Sunday, 30 October 2011


'Jasper' 35 x 25cm pastel SOLD
Wow I sold this original pastel painting of Jasper at a local art exhibition and I'm thrilled. Yesterday I visited the exhibition with friends not expecting that I'd make a sale as today is the last day. Even though I didn't get any prizes it's very encouraging when someone likes my art enough to want to buy the painting and hang it in their home so what better prize could there be than that.
http://the-pastel-cat-artist.com/

Monday, 24 October 2011

A close encounter


King Parrot male

This magnificent bird came to visit our verandah just a few days ago. He was very confident, definitely not shy and willingly perched on my arm to eat sunflower seeds out of my hand. What an incredible encounter it was. Even though we get an amazing variety of bird life where we live it's always thrilling to experience their presence up close and personal like this. As an avid amateur photographer I have a wonderful collection of the beautiful birds that inhabit our part of the world and they are a constant reminder of how fortunate I am to live in Montville.

Wednesday, 19 October 2011

Paris city of art and romance

Not far from the Arc de Triomphe the world's largest triumphal arch conceived in1806 by Napoleon I where we stayed for three days the streets heaved with crowds of people mostly tourists from every corner of the globe.  It was a fascinating experience to see the incredible mix of history with glamorous people swelling out of cafe's and bars. Paris seems slow to come to life in the morning then as the afternoon approaches the streets and cafe's fill and there is a sense of anticipation in the air as evening approaches. Traffic is chaotic yet in a strange way the drivers all seem to be familiar with what looks absolutely nerve wracking. Lamborghini and Ferrari are everywhere. For the entire three days we were in Paris I walked for miles in my sensible Colorado's looking at the sites. Not being a shoe person I found myself in awe of the incredible variety of gorgeous boots and dizzy heels so many women were wearing not just in Paris but London too. As an artist I was hoping to see evidence of it's artistic history but only saw one genuine artist at work along the Seine and she was working with a pen and wash technique painting lovely old romantic buildings and facades. With limited time we chose to see the Musee de'orsay instead of the Louvre and it was breathtaking to see walls of original Monet's Renoir and Degas to name only a fraction of what was there. So much to see and so little time. A cruise down the Seine was well worth doing for the close view of the Eiffel Tower Notre Dame and many of the other buildings of historical significance. Just three days but we packed a lot into that time before catching the Eurostar back to London.

Friday, 7 October 2011

7 ways to shake up your art schedule !

Now that winter is fast disappearing and we’re all getting back into the same old routine again - you might be feeling a bit stuck in the grind, and worrying that your all-too-well-known timetable is cramping your style, and your creativity.

If any of this sounds familiar, you’ll want to read these top tips for shaking up your schedule. Sometimes, just moving things around a little and making minor alterations to what you’re used to can make the daily routine seem refreshed and new.

1) Make a point of taking a mid-morning/afternoon break. It can be for coffee, a light meal, or even just a walk around. Move about, stretch, and try to leave the studio for a short time. It’s tempting to spend all day working when inspiration strikes, but often a short break will help you get more out of the time.

2) Put time aside for experimentation. This could be with a color that you don’t usually work with, or a material you don’t often use. Alternatively you might be exploring new subject matter or themes. You’ll enjoy the time you spend experimenting, and you’ll go back to your planned work with more energy and, perhaps, more ideas.

3) Swap your scheduled times around. If you generally work with acrylics in the morning and clay in the afternoon, try doing it the other way around. You might be surprised by how much difference that can make to your perspective when you’re engaging in either activity. Small things like this can make a significant difference.

4) Take your work outside. If you’re beginning to find the studio atmosphere oppressive, but don’t want to take a break from work, take your work outside with you. Locate a spot nearby where you can create undisturbed, and where you can get a breath of fresh air at the same time.

5) Schedule in time with friends or family. Interaction with other people will often help you refresh your ideas and thoughts, because of the connection with someone who thinks a bit differently. Also, giving yourself some social time will prevent you feeling isolated or sick of the same four walls – both of which can be problems for artists who generally work alone.

6) Find out what’s on in your local area. There might be an event that is relevant to a project you’re working on, or if there’s something that touches on an area of general interest to you it might give you material for a future project. Plus, similarly to social time, it will get you out of the studio environment, and help you take time to rearrange your thoughts.

7) Consider new ways to market your work. This is important to your career anyway, if you’re a professional artist, but it will also help you to clarify certain things about your work in your own mind. In addition, if you decide to build your portfolio, present work at an art fair, accept a new commission or anything of this nature, you will have a new project – and a new deadline – to work around. This can be both motivating and rejuvenating.
http://the-pastel-cat-artist.com/

Tuesday, 4 October 2011

Overcoming artsits block

Have you ever experienced the dreaded creative block, that horrible feeling you can't shake that you'll never produce a single decent artwork again ? Yes I have it but I'm putting it down to having to get myself aligned again and back into the thread of normal life after a month overseas. Well that's my excuse and I'm sticking to it ! Here are some wonderful tips that made me feel better about my current state of inertia, maybe they will help you because it's not just creative block, sometimes it a life block where you just can't get motivated to do anything.

Beating Artist’s Block Tip 1:
It's the fear of not being able to do it that is making you feel you've lost your inspiration. To get rid of the fear, you must approach your painting as if it were a job and DO IT.
Beating Artist’s Block Tip 2:
Force yourself to set a goal of ‘X’ number of paintings. Copy if you must, use kitchen tools as models if you must, but simply getting into the paint itself will begin to inspire you, even if you don't like the subject matter. There's always something to learn.
Beating Artist’s Block Tip 3:
Change media. If acrylic, go to oil. If oil, go to printmaking.
Beating Artist’s Block Tip 4:
Search for new painters on the web, using Google's image search. Go to galleries. Try to find an artist who's doing something that appeals to you, something that the voice inside you says, "I could do that" or "I'd like to be able to do that." Secure an image and copy it to find out what that artist did and how. Then think about recombining ideas.
Beating Artist’s Block Tip 5:
Play the "what if?" game. What if I painted this old subject matter on a tire? What if I put together a still life of bricks? How can I use a new material, a new subject matter, a new style. Be wild in your considerations.
Beating Artist’s Block Tip 6:
Remember that everyone has fallow periods. I don't consider them really fallow, just the subconscious taking a breather and getting ready to take a different direction.
Beating Artist’s Block Tip 7:
Check out some books on creative thinking to give you a jolt.
Beating Artist’s Block Tip 8:
Take a trip to somewhere you've never considered, even if it's only to a local town you've never explored. Always take a sketchbook, everywhere you go. Or a digital camera. Imagine yourself a Lilliput or a giant to change your perspective.
Beating Artist’s Block Tip 9:
Keep a journal of drawings and writings for a month. Pick something from the journal to paint. Review it in six months or a year.
Beating Artist’s Block Tip 10:
Compile a scrapbook of family portraits -- not just faces, but each family member doing something typical -- a ‘candid’ sketch with writing about the person, the time, your impressions. Keep it in a journal for your kids' kids.
Beating Artist’s Block Tip 11:
Go to a senior citizen center and draw the people there. Talk to them about their life stories. Try to express your response in mixed media using copies of their old photographs, etc.
Beating Artist’s Block Tip 12:
Take a class that forces you to produce in a structured environment.

Sunday, 2 October 2011

Where does the time go ?

Just back from a month overseas and how wonderful it’s been not to have to blog, spend hours sitting at the computer problem solving website issues, getting frustrated with it all and wondering why would anyone choose to spend time in such a fruitless pastime. Here I am doing all those things again my first day working and why ? well I chose to change my wordpress theme. It looked good until I tried to find where my blogs had gone only to realise my archives were only apparent on some of my pages and not all of them. Being away from the computer gives you a whole other perspective on the amount of time most of us spend looking at one and my personal strategy from now on is to spend a lot less time on it and more on my art. The first thing I did was clean up and unsubscribe from any unnecessary mail, then left some facebook groups and suddenly there is a lot less in the inbox and more time available since I don’t have to deal with all that useless stuff. What about the ‘funny’ emails friends send ? well I’m going to delete them all but I’m thinking of writing to everyone and asking nicely if they could take me of their list of recipients and hope no one is offended.