anika mari

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Quick Scribbles

I got a few new markers for Christmas that I was eager to try out. I got all my sketch stuff out, ready to start, but I ended up having to wash out all my rapidograph pens, since it’s been so long since I’ve really drawn; some of them were out of ink and some of them were all gunked up. It took a while, but now they are all squeaky clean and ready for scribbling.

All the following scribbles are on grid paper because that’s what I had handy.

First scribble:

Green

The new colors in this one are “pale jade” and “lime peel”. It’s a simple drawing of flowers, but I like the color combination.

Second scribble:

Pink

I used my new chartpak ad marker in “pink” for the background. It’s the first chartpak marker that I’ve tried. The fumes are intense, but the coverage is really nice, and they seem to have a nice variety of colors available. I also got a really nice dark purple that I hope to try out soon. I used my new “magenta” prisma color marker as well as a couple of old green ones (”dark green” and “parrot green”). In the end I wish I’d left off the green. I might have to do another version with just the pinks.

Third scribble:

Golden

I didn’t end up using any of my new colors in this one. The background is “goldenrod” and the other color is “spanish orange”. As I was drawing this one, I paused every so often to look at it skeptically. It’s a little odd, but I like how it turned out.

I’ve been working on some larger drawings that I hope to post about soon. It’s fun to have new colors to play with!

Art in Environment

Over the past few weeks I’ve been in a creative lull. I’ve been somewhat busy with other stuff, but I just haven’t felt incredibly inspired to do anything. I’ve been working on some daily drawings in my sketchbook, but that’s about it.

However, at the tail end of my last creative burst, I did a few drawings/painting that I just now got around to photographing and uploading. I love being in Saipan, but there are a few things working against me: the humid heat which makes me prefer to swing in the hammock with a cool drink instead of working on art, and the slow internet connection which makes me want to do almost anything else than hover over uploads that can take hours. It took me almost 8 hours and a few false starts, but I eventually got the new photos uploaded.

My sister-in-law, Rachel commented that she really liked seeing photographs of my art in their environment. I started taking photos of the artworks hanging on the clothing line or carefully propped on one of the back steps because I don’t have access to a scanner here. I also zoomed in and took some closeups, but uploaded a variety of shots to give a good sense of the scale of the drawings and prints. After hearing her feedback, I embraced the idea and worked with the concept a little more deliberately. I am pretty happy with 2 of the art in environment shots in particular.

Pink Stones and Cinder Blocks

Summer Sails and Cinder Block

I think it’s fitting to photograph my drawings in this manner since I get so much inspiration from everything that I see around me. Not that I can pinpoint exactly where the inspiration for these works come from–they tend to be a general response to visual cues that surround me. Although the cinder blocks didn’t directly inspire either of these works, I like the visual similarity they offer to the drawings, as well as a certain amount of contrast to the surrounding plants.

Perhaps I’ll continue doing this when I’m back home, and I can use my scanner just for the details.

Impromptu Watercolor Paintings

I had intended to do another watercolor similar to my recent scalloped drawing in order to practice getting a specific painted watercolor effect that I didn’t quite get on the first try. For the new piece, I decided to change the overall composition slightly, so I started out by drawing in the shapes with a watercolor pencil.

Drawing in Progress

When the drawing was complete, I looked at all the tiny shapes and didn’t feel like painstakingly filling in each one.

Not sure about what I did want to do, I switched directions and did a loose sketch of similar shapes on a much larger piece of sketch paper. I continued using a loose stroke when painting in the shapes, and ended up using orange overlapped by blue.

Loosen Up

I really liked the end result. This is definitely one of those results that reminds me that I should always work on “good” paper, even when just doing sketchy stuff. Sometimes those are the pieces I love the most, but if it’s on wrinkly, acidy paper, it’s hard to justify framing it.

I was inspired to try out a simlarly loose style with the smaller piece I’d started earlier. The final result was quite different since the technique didn’t transfer precisely to the smaller scale.

Fifth and Final Layer

I layered 5 different colors, and the result was much more spiky and chaotic than the orange and blue composition. If you are interested in seeing the progression of each layer, I have those photos up on flickr.

I wasn’t too happy with the end result of the 5 layered painting. I think that is because it was so different from what I’d originally intended to create, and also so different from the blue and orange composition that I liked so much. I got some pretty good feedback about the smaller painting that got me to look at it in a different way and appreciate the end result for what it is.

Even if it’s not my favorite thing that I’ve ever created, it’s a good example of what I love best about art–that by experimenting with techniques and following the path of ideas that lead to other ideas, I can come up with stuff that is very different from what I set out to do. By hearing what others thought and liked about my unexpected result, I’m reminded that having a final piece that is great every time isn’t what’s important. It’s the process that I love!

Squashed Caterpillar

It’s always hot in Saipan, but the past few days have been incredibly so. I think it’s because of all the rain we had last week. It cooled the island off while it was raining, but now the humidity is as thick as lentil soup. It makes it hard to get a lot of work done, but I’ve been making progress, if a lot slower than usual. I was thinking about starting to work more at night, but the bugs come out, and swarm all around when there’s light to attract them. There’s nothing more annoying that working carefully on the details of a painting or drawing when termites start landing on my arms or ankles.

That said, I finished a print of an all-over texture that I created using a large-nubbed sea urchin shell fragment.

Sea Urchin Pattern (small)

I kind of love it, and it kind of creeps me out a bit. I’m not sure why, but I have the strong desire to cut it up into little circles and make a collage. Maybe to make the impact of the pattern a less intense. Somehow that seems like faulty logic, but that’s what I’m feeling about it.

Perhaps I should try the technique again. The reason I find the print a little unsettling could be that it seems a bit unbalanced and a somewhat overwrought. I’m not sure it is strong enough as a standalone piece of art. I’m having a hard time imagining my signature at the bottom and a mat and frame around the edge.

I created another “byproduct” painting when I applied the watercolor to the sea urchin piece as it rested on another sheet of watercolor paper. It wasn’t very interesting, so I got a little experimental with it. I applied a wash of water over the sharp, jagged little brush strokes. The water took up some of the pigment and created a really pretty light turquoise color. There was an excess of liquid pooling on the paper, so I had the idea to let it drip down the empty side of the paper. It made a mess of the floor, but the effect is pretty neat.

Squashed Caterpillar

The final painting reminds me of a squashed caterpillar. This unsettles me a lot less than the above sea urchin print. Go figure.

Palm Prints

I’ve been in Saipan now for about 2 and a half weeks. I’ve been feeling very stuck about what to do lately, artistically speaking.  I have been focusing my attention to look out for inspiration for something to draw.  Patterns. doodles. little creatures or plants. something. anything.  I was gathering some visuals and inspiration from my environment and experiences, but it felt so deliberate and forced, that I never could bring myself to sit down to actually draw something.  At some point I was sitting on the patio, staring at some palm trees, thinking about nothing in particular, and I thought to myself, “why don’t you just do prints?”

Ding, ding, ding!

The words were in my head before I envisioned what kind of prints I should do, but the ideas followed right away.  In my earlier explorations of the yard, I had found a fallen palm frond from a betel nut palm. The bottom of the stem is quite wide, and the texture was supple enough that I had plans to cut out shapes and do a version of my sewn leaves (I still just might do that!).  That original idea easily translated into using those shapes to create prints. I found some of the material, but it was dryer than before, so I was doubtful that I could make it work.  I searched around the yard to look for another frond or other material, and I found some interesting fibrous matter from the coconut palms.  It was also pretty dry, so then I got a clue from basket making–maybe I could soak the materials and bring back some of the flexibility, plus that might help the watercolor paint get soaked up better.

With nothing to lose if the material I collected disintegrated or worse, I plunged the stuff into a big bowl I’d filled with water.  I let it soak while I gathered the rest of my materials to work outside under the carport. I set up my workspace on the little wooden table and was soon ready to try out a print.

Soaking Fiber

For my first attempt I worked with some of the coconut palm fiber.  Some of the material that was older, did indeed disintegrate, but for the fresher fiber, the water worked wonders. Not only did it make it more flexible, it also helped to clean off some of the dust and debris. I cut the material in the way it wanted to be cut, and what I ended up with looked a bit like a shrimp.  I laid the fiber on some watercolor paper and applied red watercolor paint. The fiber soaked up the paint and held it pretty well.

Coconut Palm Fiber

I carefully moved the paint heavy fiber to a fresh sheet of watercolor paper and I made my first print.

First Shrimp Print Attempt

Obviously I had painted the background in a blue wash before applying the print. It dulled the red down, plus those two longer strands of red on the right looked weird and very un-shrimplike. I think it looks more like a prehistoric bird fish.

I had to adjust the shape of the fiber and the amount of paint a bit, but eventually I ended up with one print that I am very pleased with that actually looks somewhat like a shrimp!

Shrimp Print

As I was making the prints I realized is that by placing the fiber on a piece of paper to apply the paint, I create another painting that is similar in shape but has quite a different texture.

Watercolor Under Coconut Palm Fiber

The water had finally brought the dry brittle betel nut fiber to life. I tried my scissors on a small section from the larger piece, and I could cut it easily and precisely. For my next two prints, I cut leaf/petal shapes from the thicker betel nut material.

Betel Nut Palm Fiber

Cut Pieces for Printing

For the first of these prints, I applied purple paint to the fatter shape and made one print.  It was alright, but it didn’t pick up any of the texture.  For the next try, I used a little less paint and printed on the same sheet of paper. I continued making prints of the leaf/petal shape on the same piece of paper in shades of purple.

Purple Petals Print (small)

The next print used the skinny pieces that I’d cut from the betel nut palm fiber.  I used all five pieces and printed them several times in various shades of green. I wasn’t as happy with the outcome, but I have an idea to cut up the print and incorporate those pieces into a collage combined with some drawn textures.

Green Print

When I was creating the green print, I rested the cut pieces on a piece of watercolor paper, as I did when working on the shrimp print. The result was quite different from the print.

Pods (small)

I think the shapes look like little pods, so I’m going to fill each space with some kind of drawing since right now it looks too empty to me.

Overall, it was a fun and satisfying project. Since I used my fingers to handle the paint-covered cut outs, my fingertips were covered with paint by the end of the process. I don’t love that, so before I try any more prints with this technique I’m going to see if I can find some surgical gloves to protect my skin from the potentially yucky stuff that’s in the paint.