Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Treasure Valley Artist Alliance "Souvenir"

Announcing
Souvenir
August 16, 2013 through September 20, 2013
The Creative Access Art Center (CAAC) is a new venue for our TVAA exhibition.  This is the same place that we have our bi-monthly meetings.  While Boise State Public Radio (BSPR) is being remodeled we are pleased to be able to take this opportunity to work with CAAC and to take advantage of their location in downtown Boise.  Because of their great location we will have a second opening (which we're calling a Mingle) on the First Thursday in September.

August 16, 2013 - Opening Reception at CAAC, from 5:00 to 8:00 pm.  No host bar with wine and beer will be provided by Boise River Catering.  We will also have some tasty finger foods provided by artist Felicia Weston.

September 5, 2013 - First Thursday Mingle at CAAC, from 5:00 to 8:00 pm. No host bar with wine and beer provided by Boise River Catering.  Felicia will be cooking up something delicious for us once again.

Prospectus
An exhibition showcasing small works with a travel theme: Mementos of escape from our normal routine, small enough to fit in your carry-on luggage. Memories of favorite trips, childhood vacations, the monument inside the snow-globe, the miniature Eiffel Tower, the postcards, and the stamps from other countries...What did you do on your summer vacation? 

This was the perfect show for me to enter as this fits most of the work I do!
These are the two of mine that got accepted.

Road Trip
8 1/2" x 5 1/2" 
$35

This small piece contains a replica of the 1976 corvette that I used to have when I was single. It brings back good memories but once I had kids it was no longer practical.

Mola #1
$35
This 8" x 8" mixed media piece highlights some of the treasures found south of the border.


Can't wait to see what everyone else has done! Hope to see many of you at the opening! 

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Art Journaling while camping


We have been spending a lot more time in our trailer lately. Between travel days and bike or hike days I do manage to take some time for art days.  It helps me think and centers me. I like to use the bits of ephemera I pick up along our travels and put them into collages. Kind of a diary.


This is my current journal. I started my first one in 1995.


I also like to draw what I see using a permanent pen....



and then filling in with watercolors. 






"Jawbone" is back traveling with us and likes to put on my glasses when I'm not looking.


And of course the "The Decider" is back - here he is pictured exhausted and ready for bed.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Secretary Blues


So the other day I had a friend come over and she wanted to see my studio and all my collections etc. She was very interested in all of it and we talked for several hours. It was this exchange that sparked my next project. She noticed my blue and white collection and said she had a blue and white dish set. 




I also showed her some of my encaustics and how I like to incorporate them into my collage/assemblages and this was how my piece started to come together. Top and centered is a wood encaustic piece I made with lace and blue encaustic wax. Also pictured above are things I pulled from the "Blue and White" shelf. I added some vintage blue children's blocks and a wooden case from Dinosaur magnets that I bought at a thrift store. The small figures I collected over the years. 






The old bottle of ink was from my mom as well as the fountain pen. I then found a page of short hand script, from this I got the idea that this piece would be about my mom and her days as a Secretary in New York City in the 50's. The two pitchers didn't seem to fit the theme, so I took a cup and saucer from another set- this seemed to go better.  The elephants were also out.



On top of the encaustic collage I nailed this blue glass heart, to represent my love for my mother.



I lined the inside of the box with the shorthand paper and blue gingham washi paper tape.


The final touch was a strand of pearls to tie it all together. I called my mom today and quizzed her on her early jobs. She was fuzzy on the details but did remember that her first job was as a secretary at the FBI in NYC. Her job was to go take notes from the FBI agent and then go back and write them up. 

Her second job as a secretary was at an advertising agency in NYC and the two major clients she remembers were Chivas Regal and The Rose Bowl Parade. She said she remembers them getting to sample the liquor at work.

This is so far removed from the mom I know, it is fun to picture her before raising a family of 5 and seeing her going to work on the bus and shopping on 5th avenue during her lunch hour or walking through Central Park.

Monday, June 17, 2013

E is for Eggplant

"E" is for Eggplant  2 1/2" x 4" x 3 1/4" $35



 This piece started out with the definition of eggplant from a 4 volume dictionary from 1899 that my daughter gave me. She bought it from Goodwill for $24.99, said it was worth $100 but couldn't find a buyer, so I decided to use it for my art.



Since I decided to cut up the dictionary I took the scissors to another vintage item, circa 1958.

I used Plymer medium to glue the painting to the sides of the box. 
 
I measured and cut colored tissue paper for the front of the box. 



I used A Bar at the Flies-Bergere, by Edouard Manet mainly for the colors that went well with the piece- greens and purples. 

Side view

Top view

Bottom view


Final touches were adding a translucent purple acrylic stain. Glueing the miniature eggplant and large letter E and adding the green dots to the E. I think I had eggplant on the brain as I recently made an eggplant lasagna for a vegan friend of mine and her husband who's vacation condo we were invited to stay. She and I both love eggplant.

Friday, June 14, 2013

Bike Boise

 Here I am in the midst of a lot of ideas going on at once. This post will focus on the one in the middle. The substrate for this piece is a used stretched canvas that I picked up at a reuse store in Santa Barbara. I covered the whole back of the canvas in joint compound. I like using this as it is absorbant and really soaks in the watered down acrylic's very well.

 The focus in the center is an encaustic transfer I made on a piece of wood in Karen Bubb's encaustic workshop a couple months ago.  I keep a sandwich bag file for every letter of the alphabet so hunting for the correct letters is not too much of a time suck. I used stickers, cut out letters, wood letters, a clothing tag and game pieces.

Bike Boise, 8 x 10 $75
Finished piece with painted dots and green added to frame to bring out the green in the encaustic piece.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Buried Treasure

http://thealteredpage.blogspot.com/2013/06/treasure-time.html
Seth Apter of the Altered Page hosts many projects that bring the mixed media community together. The latest called Treasure Time where, (so far) over 79 artists are participating by reposting their favorite blog posts of all time. 


I went into my "stats" and found my two most popular which both have over 800 views each:
http://pammcknight.blogspot.com/2011/03/artist-journals-and-my-travel-art-kit.html

http://pammcknight.blogspot.com/2009/03/mosaic-table-top-and-welcome-sign.html


I have written 343 posts. This one only had 36 views but was the one I was most excited about and it was on this trip I was able to meet Seth in person while I was in NYC! Please click below to view:

http://pammcknight.blogspot.com/2012/12/my-fifteen-minutes.html


Thanks Seth!

Monday, June 10, 2013

Learning to See


This past Saturday I took one of Lisa Cheney's drawing workshops. She is a very accomplished local visual journalist.  She has taught at Art Fest, Journal Fest, Art Unraveled etc. and has been published in quite a few books and magazines. It was quite a treat not to have to travel to attend one of her classes.

Lisa

 Lisa starts out the class with several exercises to make everyone feel comfortable.  

 It was also fun that several of my artist friends were in the class. Zella, a metals artist joked that it would be easier if we could draw with a blow torch.
Lynn, who creates life like equine sculptures and
Marianne , Queen Gypsy, Mixed Media and Photography
Marianne's drawing of Zella's squid.

My drawing-practicing contour drawing and crosshatching

mine-adding watercolor to the line drawings


At the end of the class we switched to pencil and worked with values

 It was a fun class and I was glad not to be the teacher for once.


Friday, June 7, 2013

Bambi

 There is nothing like selling a couple pieces of art to get motivated to make some more. I sold 2 canvases to a woman from out of state who had bought a piece from me that she saw at the Boise Art Museum and then wanted a couple of companion pieces. I am a prolific artist. Once I get going, I can just whip them out...the problem is my house is overflowing...maybe I'm not as good at marketing as I am at producing...hmmm...I think most artists are in that boat!

 Here is the start of Bambi. All my art is made from things I already have or got second hand except for paint and mediums. I had this plaque that was just unstained wood which I gessoed and then stenciled over a plastic doily that was my grandmothers.  The stand is made from a wooden diamond and a bracket that I nailed and glued.

A few years ago I had seen stuffed animal heads attached to these boards as take on taxidermy animals, that was white I had intended to do but then spotted this little guy in my stash and decided to use Bambi.
 I also found this antique bead/button when I was sweeping under a bookcase and decided to include it too.
Bambi 5 "x 7 " $45
The finished piece has a 70's kitschy sort of feeling. Finishing touches are dark brown and white detailing around the edges, a gloss polymer coating and a sawtooth hanger.

Saturday, May 25, 2013

WOD


For any of you that are familiar with Crossfit, you will recognize the WOD stands for "work out of the day" The piece was made as a wedding gift to give to one of our friends and his bride who are big into Crossfit.

I bought this very old dumbbell several years ago and thought this might be a good starting point for this assemblage. Of course it is very heavy, so what to do with it... I just happened to have this hand made wooden tissue box and it fit! Glue would not hold that much weight! And since the recipient is my husband's friend, I gave him the job of figuring out how to attach the weight. He drilled some holes through the back and attached it with wire. You can see the wire in the photo below from the back.

Instead of sealing up the hole in the back of the box, I decided to use it to add more dimensionality to the piece. While looking for something to use to attach the blocks, I found this stick from an aircraft museum- wow what luck! He is also a pilot!

 I like how the old worn look of the children's blocks resonate with the old worn paint on the weight. The blocks I picked up when I was with my friend Rebeca last year, she uses a lot of these in her assemblages.



The figurine in the front is a strongman from the circus. This is one of the Roses Tea collectibles that was given to me by my Aunt Nora. The figurine needed something to sit on and I needed to bring in some yellow as the "D" was the only yellow in the piece. I had a wooden heart (it is a wedding gift after all) that I painted yellow and this completed the piece! I hope they like it.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Time to bring out the travel art kit


I've been on a creative desert these past few months, so it's time to pack the bags...
 for a road trip with the T@B! 


Always an important part of my packing is bringing along an art kit. The large one I use for going to Studio Night (which has happened in a while, maybe that's what's wrong)  and I've brought it on a couple road trips when space isn't at a premium. My small kit pictured below is my usual travel kit. In just a small space I can fit miniature versions of everything I need.



This trip I wanted something between the two sizes.

 First I started with my current art journal which will not fit in the tiny case. Here I am "prepping" a few pages to finish while on the trip. I also want to take the set of brush pens which do not fit in the mini kit.


 Pictured here are my reused plastic lid for a paint palette and a plastic jar with lid for my paint water.
Here is the finished result- leave the mini kit as is, add the extra's and then fit them all into this midsize zip tote that I got as gift with purchase years ago at Chico's. This should do me just fine and hope that the must needed inspiration will come to me while on the road.