Sunday 30 March 2014

Last Block week ever!

I decided to help my good friend from school Sheila Playford in the last block week with the end of term exhibition. Done every term, students are encouraged to help with a display of their work.
You may submit 3 pieces and 2 students who volunteer organise said pieces into a coherent show that allows 'us' to sell our work for a small commission.

Open to the public it is also nice to present your work to more than fellow students, teachers and family.  You can learn to 'mount' and frame your work, publicise and display your pieces and receive feedback from the general public in the form of 'peoples choice' and the comments book.

It is a safe way of getting your work 'out there' with the school providing the vehicle. It is a time commitment of 6-12 hours depending on what you volunteer for, hanging works, distributing flyers, being floor walkers on opening night and over the weekend and finally packing up the sold items and taking down the rest and preparing the walls for next time.

It was a scary thing to put forward my first piece my first term (the 'recycle' canvas) and I went into help with the clean up of the exhibit on the first monday of the school holidays, but I did it almost every term, with a couple of terms helping on hanging weekend to. TLC provided the lunch and I got to meet other students and learnt alot about exhibition layouts. ( It helped me with my own solo and 'This is us' exhibits)

I feel that this is an important step for artists who want to start to sell their work and should be part of the compulsory curriculum of students above the certificate level.

Thank you Shelia for doing a sterling job on my last exhibit at TLC, it was a privilege to work with and for you.

New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts - Naked exhibition

I submitted and had accepted two pieces to take part in the New Zealand Academy of Fine Arts "Naked" exhibition that ran from March 15 to April 6. I had planned on entering two of my mirror pieces but discovered that to be eligible the piece had to have been completed in the last 12 months. This ruled out several of my nudes.

I was really pleased when I entered the gallery to discover that my mirror work was on the first wall that you saw when you entered the gallery.

My second piece (oil on canvas) was further back in the gallery.




Saturday 29 March 2014

Diploma With Honours - Term 8 2014 Mains

Last term! Don’t believe it, these 4 years have just rushed by. I am so grateful to have been given the opportunity to explore my creative side.


It has been a privilege to have been able to take this time, to paint, to have had access to such a high calibre of tutors and to rub shoulders with such talented artists that the TLC attract.

Monday - Plain air painting – Thomas Robson

Of the first Monday we went to the very restful taita cemetery and returned to it one other time. We also went down to the silverstream overbridge and Trentham memorial park. There were plenty of beautiful vistas to render in watercolour, and oil but I was not enamoured with the results of my efforts, I think mainly because although I love the’ landscape’ of New Zealand, I feel my renditions of it does not do it justice, and to keep my interest I need to put in the human element somewhere.

My most successful pieces were an oil that I treated like watercolour by adding alot of archival lean to, recording the houses surrounding the cemetery and 3 little canvases showing houses within the landscape.





Wednesday – Painting – Roger Key

 Ran out of time to try impasto block week so I decided to extend my still lifes into the mains classes and do some fruit using this paint additive (from archival, an Australian make) that does not affect the colour but allows faster drying time even if you apply it thickly. I use One canvas that I split into 4 panels, I ‘killed’ the white of the canvas using acrylic paint and had fun with it!. 

I think the pieces would have been better much bigger and maybe I will, the frugalness in me appreciated the paint extender even though Roger feels its cheating and you shouldn’t have to add anything to your paint!




Friday – Sarah Brock

I decided to extend the impasto painting into a portrait and I don’t think its too bad. I choose a subject I took a photo of but didn’t know well, so I did not get hung up in getting a likeness, as it was painting with impasto demanded a larger canvas than I had so I applied to her Hat and dress only.

I think it important to take your own reference photos and with the dandilions there was alot of mucking around getting the focus right and getting close enough detail to suit me.

Every time I have an idea for a painting I doubt whether I can paint it, so every canvas is an exploration of my abilities and whether the idea was a good or frustrating one. You can’t know what the public might find alluring enough to put down good money for so really if you’re in this for making money, there are easier ways that are less damaging to your sycee. You can only paint what is of interest to you, and with every one you do, get a little better and go a little further and get a little more inspiration. If people like it and I’ve only had positive feed back,  that’s  a great encouragement, if they buy it, well what a privilege to have your work part of them! And  it helps with getting another canvas to work on.

People have asked where to from here, does this time lead to a job and money coming in steady? No probably not, but it has resulted in me wanting to keep going, hopefully always having something I’m working on, cluttering up the house and maybe creating a body of work for another solo exhibition in the near future?


Monday 27 January 2014

Diploma with Honours - Term 8 2104 Block Week

Drawing with Paint – Sarah Brock.



Sarah wanted to cover three painting techniques this week. The rub out, the dry brush and the impasto methods. 

I had done the rub out method before but not with still life and I hit on an idea using fruit and veg. How far do you have to go before someone recognises a chillie if you don’ paint it red? So a blue chillie, a purple tomato? A red lemon and a green cherry, no sketching on the canvas just apply the paint and liquin mix to the whole canvas (this is your mid tone) and then rub away for highlights add straight colour for your darks to produce a tonal portrait, when you mix the paint with liquin you have a limited time to get a likeness before the paint dries. 

Choose a transparent, take off the paint with liquin and us a fan brush to blend. What can you mix with the paint to make it smell like the fruit your painting? (I like the idea of a smelly painting but the closest I’ve come to lemon scent car freshener behind the lemon painting)