Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Third Quarter of 2022

Many paintings were created this summer, so here's July-August-September now. The issues of climate change and the resulting loss of species, especially birds, became the focus of my work. One always hopes that one's artworks contribute something worthwhile, but painting my own grief about present and future environmental disruption and species losses is a legitimate purpose, too.

After the Fire

Birds Are Going Extinct

Degrees

Anxiety and Dread 1

Anxiety and Dread 2

Anxiety and Dread 3



Living on the Edge

Maelstrom


Mercy

Selfie

Pandora in Middle Age

The Goddesses Get Closer


Water


There Used to Be Tide Pools


There Used to Be Kelp 2



 

Monday, September 12, 2022

First Half of 2022

In the first half of 2022, I did not paint a great deal, but I did experiment with different styles of painting, from cartoons and realism to abstract landscapes. All of these are watercolor on paper, some with ink and water soluble colored pencils.

 

Fractures

Mom and Babies Greet the Day

Pet Heaven

Rocky Agoura Hills

The Hot Earth


Doing Environmental Art with Grandchildren

In August, 12-year-old grandson Ryan came to stay for a couple of days before school started. What would entertain him??? I got out an old painting that wasn't very thrilling and suggested that he and I could paint on it together to make it more interesting. He seemed to like that idea!

This old painting was about sea level rise due to climate change, and as we painted, we discussed the issue, sort of slowly and in a round-about way. It occurred to me that this was an example of interactive climate art and a way to inform. We also discussed color harmony, composition, and symbolism. He developed his own symbol for fish, and it was a good one, in that it wasn't clear whether it was a live fish or a fish skeleton. He added symbols and used stencils to create a feeling of the ocean. I was impressed with his interest, understanding, and creativity. 

When it was done, we framed it, and he took it home. It now hangs in their living room! I hope that when his friends see it, he will talk about the issues a bit. I hope he will remember making art and having fun with his Grandma.

Here is the before and after of the painting:




Saturday, September 10, 2022

It's Memory, Not Plagiarism

Recently, I was discussing how two artists might independently produce very similar paintings, with neither one copying the other. It suddenly occurred to me that this very thing had happened to me. Early in my career as a psychologist, I worked with the TAT (Thematic Apperception Test), which involves children telling stories to certain pictures. For decades I never even thought about that test, but recently I noticed that two of my old paintings look like TAT pictures! The images must have lodged somewhere in my memory, and one day they emerged again as I painted.This is TAT Card 4, if memory serves, a fraught picture of a man and a woman, drawn many decades ago:


Here is a digital drawing I made in 2014 from an image that seemed to just come into my mind. You can see that it is the same composition, only with the positions of the man and woman reversed. The men's hair even has that curl, his eyes and facial expression are similar, the woman's hand is similar, etc. Obviously, the memory of this image stuck somewhere in my brain, and one day it felt like it simply occurred to me.


Here is Card 7 (I think it's 7) from the TAT, followed by the painting that again FELT like it was inspired by an image that simply came into my mind:

My painting from 2008 is an abstraction of the TAT image, and again the figures are reversed in their positions, but the feeling about the relationship between the two is similar. It's interesting how memory can work, and it's interesting that I only recently recognized the similarities between my paintings and the TAT drawings, probably triggered by the discussion of how artists might paint very similar paintings without intending to do so.