valuable painting time....it's just a different mindset - shifting gears and all....not my job description!

This alone makes being a regional artist most attractive....even for a gallery, it is expensive to operate outside driving distance. Perhaps another reason we're swimming in small paintings...had to get that in:=)

So where is all this leading? An interesting alternative emerged from JFM, the company who supplies the majority of my framing. JFM is a wholesaler out of Atlanta, Ga. They might be unique in the business because they are multifaceted. JFM has an art reproduction printing service for artists, which is how I was exposed to some of their other services. I found they frequently drop ship finished work for artists....makes perfect sense.....even more so after fooling around with it the last few weeks on another project.

I also had a new gallery that wanted (8) paintings - most were shipped FedEx - (1) crate at 48x48x8 . I couldn't lift the box but me and the FedEx guy struggled and got it done. Going forward I needed a better solution - keep it light and manageable. Plus, I still had to ship the last painting, a 54x50 to the gallery. Knowing I would be faced with this more often than not led me to searching and buying larger custom corrugated boxes to fit my larger paintings up to 58x54 framed. The boxes would not arrive in time for Vegas tho...thank god!

All this brought me to JFM who I knew from experience could ship large heavy frames damage free. 
 
I approached them about framing and shipping my paintings to Vegas. They agreed and suggested sending the paintings not stretched but rolled up (less expensive); they would stretch, frame and drop ship to Vegas...or wherever. My kind of answer and just what I needed, a dependable vertical company that could do it all for me. 

So why wouldn't this work for my gallery shipments tooMy paintings and framing would be handled once and shipped direct. Aside from the obvious cost, saving over double shipping and handling, it saves time and allows me to ship worry free to any gallery or distant show. In my case, the latter being most important.....less stress (no failed paintings) more easel time!

Rolling my paintings up for shipping works for me and FedEx drivers will be a lot happier too:=)

Going into the new year I have a viable shipping solution....a serious learning curve!

Later....

Monday, December 3, 2012

Venetian Gods

The other day I started a 30x30 Venetian God painting, #759. It's been almost a year since the last one.....one sold a few weeks ago and a gallery snatched the last remaining one, so it was time to take a fresh look at Venice............ by the way it was called "Venetian Gods" because a Venice painting seems to demand the gondolier. Those iconic figures are idolized by millions worldwide. Perhaps remembered for their company while exploring Venice and if lucky sharing a great sun set too

Interestingly enough, galleries seem to gravitate towards gondolier paintings too.  Perhaps the right reason to paint a Venetian God.....perhaps not!

The recipe for #759 is simple (1) gondolier (1) Golden sunset with a pinch of gorgeous water reflections. San Giorgio in the distant horizon  (viewed from the Grand Canal); and the cherry on top would be the Salute or Dogona on the right anchoring the whole composition. 

Note: A good moon can be substituted  

DAY 1 #759




DAY 2 #759




 DAY 3 #759




DAY 4 #759


DAY 4 (2nd session) The "X" Factor?

 Not the kind one hopes for.....every once in a while a painting takes a turn and deserves a big  
"X"

#759 Venetian God "X" 30x30 oil on linen sank (11-30-12) 

LOL..I did remove the "X" but only after remorse set in. Now what?.....Fix it or move on........of course move on:=)  

Maybe a 5th session is warranted here......rather like the idea of a BIG RED "X"

Later...