Tuesday, January 19, 2016
Thursday, October 1, 2015
ESCALANTE CANYONS ART FESTIVAL 2015 -- A Radioactive Experience
Every now and then a string of curious events can result in a fabulous surprise.
For decades I wanted to make art
(see my first blog post). Over those years I wrote several books (see www.raeellenlee.com), collected art
supplies, and made many artist friends. I sketched but simply could not paint. Artists
with both MFA degrees and teaching credentials tried to help me paint. No dice.
In 2013 when I left Bellingham, WA,
to explore Southern Utah, I discovered Escalante -- home of the famed Escalante
Canyons Art Festival (ECAF). I moved here and participated in the plein air
festival that year. My entry: a tight little pastel pencil drawing. The next year,
a fabulous artist friend in Bellingham, WA, Lorna Libert, finally got me going
with oil paints. That fall at ECAF I managed to paint a large aspen tree to
enter in the plein air competition and, be still my heart, someone bought it. Of
course, I had priced it very low. But still. That winter I painted and hiked, hiked
and painted. I loitered on Pinterest looking at art and stalking artists. I
watched Youtube videos on how to mix paint. And one day I discovered Kellie Day, a
mixed media/collage artist near Telluride, CO. On her website I learned that she
planned to teach an online workshop. I got on her email list and managed to win
a scholarship for her summer 2015 online workshop.
This fabulous workshop, with the
lovely and generous Kellie Day, was just the boost I needed. Using her techniques,
I painted up a storm all summer as I traveled in Montana and Idaho. I shared
the techniques with my 11 year-old granddaughter and a couple other friends –
one of them a very successful artist who’d been in a painting slump. There were
so many happy tears – because you cannot do it wrong, and it is SO much fun. The techniques are so freeing.
Generous friends and family members who hosted me during my travels received
paintings. They invited me back!
And then I returned to Escalante to
participate in my third ECAF event. But could I use these mixed media collage
techniques to do plein air??? I already knew what scene I wanted to paint – a row
of hoodoos east of Escalante that I call The Doll Men. While I had sketched
them often, and painted them in oils before, I had never used the mixed media
collage techniques with acrylic paints. So I worked smaller (9 x 12) and
carefully prepared. I collaged the panel with a story told to me by a geezer –
about uranium prospecting by dogsled in the 1950s – and painted the sky in red tones and
two of the doll men in gold tones, leaving much of the story readable. I had gelli-printed
papers that I cut up and added for the shrub. When finished, the painting fit
into a bold black and gold frame. The judges called my painting “original,” “fresh,” “unexpected,”and
said it had a wonderful “pow” factor from across the room. The photos below show
where it happened and what the results were at ECAF 2015. I could not be more
pleased.
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Painting "The Doll Men" for the art festival Photo by Irit Reed |
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Sudsie helping me Photo by Irit Reed |
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Using a portable masonite "table" Photo by Irit Reed |
Winning a Merit Award in the Watercolor/Mixed Media Category and $500.00 Photo by Allysia Angus |
Saturday, September 12, 2015
B IS FOR BEARGRASS
Last summer while driving on the Trestle Creek road in the Idaho Panhandle National Forest looking for huckleberries, my daughter-in-law, Lee, and granddaughter, Madison (10 at the time), and I encountered acres of beargrass in bloom. We were gobsmacked. Then we found huckleberries -- and -- later encountered a juvenile moose on the road. It was the loveliest of evenings.
This summer my daughter-in-law graduated with a masters degree in business administration from Western States University, so I gave her my painting, B is for Beargrass, an acrylic mixed media collage piece. My son -- who had never seen beargrass -- asked the question some artists dread, "What Is It?" But as an emerging artist I am happy with my location on the artistic style spectrum -- somewhere between Ordinary Realism and What Is It. (Note to self: Next summer take my son up in the mountains to see beargrass.)
Below is the evolution of this painting.
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Basic colors were added. The bird and fish are now difficult to see. In future paintings, I want to leave more collage items visible. |
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B is for Beargrass 16" x 20" Acrylic Mixed Media (You can see the bird and the fish if you get up close and personal.) |
Friday, September 11, 2015
IN MONET'S GARDEN AT GIVERNY
In May of 2008 I was lucky enough to go on an artist trip with the Blue Horse Gallery in Bellingham, WA. We were in Paris a week and Normandy two weeks. Everyone LOVES Paris, but I couldn't wait to get into the countryside. Oh the pastoral landscapes, the villages, the old buildings. I fell in love with France. I think of Etretat about every other day -- still. And the fading tulips in Monet's garden in Giverny -- well I have painted them (from my sketches and photos) many times since. I have one in progress now. I will include the latest ones done just this summer, and I'll include the steps I took along the way.
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Detail of Grande Dame in Monet's Garden 16" x 20" Acrylic Mixed Media This piece is now in the show, Itinerant, at Dakota Arts in Bellingham, WA |
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Here it is in its entirety. |
Tuesday, September 8, 2015
EVOLUTION OF A JACK RABBIT PAINTING
While loitering on Pinterest one day I saw paintings made of mostly torn pieces of colorful papers. I had started an 8" x 10" portrait of a jack rabbit but did not like it much. So I tried my hand at this new method, using bits of paper from magazines, maps, and Gelli prints I had made in the spring. The evolution of J is for Jack rabbit speaks for itself:

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J IS FOR JACK RABIT With a barn wood frame from NORTHWEST HANDMADE in Sandpoint, ID now proudly resides at the home of Sherry and Sam Irwin in Priest River, ID |
ART-MAKING ON SUMMER 2015 ROAD TRIP
Every summer I drive all over Northern Idaho, NW Montana, and over to Bellingham, WA, to be with people and landscapes I love. This last summer I also took a wonderful online art workshop with the fabulous mixed media collage artist in Colorado named Kellie Day and made art along the way. Basically, you use acrylic medium to "glue" meaningful scraps/pieces of paper -- old letters, images of birds, maps, flashes of color, poetry, etc. onto a canvas. Once that dries you sketch your main subject free hand with fluid black paint using an eye dropper -- which resulted (for me) in a globby calligraphic outline. Then you paint the background, removing paint in some areas to reveal some of the collage elements. Then you paint the main subject. All paints/mediums are acrylic. At any time you can add more collage elements. YOU CAN'T GO WRONG with the fun method. You just keep playing until . . . well, that is the mystery. When is a piece "done?"
Here is the basic process in photos:
Here is the basic process in photos:
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F is for Fireweed -- 12" x 24" After doing the collage I outlined the fireweed from a sketch I did years ago, and then painted a cream background. I repainted the background in light blue. No cigar. |
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Then I painted the fireweed and repainted the background a pale cream -- losing most collage elements. I threw and drew bits of white onto the fireweed. |
Sunday, March 22, 2015
RAVENS MATE FOR LIFE – or – THE STORY OF ED AND LENORE
For fabulous facts about ravens please
click on this link: http://www.whitewolfpack.com/2014/12/10-fascinating-facts-about-ravens.html
The comments at the end of that article
are also fascinating.
In February I had a visitor named Victor Jacinto Cano from Bellingham, WA. He arrived in his small motor home with his small and
altogether adorable Havanese doggie named Lola. While Victor and I have nine
mutual friends in Bellingham, we had never met. He and Lola found a mostly
level spot to park the RV and stayed two nights. We had a nice time and Sudsie
liked having Lola around as we drove to sights on the Grand Staircase.
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Vic and Lola at Devil's Garden |
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Sudsie and Lola |
Prior to Vic’s arrival, he had posted
photos of his travels on Facebook – including several pics of two ravens. He had taken these photos while camping in
Northern Arizona. With Victor’s permission, I set about painting the ravens in
various poses using mixed media techniques with acrylic paint. After learning that ravens mate for life, I
decided this particular raven couple had relationship issues. My friend Howard
Hutchison, a world famous paleontologist and a very witty person, suggested I
name the ravens Ed (for Edgar Allen Poe) and Lenore (for the woman EAP wrote
about in his most famous poem).
The next thing you know, I started
having “commercial” thoughts about my experiments with ravens in art. I would make prints
of the three paintings as well as note cards. I gave the paintings titles – captions,
really – of what Lenore might be saying to Ed, based on their “body
language.” Remember, their relationship is troubled. It was great fun thinking up titles.Then an artist friend, whose opinion I value, suggested
that I might sell more note cards if the titles were “friendlier.” She probably
has a point.
Below are the images along with their current titles, which will
be changed for the note cards. See what you think.
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You Know I Love You Just the Way You Are **SOLD** Mixed Media, Acrylic, 12" x 12" by Rae Ellen Lee |
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Ed, look! It's Your Higher Power! ** SOLD ** Mixed Media, Acrylic, 12" x 12" by Rae Ellen Lee |
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We Could Just Ask For Directions! **SOLD**. Mixed Media, Acrylic, 12" x 12" by Rae Ellen Lee |
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