Day 3 & 4 : Landscapes of Fabric
It is often the materials themselves that inspire my artwork, and so I am always on the look out for new bits and bobs that I can use to create. Last year, a good friend of mine gifted me a book of fabric samples and since then I have looking for ways to incorporate them into my artwork. The landscapes in both of these pieces are made with some of those samples.
Burgundy Wood 2024, 11x14″, $375
The Rocky Mountains 2024, 11x14″, $375
Deep in the woods, a commune there was, where the stars danced, to a bluegrass jam.
tissue paper and paper towel collage, watercolour, craft paper, fabric, acrylic paint, and embroidery thread on paper and canvas
The trees are not afraid, they seen these storms before, they know that even they fall, the forest will grow more.
tissue paper and paper towel collage, watercolour, fabric, acrylic paint, and embroidery thread on paper and canvas
Day 5 & 6 : The Sky Sisters
With many of my pieces I like to recycle my past artworks. These two pieces are prime example of that. When painting with watercolour it is difficult to know how a particular colour will look once painted, and so as I paint I keep a piece a paper handy and test my colours as I go. The clouds of the artwork on the right are cut from one of these test strips. The pillars that the ladies are standing on are also cut from a watercolour piece I did in 2019.
Stylites with Style II 2024, 11x14″, $350
Stylites with Style I 2024, 12x12″, $350
watercolour, watercolour pencil, pen and ink, acrylic paint, craft paper, fabric, and embroidery thread on paper and canvas
To the sound of rumbling thunder, the sky sisters dance. They do this every morning, to welcome in the day.
Day 7 & 8 : Playing with bugs
When I was a child I would spend hours by myself, playing in my backyard. Once my favourite things to do, was to find a big rock, turn it over, and marvel at all the bugs living underneath. For me, it was like a treasure hunt.
In my artwork, I am always trying to reduce things to their essence. To do so, I ask myself – what is the simplest way I can represent this? This is another reason I love drawing bugs. Their forms are simple yet beautiful, and with a few basic shapes can be easily created and recognized.
Bug Sampler 2024, 12x16″, $500
From the earth and sky, they crawl and they fly, witnesses of evolution, they will outlive us all.
watercolour, watercolour pencil, ink, tissue paper collage, craft paper, embroidery thread and beads on paper and canvas
Up in the Forest 2024, 16x16″, $450
In the enchanted forest, high up in the canopy, the spirits of the flying ones, delivered our prayers to the divine.
tissue paper and paper towel collage, watercolour, acrylic paint, embroidery thread and beads on paper and canvas
Day 9 & 10: What can be done with a square?
I came up with artworks by asking myself - What can one create a square? It turns out with a few simple lines, a square can become a face, or even a frog.
The squares found on these artworks are created from recycled paper towel. When I paint with watercolour, I find that it useful to dab my brush on paper towel before bringing it to the paper. This allows me to control the amount of water I have in my brush, and gives me more precision when painting. The patterns created by the random blobs of paint on these paper towels are often so beautiful, that I can’t throw them away. And so I reuse them to create other artworks, like the ones shown here.