Over the last several I have collected quite a number of paint covered sticks I use to stir paint. I decided to use some of them to make some tiny multi-colored boards to board up some window openings in a tall building wall sculpture.
A chair
How about a little misinformation?
An artist friend told me recently that I am featured in the book Dictionary of Utah Fine Artists. It’s a mystery to me where the authors and publisher got their information about me. They certainly didn’t get what is published from me. What ever happened to making sure information is accurate? The entry has me with degrees in art when in fact the degrees are in graphic design. The text also says I was heavily influenced by an artist I don’t even know and whose work I’m not familiar with nor do I follow. I wonder what other inaccurate information may be contained in the book.
The great and spacious shed of Damocles
I can’t remember when I started this one but may sometime early in 2021. The structure and the hanging building have been hanging on a wall for quite awhile unresolved. I finally came upon the idea how to finish it. I came up with 18 title variations before settling on this long one for this piece.
Phillips Gallery: Winter Group Show
The Winter Group Show opens this evening at the Phillips Gallery 444 E 200 South, Salt Lake City, Utah. I have five small paintings from the Cayucos series in this show. Stop in and see them up close along with some great art by other artists represented by the Phillips Gallery.
This is not fine woodworking
It’s true. I’m not a fine woodworker. I don’t’ have the tools, the shop, or the inclination. I use whatever wood I can get preferably soft and easy to work with. Some of it is purchased and occasionally I use junk wood when I come across any. I like the imperfect quality of the wood I use and construction which is a bit of the haphazard, rough measuring, sloppy gluing, and intentional rough construction to match the rough painting.
It's finished
Here is the completed piece from yesterday's post.
More drips and messes
This piece has more drips than any other piece I have created. I drilled holes in the bottom of each bucket and covered each hole with a piece of tape before filling them with paint. I watered the paint down so it would run out of the buckets and drip easily. The tape was quickly removed allowing the paint to run out of the bottom of the bucket onto the pencil and chair.
Cavorting Purple Dogs and Broken Buildings
Another long title. The dogs were originally going to be green but then I realized there would be too much green so I changed them to purple to add more color variation.
The bathroom?
Yes I will even use the bathroom as studio space. The lighting in my studio is lousy so I had to work in the bathroom where the lighting is better to see what I was doing which in this case was marking some places on the inside of a box to drill some tiny holes.
A new Central Coastal digital painting
I have blocked in color and am beginning to add some detail and change some of the colors. This is a scene along the Point Buchon Trail going south which is part of PG&E land.
Tools: Modified paint spreader card
I modified this old card so I could spread paint on the inside of my boxes. I trimmed two of sides at angles so I can spread paint on surfaces that meet at 90° angles without scraping wet paint off the sides.
Brand name or no brand name?
I have this cheap no brand name miter box that I have been using this past year and it has worked great for me. Easy to set up and put away. I wanted something that had a few more options for cutting angles so I picked up this cheap Stanley miter box and saw set.
Brand name products and tools are not necessarily the best and in this case the Stanley box is somewhat inferior to the no name box. The 22.5° cuts I made with the Stanley are not as accurate as they should have been. It’s still a useful miter box. I will say the saw that came with the this box is very nice.
Somehow or other it just had to...
Here is the finished work with the pink I-beam I posted about in a few previous posts with some detail shots. I used metal letter stamps for my signature at the front lower left corner and on the pink I-beam. I always sign my art on the back with date and location.
Another Pink I-Beam
Work in progress images.
Repurposing
I had this panel hanging on the wall for months and couldn’t get myself to finish what I had originally had in mind for for it. It suddenly hit me the other night when I couldn’t get to sleep what I need to do with it. It will be another pink I-beam piece. I believe this is the third rework of this panel.
The Studio
I was trying to go to sleep the other night and it wasn’t happening. I took these images of part of the studio.
Cutting a big slice of wood cake from a section of dowel
The wood dowel is 2 inches wide. I made three cuts to get a nice looking cake wedge shape. I cut seven of them. With a hand saw.
Priming surfaces
Starting a new assemblage box by painting a white primer coat. I’m being more vigorous with brushing this one. After this primer coat dries I will paint the actual colors using a brush and spreader card.
More fun with cakes and ladders and snakes
I started this one the beginning of September and finally finished it yesterday. I had it sitting aside for weeks till while I started and finished a couple of other pieces. I finally figured out what I wanted to do to finish it a couple of weeks ago. I’m glad I didn’t rush this one.