If you enjoy checking my blog from time to time....I will be posting from my new address.
Jobethwatercolors.com a web site in progress for information, demonstrations, and a gallery of my watercolors. Thank you in advance for visiting the site. Feel free to commit or post questions.
JoBeth Gilliam
Welcome to My Scene
"My Scene" is sharing a finished painting or my 3 step process to a finished painting using photographs or sketches. Asking, how can I make this scene or subject mine from refrences that hold my attention longer than 5 minutes. Some photographs are just....photographs not paintable interesting subjects. So let's began and hope you enjoy your painting experience........JoBeth
Thursday, July 18, 2013
Monday, May 6, 2013
~When Did You Start Painting?~
I am often asked the awkward questions ‘how
long have you been painting’ or ‘when
did you start painting.’ Never quite
sure if that question is literal or they are qualifying my paintings in
comparison to the timeline questions.
Whatever the thought behind the question, here is a short summary of my
journey.
Friends…friends…friends and their persistence
pushed and pulled me into this incredible journey. I remember thinking okay I’ll give it a shot
to get them off my case….like when children keep nagging for a cookie before
dinner. An appreciation of those who drew or painted
their vision was the spring board for my quick ‘I do’. Mostly self taught….I have the mile high
paintings and the scars that prove my claim.
My first experience was tole painting…how
many flowers can cling to one wooden plaque.
The second experience was an oil painting class. A delightful instructor along with a pushy
friend broadened my enthusiasm for art.
She was patient with this novice flower painter teaching design and
principles of composition. It became a test
making sure my viewer could see every painted barn board and every blade of
grass from foreground to the barns foundation.
Now readers! If you enjoy painting on wood or the patina pattern on
boards are important to you….be my guest.
I admire your tedious work, it just wasn't` me.
Another friend insisted we take a
watercolor class just for fun. My first
brush stroke of watercolor pigment on beautiful white paper was the hook. From the first class my palette was seldom dry
because painting became a daily routine. Watercolor
became the spontaneous expression appealing to my creative taste. My paintings have been described as happy,
colorful, interesting….would prefer dramatic, exciting, and awesome…you know
the adjectives’ used when visiting museums.
Many thanks to Frank Webb, who taught me lines
don’t have to be straight, color is mine, paint to please yourself, and the
importance of shapes. My credentials’
are few unless holding an office in local art organizations qualifies anyone
the title of artist. I’ve held many offices
worn many hats…..most were accepted out of ignorance on my part.
Incidentally…those friends who pushed me
kicking and screaming to class never purchased another tube of paint or a brush. Their supplies found a home with me…so what
was I to do but use them. Interesting
how God placed friends in my life to move me out of my comfort zone to
experience his pleasure…
Saturday, May 4, 2013
Painting on the Run
Keeping up with life at times dries out the palette. I remember when painting everyday was common, if just an hour. I fall into one of two categories ...getting slower with menial task or my plate is full. Whatever category or shoe that fits, I am persuaded to speed up or scrape the plate. However a window opened to produce a couple of new images. Don't know about most of you reading this blog, when time is limited.......my focus, get paint on paper. My photographs are categorized with one slot labeled maybe. These are references that almost found themselves in bed with yesterdays news. This slot isn't opened often....you have those too....where was this? Soooo...long story short, the two paintings below where several photos in the 'maybe' slot. I seldom use one photo for a single painting.....a maybe subject from one and background/foreground of another. These paintings are not chosen for the travel channel because they don't have zip codes. I want to set at the table, smell the flowers, or walk down the street even better shop. Painting what could be.....
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Class Demonstration
This was my demonstration last week in Lamesa...with a symmetrical format. Symmetrical paintings are all about balance...formal or informal. This is an informal motif because it is not a mirrors image. Balance is the key in all paintings but it's most important with a symmetrical format. Asymmetrical is much easier for me because I like 'stuff' in my paintings. Most of us recognize when our paintings list to the left or right like a boat about to capsize. Adjusting shapes within the composition can be hazardous to your composition. Balancing the painting as a whole is the goal. Shapes are made larger, smaller, louder, quieter, softer disregarding the reference you are working from....hope you enjoy Paint Bucket Daises...
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Sketch When Inspired
Recently while having lunch at Abuleo's, with my husband, I was caught off guard without anything to sketch on but a cocktail napkin or my husbands shirt. (He said, No). The light reflections streaming in and around the busy scene was a painting waiting in the wings. I not only didn't have paper, no pen....so borrowing the waiters pen, shapes that appealed to me where quickly drawn. The figures moving around changed the light prospective often and another napkin was required. Think I have enough information to compose several interesting paintings from one setting. I keep a small tablet in my purse with pen just for those inspiring moments...but where was it when I needed it...at home. So when you find yourself without, overly inspired, sketch on anything available....that is anything you can take with you. Restaurants frown on taking their tablecloths or napkins.....JoBeth
The napkin drawing
The 11x15 study on A'rches 140# rough paper
The napkin drawing
The 11x15 study on A'rches 140# rough paper
Painting with Limited Palette
Seems I have little time to keep my blog up to date. Not sure if it is the lack of organization or too much on my plate...probably the latter. I paint/sketch or read, art almost everyday. Not everything I paint is worthy for publication....most of the time it begins as a masterpiece, runs off the road then quickly is tagged as experimental. Another word often used is 'series' that term is used when you can't get it right. The experimental or series claim makes one feel as though they didn't waste their time and supplies. The fat stack of those so called 'experimentals' seems to grow in the studio faster than the debt ceiling. I will admit learning from my mistakes has probably been the best tool in my kit. 'What Not To Do' would be a perfect title for a book but a high fever plaguing my body would have to be present for me to contemplate writing the book. The longer I paint the dont's seem to have taken more space within the pages of my note pad than the do's. What to do or not....doesn't seem to keep me from that continuous passion to paint.
The painting below is 22x30 on A'rches 140# rough paper. A brush drawing using yellow ochre, on dry paper, a limited palette, and a #10 quill brush were the tools used to start this fun painting. The colors mixed on the paper keeping a close observation on the strength of values with every brush load of pigment. When dry the dark values were added to emphasize windows, doors, figures and anything of importance...experiment...paint a series....just PAINT
JoBeth
The painting below is 22x30 on A'rches 140# rough paper. A brush drawing using yellow ochre, on dry paper, a limited palette, and a #10 quill brush were the tools used to start this fun painting. The colors mixed on the paper keeping a close observation on the strength of values with every brush load of pigment. When dry the dark values were added to emphasize windows, doors, figures and anything of importance...experiment...paint a series....just PAINT
JoBeth
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