Now that the drawings for The Cabins of Wilsonia are finished, I’m thinking about oil painting again.
I’d like to make a 2015 calendar of paintings, and need to decide if I have any that can be used or if I need to do 13 new paintings. Thirteen? A year has 12 months, a calendar has 12 months PLUS a cover.
I’m studying some paintings I didn’t use in the 2013 calendar very intensely. Why hasn’t this or that painting sold? Is it the old “right person hasn’t come along” or is the painting just not good enough to grab those who have come along??
When I wonder about things like this of a philosophical and esoteric nature, I talk to my friend D about it. She and I have decided that we live in a time when we are all used to things being instant and awesome, or as I think of it, “juiced up”. Here are some examples:
Photos
A. regular photo – nice.
B. juiced up photos, like the ones in the link I gave you yesterday. We are impressed when the light and color are enhanced, or juiced up.
Music
A. friend playing a song on a guitar – nice.
B. juiced up, hearing it in stereo on our ear buds with all the accompaniment
Movies
A. old movie – entertaining in a dorky sort of way.
B. juiced up – big flat HD screens with stereo sound and special effects and surgically enhanced actors
What does this have to do with painting?
I can paint what I know or see, mixing the colors that match nature and reality. Nice.
Or, I can juice it up – exaggerate the colors, enhance them and show people a scene the way they remember it, because it was a juiced up memory.
Here is a non-juiced up photo:
Nice. Of course it is nice; it is Mineral King!
Here is a juiced up painting:
The colors are brighter, I added a peak, I subtracted a tree. The tree was good, but it didn’t fit the shape of this rolling trunk with a slightly warped lid.
I decided to paint this same scene on canvas. If it turns out well, I’ll put it in the 2015 calendar.
It is very wet and the color doesn’t look juiced up yet. When it is finished and completely dry, I’ll rephoto or scan it so you can see what I mean about juiced up.
I’d love to hear your thoughts, but I don’t dare turn on the comments and be hit by a tidal wave of spam. Sigh. You can use the Contact the Artist tab above or email me if we are already correspondents.