My only real New Year's resolution was to get back into the studio to make more art (along with the requisite staring at the walls, rearranging of the file cabinet, tearing illos out of The New Yorker to cry over, organizing the paint tubes by height and popularity, etc.)
Naturally, January is almost done and not until this past week did I do any 'real' painting; the kind that requires cleaning brushes, changing water and yanking wet canvases out from under the muddy paws of Junior, as opposed to sliding my fingers around a touch-screen. I'm not keen to work big right now, just make little things with no pressure. Done-in-one sorts of things in watercolor and gouache.
Back in November I took a one-day watercolor class as a refresher, and one simple thing I was reminded of was the importance of using better-quality pigments and paper. Acrylic and oil and even gouache can be forgiving even in cheaper 'student' grades, and can go on almost any surface with some success. But watercolor is high-maintenance. And it really likes good paper. So I pried open my wallet and bought good paper (and a wet-media sketchbook -- watercolor on cheap recycled sketchbook paper is a recipe for aggravation.) It makes working in watercolor a lot less intimidating, although I have years to go before I can say I'm proficient.
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| Statesman, son of Secretariat. Watercolor, 3.5 x 5" |
This is Twinkie, who was Secretariat's second 'test' offspring. His mama had draft horse in her pedigree, and Twinkie (official name, Statesman) got the best of both parents. He was a sport-horse and accomplished in many disciplines including dressage. In his later years he lived in Arizona, and for several years he lived with a dear close friend of mine, who like me, grew up loving horses and cheered Big Red on during his Triple Crown. Having Twinkie 'in the family' was a like having Secretariat looking over your shoulder.
This little painting of Twinkie (above) is from a photograph I took to accompany an article Tobi wrote about him for the Blood-Horse many years back. Twinkie passed away a few years later, after a good long life. He was big, calm, kind and smart, and I'm proud and grateful to have known and ridden him.
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| Przewalski's horse, 4x6" |
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| Big bear and cherry tree, 4.25x8.5" |
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| 'Wings', gouache on New Yorker page. |
The horse and bear are based on photos I took at the San Diego Zoo years ago, but the backgrounds are pure whimsy. The bottom piece was me looking at stuff on my bulletin bard and doodling ideas for Illustration Friday. (The fish just horned in of its own accord.)