Posts tagged painting classes
Give YOUR Voice to Watercolor

For years, I was afraid to paint with watercolors!

I’d heard they were unforgiving, that you can’t make mistakes,
and that you have to know what you want to achieve before you begin.

I don’t operate that way, I’m more of a “go with the flow” kind of person.

I learn by doing, too eager to paint to take time to plan.
Which, if you know my origin story, isn’t a surprise.

I moved to Hawaii on June 2, 2000, to begin life as an artist. I’d housesit for a friend for five months and figure everything else out
when I arrived. I sold my house, put everything in storage awaiting my return, and bought a one-way ticket to Honolulu. 

Once inside the tiny garage apartment I cared for, I realized its size necessitated my ditching
my beloved oil paints and learning to paint with watercolor.

It was either that or risk death by fumes.

Fortunately, I met a wonderful teacher who didn’t mind that my paintings didn’t look like anyone else’s.
One night, I laid eight of my paintings on the floor of that tiny apartment and gazed down at them from the bed.

“Well,” I thought, “at least they all look like mine.”

I had no idea the importance of having a signature style, nor did I know how much mine would continue to evolve.

I wasn’t interested in the things we painted during class, but I soaked up the technical information like a sponge.

After class, I painted the flora in the yard I tended in return for my temporary home.

From the start, the colors in Hawaii called to me.

Originally from Wisconsin, I was used to neutral, earth tones.

Hawaii is a land of beautiful, outrageously bright color in the sky, the sea, and across the land.

The feeling of those colors is what I emulate with my paintings.

Traditional watercolors use the softest of voices, beautifully.

That doesn’t mean you have to paint that way if you prefer to speak/paint with brighter colors.

Yes, I can save the white of my paper if I have to, and I can paint soft, sweet, lullaby pastel colors when they’re needed.

Maybe I simply have a louder painting voice than most.

The key, no matter what tone of voice you use when you paint,
is to know how to use your colors to achieve the results you want.

I studied color theory for two semesters at the University of WI, Madison in the late 1970s.

I waited to take these classes until after graduation because the instructor was intense, and I needed time to focus.

I am enthralled with the ways color works.

There’s a big difference between reading about the ways colors work and interact with one another, and experiencing it.

While some people might learn by reading, I learn best by doing — pictures help too.

Remember what I said at the beginning, about watercolor being unforgiving?

That is so NOT TRUE!

I smile as I tell students that those misconceptions are lies started by nefarious watercolor artists who want to keep watercolors all to themselves!

Don’t be bamboozled!

Find out for yourself, take a class, have fun, and give YOUR voice to watercolor!

Finding YOUR Way with Watercolor

Two professional oil painters recently told me that they are afraid of painting with watercolor. They said that it is too unpredictable and unforgiving. I have heard this before.

In fact, I used to believe that too. I had NO intention of even trying watercolor before moving into a very small apartment in Honolulu made it advisable (fumes from oil paints can be deadly).

Now I know watercolor can be magical & free as well as domesticated, and occasionally quiet.

Watercolor has many facets and can be used differently to suit your moods.

My favorite method is to embrace the mystery of painting as a form of meditation and insight.

I enjoy the challenge of starting fast with a loose idea. Then applying texture and paint to create an underpainting (my Hide-N-Seek method).

Later, when all the texture has been removed, I paint slowly, taking my time to find my original idea (the Seeking part of Hide-N-Seek).

It is a good idea to have several paintings going so that when you get “stuck” on one, you can work on another.

Each painting has the potential to teach us something new about art and about life.

When we quietly tiptoe into our paintings, we have the opportunity to watch magic happen as the world expands through our creation.

When painting slowly, stop periodically to really look at the painting in progress. In this way you can see what is needed and the painting process becomes a meditation.

Sometimes paintings happen quickly. Stunning paintings, filled with charged color and fluid movement can happen in one sitting.

There truly are as many ways to paint, as there are people.

If you want to find your own way with watercolor, please email me. Teaching and helping others to expand their artistic vision is one of my favorite things to do.

Not yet complete, here you see that I am finding more and more trees in this Aspen Grove in Autumn. This painting was started in the Hide-N-Seek Class I taught in Denver earlier in October, 2014. Ask me how you can arrange to have me teach a class i…

Not yet complete, here you see that I am finding more and more trees in this Aspen Grove in Autumn. This painting was started in the Hide-N-Seek Class I taught in Denver earlier in October, 2014. Ask me how you can arrange to have me teach a class in your neck of the woods!

FREE 30-minute Speed Painting at the Kuloko Arts Gallery
HonuPaintedatKuloko.jpg

Join me every Tuesday morning at 11AM when I teach a FREE 30-minute Speed Watercolor Painting Class at Kuloko Arts Gallery at the Outrigger Reef on the Beach in Waikiki.

Using five bright watercolor paints from Cheap Joes and 90# Arches watercolor paper we paint our masterpieces. Each turtle (honu in the Hawaiian language) is as unique as we all are.

This is a great fun way to spend 30 minutes creating a memory to last a lifetime. Plus you have your own art to take home to grace your walls.

While at the gallery, check out hundreds of creations made by 35 artists living in Hawai`i. Watch art take shape before your eyes as a different artist paints, draws, or makes jewelry in the gallery every day.

Other FREE30-minute classes at Kuloko include an acrylic painting class at 4 PM on Mondays with artist Rebecca Snow, and a colored pencil class at 7:30 PM on Wednesdays with artist Teri Inouye.