Showing posts with label Flower Painting Workshop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flower Painting Workshop. Show all posts

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

June Flower Power Encore at The National Art League

A bonanza of beauty and blooms welcomed artists entering the new 2nd floor studio at the National Art League. The occasion is Shelli Robiner-Ardizzone's 9th year of this popular spring "Flower Power" weekend, June 27-28 (added the 29th).

This festive atmosphere marks an annual celebration of color and joy for Flower Painting enthusiasts who gather and are inspired to create art which endures beyond the season.

Flowers are purchased by Shelli at wholesale markets, and presented in lavish set-ups, for painters of all media who look forward to this painting opportunity.

This popular workshop began in 2000 as a Memorial Tribute to honor Lisa Specht, mentor, instructor and past president of the Art Students League of NY. For many years the workshop was held at Woman's Studio Center in LIC. In recent years the Workshop has been presented at NAL, Great Neck Adult Ed., Cumberland, and at The Art Guild/Elderfields.

"Flower Power" celebrations now include , "Flowers in Summer" and "Flowers in February"

Shelli Robiner-Ardizzone is an NAL award winning artist in oil and pastel. She will be offering a Saturday Class at NAL 1-4, beginning in Sept '09.

To register or for more info, visit www.nationalartleague.org or call 718-224-3957.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Preview of Pastel Sunflower Demo

A fall out from exposure to Jimmy Wright's pastel sunflower series and my upcoming demo at Suburban Art League on June 2, 2009.

I spent some studio time with a "curvy " model sunflower, and built it up on a Sabretooth pastel paper sheet. Working directly on the turq-blue paper, no under-painting, going to the soft ammunition, Rembrandts, Sennelier, Unison, Rowney (for highlights and line work).

Catastrophe with clogged nozzle of spray fixative !!! Which I hardly ever use. Lumpy spots of fixative everywhere on the surface, also spray killed that color. Faced it to the wall.

After 2 days, I looked at it and decided to work on a portion of the paper - "what the hell, it cannot get any worse"- pockmarked and flattened color, one step away from the garbage.

"Try to remember it is the JOURNEY, and this piece that is the story."



Well - it was an OK struggle, this time. The wonderful soft pastels can overcome the physical damage, if I can overcome my fear and continue to work the surface. Using a stiff brush to remove several layers, and start reapplying this magic medium that I love.

Voila, a smaller, kinder painting.



I like do a rehearsal Demo before my in-class Demo, to overcome my fear of working in public. I have no fear of speaking in public, however I hate to be exposed as when a painting does not go well. A painting going downhill fast is bad enough--to do it in front of witnesses is really disheartening!

OK, so this is on a sanded Art Spectrum Colorfix surface, under-painted with Alcohol and Pastel, (which I will also demonstrate ) a charcoal sketch, and soft pastel application of a Sunflower with "Personality".

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Sunflower Pastel Demo

I try to do a rehearsal for my demos, in order to feel more comfortable with the subject and medium. This series is inspired by the recent article in Pastel Journal on the work of Jimmy Wright. He has brought sunflowers, long a favorite subject for painters of all stripes, into iconic celebrity status.

I have enjoyed them always as a part of a large casual bouquet. This painting will celebrate one sassy, shapely bloom. Here goes.

Pretreatment and Under-painting.
I am working on Art Spectrum Colorfix 1/2 sheet, a light yellow. This paper already has a medium sanded surface and can take many layers of pastel. Rubbing the side of several colors which are arranged in horizontal bands, I cover the surface.

Alcohol is brushed on and manipulated while wet, softened and made to resemble a wet water color. I enjoy working on a pre-treated textured paper because it challenges me color wise. It enables me to see the tone as a medium VALUE so that I can better judge which lights and darks are to follow.



The "portrait" of this sassy and curvy feminine form is drawn in charcoal with attention to the GESTURE of the stem and placement of the leaves. I am enjoying this shape very much and it feels like it will make its appearance onto the paper in an organic and natural way.

I see this Dancer in a Musical - and the color costume, greens and a crown of yellow. Unlike Wrights often tortured forms this one is happy and willing to show up and show-off.

The background gets more alcohol/pastel treatment and some side of the stick lightly applied color application/enhancement.

I am too much committed to the background and will not mess with it too much - on this piece. Building up using soft, also referred to DRY Pastels, Rembrandt, Sennelier, Schmincke, Unison, and Rowney as I am blocking in the darks of the leaves and the darks in the corona at the base of the flower.



Developing the drawing, and wanting to keep the feeling of this piece about the movement and personality of the flower as I see it. This looks "pretty" is that a bad word?

Some further enhancement of pastel in the background and a lot accents in the leaves to exaggerate the movement that Sunflower leaves actually have. They twist and turn in an amazing variety of shapes and lines, light and darker color. I am using warm and cool greens, and as well as various line colors. The stem is a riot of line and color striping.

This is the finished pastel, I shall call it "Struttin My Stuff" or something like that.

This is a closer view of the Sunflower strutting its stuff. I enjoyed this one, and I want to do more with other attitudes. Stay Tuned!

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Flower Painting Workshop


"FLOWER POWER ENCORE"
With Shelli Robiner-Ardizzone


A SPRING FLOWER POWER PAINTING WORKSHOP

June 27 - June 28

Hours are 9am - 4pm for each day
2 days of Flower Power, Flowers included: $110.

Join the fun celebrating the joy of Spring Flowers. A highly anticipated encore of last years great workshop at NAL. Shelli selects and arranges the Freshest Flowers for you from wholesale markets. There will be multiple arrangements and Great Set-Ups for your painting enjoyment. Artists should bring their favorite materials and a portable easel (in case we run out.)

Workshop will be held in the new 2nd floor studio of the League.

National Art League
44-21 Douglaston Parkway
Douglaston, NY 11363

TO REGISTER CONTACT:
Shelli Robiner-Ardizzone
artzoneny@earthlink.net
www.shellirobiner-ardizzone.com
(917) 723-3362

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Lilly Pastel Demo

Beginning pastel and alcohol under paintings.

The grey blotches are my granular surface gesso/punice mix added to block in the new floral group. Not only is this gesso mix a base, but it will serve as to "correct " this stage of the piece. My other choice was to start over - however I wanted to show that this type or radical surgery is possible.

The new flowers are actually pink, I am undecided as to what color they will be in the painting, so the pastel block in is red and pink, see me feeling around for some petal structure in the background - still thinking of this as a bouquet.







More mucking about and a ghost of the bottle appearing. I thought that you had done the bottle that I would set up the same challenge, it is drawn in and I am trying to integrate the bottle neck and width of the bottle into the painting, by making in wider. Not yet committed to the drawing, lots of "thought " lines still showing.













New set up, These lilies are PINK , and I am using one of my favorite multi-colored fabrics. I also felt the lilies needed needed the darkness of the green leaves as counterpoint to the very orange at the bottom.

I am color blind , and seem to refuse to make the proper color adjustment. Little by little the block in is filling out into describing the leaves, the bottle, the fabric, and bringing the lilies in focus (lighter and brighter ) if NOT in color.

I am working the ENTIRE picture. It is difficult, I know, but it is the correct strategy. You will learn how to do it - I suggest concentrating solely on the flowers and suggestion of the dark leaves as you subject matter. Here is what I am looking at, and developing:

1) The fabric (lights and darks ) - Fabric is one of my favorite things, therefore I think I over-render.

2) The flowers - Bringing them into focus, and contrast to the background.

3) The vase - Reflections abound, it is a great distraction. Ask yourself What is the SUBJECT of this painting? THE FLOWERS.

4) Flowers - Make a portrait of this group, this is your primary area of interest-given the time we have.








The Flowers are beginning to be PINK, I might have done this sooner, don't you think? I was sort of thinking that the colors under the pink, would give more variety to the color (having a limited number of pinks, and whites to choose from led to keeping the reds in evidence).

This was shot in the RAIN, so the color of the image is greyer then on the day before. This is where I am now, the orange at the bottom, and the reflections are not to my liking...too strong and not enough variety of color. I am going to work on the green leaves later and see how it looks tomorrow.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Hydrangea Pastel Demo

I was really jazzed to try to complete the Demo which I began in the class. As you saw, the water color under-painting on the white sanded surface gives one lots of options in developing a pastel painting. Using Nu-Pastel, and softer pastels back and forth the piece went through a number of changes as it was developed. This is pretty much how it all began, when I left you on Thursday.

I thought it would be boring to keep doing the Demo. My usual purpose in doing a classroom demo, is to get you started in a new way.

Here I did some leaf drawing with a dark nu-Pastel stick, and filled in some "mass tones" (the general color of an area). Each flower head had a little different division of the predominantly pink/burgundy and green tones to make it more interesting.





Here I whittled down the vase, which kept growing as I worked on the interior stalks of the flowers. In removing with water, I softened and added more turquoise in the background. A combination of wet (water) and the side of a Nu-Pastel were used to remove, replace, and soften the background.




I am interested in the background here, and went back into the piece with water and Viva towel. Now there are watery looking passages which I may or may not keep. Pastel is a very forgiving medium, especially when used on a surface that allows for various kinds of repairs, wet removal, dry brushing the surface, kneaded eraser, and resurfacing if needed.

Further articulation of dark and lights within the color scheme. One is always looking for light, medium, and dark in the "value" of the colors. The darks carry the eye of the viewer around the painting. Notice how the vase has grown in width, I will have to deal with in a later step which is when I finally noticed how it deviated from the set up I had right in front of me.

Detail showing drawing, water color areas showing through,opaque passages of soft and hard pastel, using the stix on the side, with the point, blending by softening an area with Viva towel wrapped around my finger.



This was the original bouquet. It was necessary to find and define color areas within each flower head. The arrangement of color, line, shadow areas, lights and darks, interesting shapes, exaggerated or realistic will make for an interesting and individual interpretation of this bouquet. Doing yet, a second painting from this set up, will be more expressive and easier. Better yet, do the second painting from the first painting only - toss the bouquet.

I will carry darker, and mid tone values and color into the area on the upper left to integrate it with the rest of the painting. I am about 3 hrs into the piece.

One needs to develop the entire surface, all at the same time. I have been concentrating too heavily on the pinks shapes, and now I see the the green and blue "heads" to the left are under developed.

This is almost done, there will be more accent darks moving the eye into the upper left, and balancing the composition. As long a the dark value is the same as the colors used, I can vary dark green, dark blue, dark purple as linear points of interest and broken varied outlines.

The ever growing in width vase, which got fat AGAIN, will get special slimming attention before I can call it quits.

The class inspired some homework for me, and perhaps for you too?

If you enjoy this sort of Blog stuff as I do the work, I am happy to send the "lessons" by e-mail.