I kept thinking "well it is only this month, just one more..." I am now counting the cost as it has come on top of Kitty's wardrobe revamp and Daisy's continual hand out. Next month, I keep saying that though and somehow it never happens. Plus I have a holiday to pay for, oh once again I feel a financial meltdown coming on...with no one to blame but myself.
So this was the penultimate painting, we had a new teacher whose voice and body language I loathed, she had an almost chimp like way of baring her teeth when she smiled, except it was not a smile but a point made sugar coated in arsenic.
Despite this I learnt a lot from her, I was able to take away and use small nuggets she had suggested and move my work forward. That said I did not enjoy this painting, It is my cup and saucer but I made a fundamental error by placing it on synthetically dyed tissue paper that I could not hope to replicate using pigment oils, still I tried and managed to resolve some of the issues and again experimented with applying paint only with a palette knife which produced another unctuous painting that will take months to dry.
Last night I painted this catastrophe. The tutor kept banging on about getting rid of the white so I created a green wash of colour. Sick of still life I decided to try painting from a photograph. Not a good idea because it was too small.
The first attempt at painting went horribly wrong, so I wiped it all off and started again. This time I used the long floppy brush that a lot of Japanese painters used. I was so irritated that I also dribbled paint and wiped paint with paper towels, all things I hate in the work of others. Strangely the painting became quite cathartic and I wished I could go back and keep trying different techniques like this. Trust me the full extent of this monstrosity is not apparent in the photograph!
I will try to find a class for next year far far away from Covent Garden. I have grown immensely as a painter and really want to keep going, but it is a real effort when the girls want me home. When I told them it was my last class they cheered!
4 comments:
I must remind you, you the art teacher and painter and me the nobody, that art is HIGHLY subjective. I happen to want to walk into the lushness of your flower canvas and swim in the richness of the colour. I am not being "nice". I feel the need to share with you that I am not really that nice at all. Sorry, this isn't about me.
I am delighted to hear that you are going to keep painting and that you feel like you learned much during this course.
I have loved following the painting classes vicariously -- I hope you'll find some time to follow through with painting on your own and maybe post occasionally about the process.
I have to say, I thought I was self-critical, but you take self-criticism to a whole new level, practially an art form itself! What surprises me is the way you can do this, though, without getting walloped into giving up -- you critique yourself rigorously but also productively. I'm impressed and try to learn from watching you do this.
I looked at the pictures before I read the entry. Am I still allowed to think that painting's really nice now that I know it's been designated a catastrophe?
LOL one and all!
I must promise you the photo does distance you from the mess, but you are right about the subjectivity of art and having taught for so long I am probably all too aware of my short comings as a painter. I think the minute that feeling goes so will my desire to paint though.
Post a Comment