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Thursday, November 30, 2017

Peacocks in Spring

Day 30, the last day of the November Asian art painting challenge held at the online OASlife Facebook group. OAS, Oriental Art Supply, is an art supply of traditional Asian calligraphy and related traditional arts material. I just became a member a few weeks before the painting challenge and really didn't know much about the group. I was just attracted to the group because it involved calligraphy and traditional papers and thought I could learn something. Wow, have I learned!

The group members are around 450, not all of course are active, but there were probably 20 or so participating in the November painting challenge and another 20-30 regularly viewing the submissions. People made comments about the type of paper, brush and ink they were using, and since most of the paper was knew to me, I was able to get an idea how different papers worked with different mediums. Well, Xuan/Shuan paper whether single or double I'm still clueless about, as I am about a lot, but the learning curve has been very healthy and I love the group. A very supportive and positive group of people!

So here is my final submission for the painting challenge November 2017.

Peacocks in Spring
M Graham and Marie's watercolors (the Marie's were too pastel when dry so started using M Graham. This particular shikishi board can take the different binders of M Graham without bleeding; other shikishi isn't so forgiving.) Chinese ink for accent and to make the colors pop.

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Monkeying Around

Day 29 of the November Asian art daily painting challenge. One day left. Because the time is winding down and I've really wanted to challenge myself this month by first (1) starting to do art, (2) learning and practicing skills to make beautiful paintings (beautiful in my eyes is ok), and (3) drawing and painting different things than what I've attempted in the past. Well, I haven't draw a lot  in the past but what I'm saying is trying to do things that I haven't thought of drawing before (like the monkeys tonight) or drawing things that I don't particularly like (example, drawing still life (*&^#$@!) which I find boring but I did a still life piece two days ago, "Tea Time"). A friend just asked me to draw her little dog with a plum blossom and a tea set, all symbols that are a part of her life. I really don't like dogs and probably have never thought of drawing one, but you know, it's for a friend and she has an intriguing composition in mind ... so why not?! It'll be my first dog probably, so another first! This month there's been a lot of firsts! I have thoroughly enjoyed this painting challenge!

For these monkeys I drew two monkeys by looking at different reference pictures. The third and smallest monkey I drew without any reference. I just had to get the shape ok and since it's further in the background I didn't have to draw in a lot of detail. The shading could be better in several spots of the composition and I'm seeing a couple other areas that could be fixed up before posting this, but it's very very late and I need to crash. 

Monkeying Around
Marie's watercolor and Chinese ink with touches of Micron .005 around the face, hands and feet. Shikishi.

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Dragonfly postcard

Day 28 of the November painting challenge, Asian art. For tonight a simple dragonfly ... with rather wonky-wings ... in the haiga art form. Haiga are Japanese paintings with a haiku-like text written on. I used a picture reference, but couldn't a short but very uplifting quote so just wrote my own sentiment.

Embrace the Moment (haiga)
Marie's watercolors on watercolor postcard 

Monday, November 27, 2017

Tea time (etegami)

Day 27 of the Asian art painting challenge. In a major hurry to get so many other things done that I don't have much time to paint, but this etegami (simple Japanese postcard) is from my weekend tea drinking experience with a monk at Jikwansa Temple. The tea ceremony was quite beautiful!

Tea Time
Etegami -- Maries watercolors on watercolor paper postcard size

Sunday, November 26, 2017

Autumn Song

Day 26 of the painting challenge. Marie's watercolor and Chinese ink on shikishi. Used a picture reference for this to get the colors right. 

Autumn Song
Marie's watercolor and Chinese ink on shikishi
picture reference

Saturday, November 25, 2017

Whimsical Etegami Notes

Day 25 of the Asian art painting challenge. It's getting harder and harder to snag some time to paint every day, so tonight just did some simple etegami cards. Have been so sleep starved, but these still took me well over an hour, mostly because I had to let layers dry before adding more paint. If I weren't in such a hurry, they could have turned out really cute. Ah well. Tired. 




And then a shot of them together. One of the people on OASlife where the daily painting challenge is being held described these as "whimsical". Yes, perfectly descriptive of them!

All 3 etegami done with Marie's watercolors and Chinese ink on watercolor postcards.


Friday, November 24, 2017

Thinking Eagle Thoughts

Day 24 of the Asian painting challenge being hosted on OASlife on Facebook. Tonight I painted an Asian-style eagle. My mom's comment was "Except for the head, it looks pretty good" and many people commented on the aggression and anger of the eagle. Well, I did reference a picture although I changed it enough to kind of call it my own ... except the awesome blue-dotted bark of the pine tree. Whoever originally did that was masterful! And unfortunately, am unable to locate the picture. I had it as a download which was saved from a long time ago.

Thinking Eagle Thoughts
Marie's watercolor and Chinese ink on shikishi

Thursday, November 23, 2017

Panda Mama and Her Toddler

Day 23 of the November Asian art painting challenge. Several months ago I saw a picture of a mama panda joyfully tossing her cub in the air, and the cub seeing to whoop and holler like any human toddler. Susan Windsor was the artist and she really captured the spirit of fun, joy and love. So tonight I tried to emulate her painting, but wanted to frame the pandas in a thick forest. Hmm, I do like the contrast but the overall picture is a tad bit messy.

Panda mama and her toddler
Marie's watercolor on shikishi with small touches of Micron 02 archival ink on the mouth, eyes, and claws.
Art credits to Susan Windsor



Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Chinese Calligraphy Horses

Day 22 practiced drawing horses in Chinese ink. I love the power of running horses and after studying the strokes and watching a YouTube video by a Chinese-style horse painting master who was adept at capturing the essence of a horse running, thought I'd give it a try. First attempt a whole picture, but as a kid I was entranced by horses so drew them a fair bit ... straight knee-less legs and always side views, but they were horses. This month of accepting this painting challenge to create some Asian art form every day has really helped me improve. A lot of Asian paintings rely on the fluid simplicity of the line to capture the essence of the object. While it's not my first choice in art form, it's actually important to establish those simple lines before putting in the detail like in Western paintings. This month has been amazing for challenging new art styles and finally getting a brush to paper to begin learning to paint. It's been exciting!

So here's one of my first goes at Chinese inked horses. I used newspaper because why waste good quality paper for first learning techniques?

Racing Horses
Chinese ink on newspaper

Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Golden Koi

Day 21 of the November painting challenge, and my Asian-style contribution for tonight is Golden Koi. First I painted the shikishi board with three colors of blue (Marie's watercolors) and let that dry overnight. Then today I sketched out the koi and water and painted it with Finetec metallic watercolor paints. But somehow when I got the metallics on the board with the blue background, there just wasn't enough contrast, so with SWC ShinHan professional watercolor peacock blue I outlined the koi and scattered blue water bubbles, and somehow that seemed to provide the necessary dimension and color contrast. 

Golden Koi
Finetec metallic watercolors on shikishi board; accents in SWC peacock blue
18cm x 21cm
Reference 1 and Reference 2

Monday, November 20, 2017

May All Your Weeds Be Wildflowers

November painting challenge continues - Day 20. Well, this painting just got weirder and weirder. I had dragonflies in mind and thought I'd paint a couple simple flowers, but next thing I knew, I was in zen mode painting a whole field of those things. Certainly not my intention, and it seems the dragonflies flew away. Ugh. If there weren't a daily painting contribution required or I had more time to paint another, I would toss this baby under the bed and fling it in the morning. Ah well. Win some and lose some. Love the saying though ... and that was another afterthought. I painted mishmash tonight. 

a field of wildflowers on shikishi

Sunday, November 19, 2017

Tiger Woodblock Printing

Back in June I made a woodblock carving for the annual Gopanwha Museum woodblock carving competition. Supposedly the competition, which has been held every November for the past seven years or so, was going to be held this year because of the upcoming Olympics here in S. Korea and the monk who owns and runs Gopanhwa was hoping to host special events this year in addition to the woodblock competition, so he had said the competition would be held some time in the summer. 

Well, so it was never held in the summer, probably because carving is certainly not a summer activity, and is much better suited to the colder wintry days. Well, that worked out well as I'm doing a daily painting challenge this November and would have had time only for one event -- either the carving or the painting. So I'm just inking the woodblock I carved before and counting it as my Asian painting contribution for today.

As for matter of inking, yikes! I'm terrible, but then I knew that last year too. There's hope on that account though. I was reading about Japanese woodblock artist Hokusai (c. 1760 - 1849, during the Edo period) and his probably his most famous piece, The Great Wave off Kanagawa, and (according to Wikipedia) artists like Hokusai designed pictures, woodblockists carved them, inkists inked them, and then publishers (who then by rights owned them) printed them and I guess had them distributed and arranged for sales. Ah ha! So Hokusai, though he was apprenticed and trained as an engraver, didn't have to ink his own pieces .... Ah yes! There is hope for me!

Practiced and practiced and practiced inking ... and then it still didn't turn out very good. Ah well. I tried.

So here is my inked woodblock print. I tried several times and this was the best, but actually it was quite light so spent an hour carefully touching up parts with a happy dot Chinese calligraphy brush. I know that's cheating but I'm not too fond of this woodblock picture and don't expect to win, not even honorable mention like last time. However, I did carve a woodblock and so will participate in the event, especially as I already told the monk my woodblock was done and I would join.

"Tiger and a Drink of Water"
Tiger woodblock print
13" x 21" woodblock; the scroll 13" x 43"

Saturday, November 18, 2017

Fish in Hokusai Waves

Thought a wave would be fairly straight-forward to paint ... but not Hokusai's waves, and certainly not more than one. That guy was an artistic genius, esp as he made his wave in woodblock form which took a LOT more energy to carve than it took me to do the detail work to watercolor.
Katsushika Hokusai (葛飾 北斎, c. October 31, 1760 – May 10, 1849) was a Japanese artist, ukiyo-e painter and printmaker of the Edo period. He was influenced by Sesshū Tōyō and other styles of Chinese painting. Born in Edo (now Tokyo), Hokusai is best known as author of the woodblock print series Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji (富嶽三十六景 Fugaku Sanjūroku-kei, c. 1831) which includes the internationally iconic print, The Great Wave off Kanagawa
Hokusai created the "Thirty-Six Views" both as a response to a domestic travel boom and as part of a personal obsession with Mount Fuji. It was this series, specifically The Great Wave print and Fine Wind, Clear Morning, that secured Hokusai’s fame both in Japan and overseas. As historian Richard Lane concludes, "Indeed, if there is one work that made Hokusai's name, both in Japan and abroad, it must be this monumental print-series". While Hokusai's work prior to this series is certainly important, it was not until this series that he gained broad recognition. (Wikipedia) 
Fish in Hokusai Wave
Watercolor palette limited to complimentary colors. Marie's watercolor on shikishi. 18cm x 21cm

Friday, November 17, 2017

Winter Mandarins

The November Asian art painting challenge continues. Today is Day 17, and the endurance month of painting is over half done. And for today, my contribution is a pair of mandarins in the coolness of winter.

Winter Mandarins
Marie's Chinese watercolors and Chinese ink on shikishi, 18cm x 21cm

Thursday, November 16, 2017

Birdsong (haiga)

Day 16 of the Oriental art painting challenge. This one is done on shikishi board and with Chinese ink and Marie's watercolor. And I cheated a bit, but then I'm not a traditionalist. Instead of using brush and ink for the lettering, I couldn't get the letters neat enough on the somewhat toothy shikishi so ended up just using a Pigma Brush pen. It's still not great, but it is tons better than I could have done it the traditional way.

Birdsong
Chinese ink, Marie's watercolors and Pigma Brush pen on shikishi.
Two comments to the post made by OASlife members were very intriguing. One person offered the origin of this saying -- from the poet Henry van Dyke (1852-1933):
"Use the talents you possess, for the woods would be a very silent place if not birds sang except the best."

One of the other members commented that this was Japanese haiga art. Oh? So I looked up haiga style on Wikipedia .... 

Haiga art-form
Haiga (俳画, haikai drawing) is a style of Japanese painting that incorporates the aesthetics of haikai. Haiga are typically painted by haiku poets (haijin), and often accompanied by a haiku poem. Like the poetic form it accompanied, haiga was based on simple, yet often profound, observations of the everyday world. Stephen Addiss points out that "since they are both created with the same brush and ink, adding an image to a haiku poem was ... a natural activity." 
Stylistically, haiga vary widely based on the preferences and training of the individual painter, but generally show influences of formal Kanō school painting, minimalist Zen painting, and Ōtsu-e, while sharing much of the aesthetic attitudes of the nanga tradition. Some were reproduced as woodblock prints. The subjects painted likewise vary widely, but are generally elements mentioned in the calligraphy, or poetic images which add meaning or depth to that expressed by the poem. The moon is a common subject in these poems and paintings, sometimes represented by the Zen circle ensō, which evokes a number of other meanings, including that of the void. Other subjects, ranging from Mount Fuji to rooftops, are frequently represented with a minimum of brushstrokes, thus evoking elegance and beauty in simplicity.

And then a note at the bottom of the Wikipedia entry stated to see also wabi-sabi ...

In traditional Japanese aesthetics, wabi-sabi () is a world view centered on the acceptance of transience and imperfection. The aesthetic is sometimes described as one of beauty that is "imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete". It is a concept derived from the Buddhist teaching of the three marks of existence (三法印 sanbōin), specifically impermanence (無常 mujō), suffering (苦 ku) and emptiness or absence of self-nature (空 kū). 
Characteristics of the wabi-sabi aesthetic include asymmetry, roughness, simplicity, economy, austerity, modesty, intimacy, and appreciation of the ingenuous integrity of natural objects and processes. 
According to Leonard Koren, wabi-sabi can be defined as "the most conspicuous and characteristic feature of traditional Japanese beauty and it occupies roughly the same position in the Japanese pantheon of aesthetic values as do the Greek ideals of beauty and perfection in the West." Whereas Andrew Juniper notes that "[i]f an object or expression can bring about, within us, a sense of serene melancholy and a spiritual longing, then that object could be said to be wabi-sabi." For Richard Powell, "[w]abi-sabi nurtures all that is authentic by acknowledging three simple realities: nothing lasts, nothing is finished, and nothing is perfect." 
The words wabi and sabi do not translate easily. Wabi originally referred to the loneliness of living in nature, remote from society; sabi meant "chill", "lean" or "withered". Around the 14th century these meanings began to change, taking on more positive connotations. Wabi now connotes rustic simplicity, freshness or quietness, and can be applied to both natural and human-made objects, or understated elegance. It can also refer to quirks and anomalies arising from the process of construction, which add uniqueness and elegance to the object. Sabi is beauty or serenity that comes with age, when the life of the object and its impermanence are evidenced in its patina and wear, or in any visible repairs. 
After centuries of incorporating artistic and Buddhist influences from China, wabi-sabi eventually evolved into a distinctly Japanese ideal. Over time, the meanings of wabi and sabi shifted to become more lighthearted and hopeful. Around 700 years ago, particularly among the Japanese nobility, understanding emptiness and imperfection was honored as tantamount to the first step to satori, or enlightenment. In today's Japan, the meaning of wabi-sabi is often condensed to "wisdom in natural simplicity." In art books, it is typically defined as "flawed beauty."

Wabi-sabi in Japanese Arts

Many Japanese arts over the past thousand years have been influenced by Zen and Mahayana philosophy, particularly acceptance and contemplation of the imperfection, constant flux and impermanence of all things. Such arts can exemplify a wabi-sabi aesthetic. Examples include:
Honkyoku (traditional shakuhachi music of wandering Zen monks)
Ikebana (flower arrangement)
Bonsai design features such as snags, deadwood and hollow trunks highlight passage of time and natural cycles. Bonsai are often displayed in fall color or after they have shed leaves seasonally, to admire their bare branches.
Japanese gardens, Zen gardens (tray gardens)
Japanese poetry Japanese pottery, Hagi ware, Raku ware Japanese tea ceremony

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

The Early Bird Gets the Worm (etegami)

Today marks the halfway point of the Asian art painting challenge for November. Tonight I'm in a big hurry so just painted an etegami, a fun and quirky Japanese-style postcard that has become very popular in Japan and floods the postal system. Etegami is basically a simple piece of art with perhaps an very obvious, quirky or fun saying. The background and art is very simple, but then that is the whole idea. The concept of etegami was to just draw, paint and have fun and anyone can do all of those things. Prior to etegami, people felt they had to be artists to draw or paint. Now with etegami, everybody becomes the artist ... and everyone has fun.

Here's my first etegami! And I had fun painting it!

The Early Bird Gets the Worm (etegami)
Sepia and Chinese inks with touches of Marie's watercolors

Etegami has become so popular that even etegami paper was designed for its specific use! That's just how popular it has become!


An Introduction to the Art of Etegami

In recent years, the popular Japanese art form known as etegami (= image; tegami = letter) has captured the interest and imagination of artists all over the world. The simplest English definition of etegami may well be “Japanese postcard art.” But that phrase hardly does justice to the “the way” of etegami, and I’m happy to have this opportunity to give a fuller account of an art form I’ve been trying to promote through my blog to art lovers outside of Japan for almost twenty years.

Teapot by dosankodebbie

“New Year’s Cards in Their Everyday Clothes”

In 1873, when the Japan Postal Service first began to print standardized postcards, the traditional exchange of New Year greetings by letter (which dates back to AD 700s) suddenly became more affordable and popular than ever before. The set phrases used in traditional New Year’s greetings were ink-brushed onto the cards with a fine hand, often accompanied by an auspicious image such as Mt Fuji, red-crowned cranes, sea turtles, or the oriental zodiac animal of the new year.

Sheep by Alison Labonte (USA). Hanging Persimmons by Tatsuaki Maekawa (Japan)
The art form we now mean when we use the word “etegami” was conceived in the 1960s, when burgeoning calligrapher Kunio Koike became exasperated with the rigid traditions of his chosen field. He felt that the endless imitation of the masters was an exercise that diminished him. He longed for an art that did not require particular talent, years of training, or masters to demonstrate the “correct” form. He envisioned an art form that could be spontaneous, honest, and personal without being self-obsessed.

Koike began combining simple images with brief but thoughtfully chosen words on washi postcards, using tools and materials that had long been used in Japan’s traditional arts and were already familiar to him. He sent these postcards to a good friend with whom he explored the possibilities of his idea. He called this idea “New Year’s cards in their everyday clothes,” and created the slogan: Heta de ii. Heta ga ii, which can be translated “It’s okay to be awkward. Awkwardness has charm.” This wonderful slogan encouraged people who wanted to make art but had always felt they lacked the talent to do so.

Goldfish by Dan Jones (UK). Flowers by Yun Stouls (France)
The passion for etegami soon spread throughout Japan, and people began exchanging this form of postcard art through every season, rather than just at New Years. In 1996, Koike founded the Japan Etegami Society, which publishes a monthly magazine. Through the magazine, the Society sends out calls for etegami on specific subjects throughout the year, often displaying submitted works at the Society’s own etegami exhibition halls for public viewing.

tea ceremony by dosankodebbie
Tools and Method

The standard tools and materials used in etegami include (1) a line-drawing brush (2) a coloring brush (3) liquid sumi ink (4) blocks of water-soluble, mineral-based gansai paints (5) a selection of washi postcards (called gasenshi) with varying degrees of bleed.

One distinctive characteristic of this art form is a desire to avoid total control of the process and the results. The lifted position of the elbow, the way the brush is loosely dangled perpendicular to the writing surface, and the extremely slow progress of the ink brush across the paper are some of the ways we strive to create “living lines,” the wobbly, often blotchy outlines of our subject.

Once the sumi outline is done, color is applied with the coloring brush, which requires no special handhold. Ideally, one “taps” rather than “strokes” the color onto the card, letting the color spread through the natural bleed (nijimi) quality of the washi card. The higher the bleed-rating of the card, the less control one has over the spread of the color, and this, too, adds character to the finished work.

Sparrows by dosankodebbie
Blank, unpainted space is important in etegami. We try to leave uncolored areas within the borders of the image, and the most orthodox etegami always have blank backgrounds.

We choose the subjects of our etegami from our daily lives, preferably items that reflect the season, such as fruits, vegetables, and seasonal flowers. Most often they are single subjects rather than items bunched together in some kind of staged still-life setting.

Ideally, the subject of an etegami is something that can be placed in front of us–something we can observe closely and touch. Painting from a photograph is discouraged, as is painting from the imagination. But– as I’ll explain later– once you’ve got the hang of orthodox etegami methods, it can be wonderful to depart from them and experiment with uncommon materials. An image accompanied by words, in a form that can be easily mailed to someone else– this is the basic requirement for etegami.

Eggplant by Shungo Asada (Japan). Asparagus by Mayumi Miyagawa (Japan). Peaches by Hideko Sonomura (Japan)
The Accompanying Words

Koike encourages us to use fewer rather than many words, and to avoid repeating information that the image already contains, so we would never accompany an image of an apple with the words “this is an apple,” unless it was meant humorously. Whether he chooses to use a writing brush and sumi ink, or a crayon, or a ball-point pen, the etegami artist aims at easy-to-read block letters rather than fancy calligraphy or elegantly cursive penmanship.

The finishing touch to an etegami is the placement of the hanko (chop), which serves as a signature. There is no “correct” place to press the hanko, so it can be anywhere the artist wants it to be. We generally do not use the fancy, stone-carved chops used by calligraphers and sumi-e artists. We typically make our own chops by carving the first kana syllable of our given name into rubber erasers, although there are endless variations.

Pumpkin by dosankodebbie
Completing the Circle

“Catchers” are what Koike calls the people who are at the receiving end of our etegami. The sender is the “pitcher.” Catchers are a vital part of the etegami experience. We should be thinking of the intended recipient when we chose the subject and the accompanying words. Catchers help channel our focus outward, toward others, which keeps our etegami from turning into an exercise in self-absorption.

Every etegami we create should be posted to someone, even if we want to rip it up and toss it into the trash. We may be tempted to look at our work and think: “Does this piece reflect well on me?” or “Will the receiver admire me for this?” There is something very un-etegami in this way of thinking. Etegami is not about making ourselves appear skilled. Etegami is about enjoying the process, and about wanting to amuse, comfort, or maybe stimulate the mind of the receiver.

There are no master’s models in true etegami. Nor is there any place in etegami for drafts or underdrawings. Each etegami is a one-shot deal. Koike calls this a “shinken shoubu,” a phrase that means battling in earnest with real swords, as opposed to the wooden sticks and protective gear that are used in sword-fighting practice.

Swan by dosankodebbie
Further Adventures in Methods and Materials

Finally, there is plenty of room in this art form for departing from orthodox methods and materials, once one has grasped the heart of etegami. Thickened coffee can substitute for sumi ink; crayons instead of gansai paints. Pieces of an old bath towel wrapped around the tip of a chopstick can substitute for a brush; corrugated cardboard for washi postcards. Go ahead and paint from your imagination or a photograph, if you want to use a spaceship as your subject, and there are none handy in your neighborhood.

I have included photos of etegami painted by people from several different countries, including some of my own, using both orthodox and unorthodox methods and materials. Learn more about etegami from “The Beginner’s Guide to Etegami” a small but thorough book that is available from Amazon.com or my Etsy shop. The listing on my Etsy shop also provides a link to a downloadable, digital version of the book.

To learn more about Dosanko Debbie visit her blog.

Tuesday, November 14, 2017

Cranes Frog-fishing

Day 14 of the Oriental painting challenge for the month of November. The cranes frog-fishing turned out a bit surreal with all that carmine-ish background, but shikishi board doesn't allow gradations (at least I haven't figured out how to do it neatly yet) so I just painted the water carmine too. And then it was too much pink so added the mauve clouds to tone the colors a bit, and they turned out surprisingly ok. 

Mixed media painting

Cranes Frog-fishing
Mixed media: Marie's Chinese watercolors, Chinese ink and FineTec metalic gold paints
Japanese shikishi, 18cm x 21cm
Referenced Large Asian Red-capped Crane Stencil

Monday, November 13, 2017

Cats of a Different Color

Day 13 of the month-long painting challenge, and I'm seriously tired. Not tired of painting, but am trying to juggle a professional job while also doing quality pictures. Well, tonight is a cop-out. I just painted some sketchy cats and gave them a colorful title. Tonight I made sure to use traditional Asian-style paper since the group where I'm posting only uses that kind of paper and not my preferred watercolor stock. Not a keener for the rough-toothed traditional hanji, but it's etiquette to follow the guidelines of the group one participates in, and the proactive viewpoint is it gives me experience with another medium and develops other artistic expressions and strategies.

Cats of a Different Color
Marie's watercolors on hanji, Korean handmade mulberry paper

Sunday, November 12, 2017

Hungry Panda - watercolor

Day 12 of the Oriental art daily painting challenge. It's Sunday and I was so busy skurrying here and running there, so when I finally got home, I was exhausted ... but the daily painting submission still had to be painted. Pretty exhausting cornering time every day for a month, and today I wasn't in the mood for art, but a challenge is a challenge. Once I sat down to a hot pot of tea and started sketching, the calming Zen mood of night painting kicked in. And in outcome, I have a piece that I quite like. After taking a picture of the painting and seeing it on my iPad, I was able to better visualize places I need to fix or improve on. Note to self: take a pict and then fix "weak" areas before putting the paints away. Live and learn!

Oh, and this painting totally fits the Oriental Art Supply group I'm painting for -- all materials as well as theme is on the line of Oriental painting. Until now I've been mostly painting on various kinds of watercolor paper, but the Hungry Panda is done on shikishi (a Japanese rice paper mounted on a stylish board) with Marie's Chinese watercolors and Chinese ink and painted with a bamboo brush = all paints, inks, papers and brushes were Asian. The OASlife group will be happy to see me finally migrate over to their style of painting :)

Hungry Panda
Marie's watercolors and Chinese ink on shikishi, and painted with a bamboo brush
18cm x 21cm
Somewhat referenced Roger Bonnick's watercolor panda

Saturday, November 11, 2017

Chickadees on Rice Paper Fan

Day 11, November 11 aka Peppero Day - names because peppero sticks are long and, according to creative Korean thinking, resemble the 11.11 of today's month and date.

Anyway, the Oriental Art Supply November painting challenge continues. Tonight I tried using a totally new medium: iridescent paints my mom gave me a year ago. (Shame on me for not opening them and using them before.) Had fun playing around with them, but they don't create contrast so used M Graham watercolor paints for the bird, stems and most obvious green leaves. Also touched up the edges of the stems and the birds with a Chinese Xeno calligraphy brush pen, small. Had to use it last as it's not waterproof. Those tiny black accents really sharpened the sparrows, but still, something's lacking...


Wasn't liking how the first fan was turning out so tried painting another. Well, while I like the sparrows on one fan much better (got the eye right, what do you know?!), I like the flowers of the other one better, less messy. Like I said, more practice needed, but these things have great potential!


Mixed media: Chinese rice paper fan with iridescent and M Graham watercolor paints
along with touches of Chinese Xeno calligraphy brush pen, small. 

Friday, November 10, 2017

Green-winged Teals - watercolor

Day 10 of the Oriental Art Supply November Oriental art painting challenge. My contribution today is a pair of green-winged teals. A pair of ducks, cranes, fish are feng shui symbols for marital bliss. How appropriate to include them in the Oriental painting challenge.

Green-winged teals
Conjugal pair symbolizing feng shui marital bliss
M Graham watercolors on Strathmore 400 Series watercolor paper, 5.5" x 8.5"
Source - China Online Museum

Thursday, November 9, 2017

Under the Cherry Blossoms - watercolor

Under the Cherry Blossoms

Day 9 of the Oriental Art Supply November Oriental art painting challenge. So far, nine days of painting in a row. The goal, a month of paintings.

Under the Cherry Blossoms
Bamboo brush and Chinese ink, Strathmore 400 Series Watercolor Paper
5.5" x 8.5" / 14cm x 21.6cm
source

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

Eagle in Sepia

Day 8 of the Oriental Art Supply November painting challenge. Tonight I tried two new artforms: painting in sepia ink, and an art board I found in the Chinese, Japanese, Korean traditional watercolor section of an art store. Shikishi board! Apparently the board is supposed to be used with the thicker Asian traditional watercolors, but not mixing them with much water. 

I like the concept of having a board semi-framed and therefore complete to hang once done, but I'll have to learn how to master using this board with watercolor. Because the paper covering the board is rice paper, it dampens easily, which changes the color, so I had a hard time knowing how much paint to add to the water. At first it seemed like I didn't have color in my light paint mixture. Then I started adding more ... and well, overworked the color. Anyway, it's a nice beginning. BTW, the color tinting was done with M Graham watercolors, earth tones. 

Eagle in sepia
18cm x 21cm on shikishi, a Japanese art board
Image was from Wang Xi Guo's pyrography of an eagle

Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Young Tigers

Day 7 of the Oriental Art Supply November Asian-art painting challenge. This one is done in India ink with tinting from M Graham watercolors. Daler Rowney Aquafine cold-pressed NOT watercolor paper, 300 gm, 10" x 10".

Young Tigers
India ink with M Graham watercolor tinting; Daler Rowney Aquafine cold-pressed NOT watercolor paper, 10" x 10"
reference

Monday, November 6, 2017

Daisies

Day 6 contribution to the Oriental Art Supply November daily painting challenge of something Asian/Oriental. Well, this started out with good intentions of being Asian, but somehow in the process the colors got brighter than intended and the picture got altered. Painted on Strathmore Series 400 sheets, apparently rough. I've quickly discovered that I can't achieve the fine detail and color saturation with rough watercolor paper. Hot pressed paper is definitely for me!

Anyway, am chalking this pict up to one of the stepping stones to being a better painter. I wouldn't even post it if it weren't part of the 30-day painting challenge. Ah well. Learning.

Daisies
M Graham watercolors on Strathmore 400 Series watercolor paper, apparently rough

Sunday, November 5, 2017

Plein Air Painting at Sochi House

Today is the fifth day in the OAS (Oriental Art Supply) November painting challenge. Since I was traveling this weekend (did templestay at Ssanggye-sa Temple, Jindo Island, Jeollanamdo, South Korea, and because the temple is right beside Sochi House, the traditional home of the famous aristocratic painter, Sochi, penname for Ryun Hur (1808-1893), I did a bit of plein air painting at the traditional house. Actually I started but had to finish at home because before I could finish our templestay group had to hike up the trail to the temple where we were staying.) 

Sochi House
Jindo Island, Jeollanamdo, S Korea. 

Sochi, pen name for Ryun Hur (1808-1893), was a traditional painter and calligrapher with many disciples. Despite his father's wishes, he became a painter (an unstable job that didn't bring in steady income), but though he wasn't loaded with money, he was satisfied with his choice to exercise his creativity. He was a passionate artist, and he became the founding father of 5 generations of artists, with the fifth alive today. He and his artists descendants strongly influenced Korean painting; they seemed to have contributed to a more realistic approach to painting nature. Their pictures show development in depth and tone. Shading and brush stroke were changed to add to the more realistic style. 

Kaleidoscopic Altoid plein air palette --- M Graham paints are too messy for plein air! So are Sennelier too I hear.
Sochi House, home of Korean traditional painter, Ryun Hur (1808-1893)
The pond just in front of Sochi House, Jindo, South Korea

Micron pens and Altoid box plein air painting with M Graham on Fabriano watercolor postcard. (FYI, M Graham and Sennelier are honey consistency paints that are perfectly lousy for plein air painting .... but absolutely smooth and creamy for studio on site painting! My Altoid box is now a kaleidoscopic mess!)

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Painting a One-stroke Kitty Cat

Well, not exactly one stroke, but still following the economy-of-movement Asian-style painting method: maximize the impression with the least possible lifting of the brush. I guess some could even say this one-stroke method is the Asian form of impressionism. Maybe.

So this is my contribution for Day 4 of the Oriental Art Supply (OAS) November painting challenge for 2017. I'm seeing myself improve already! I love the idea of posting something, even if it's something very simple, every day. It really does make force one's creative juices to flow.


Best attempt. Still not satisfied with either of the paws but the impression is clear enough ...
and I'll improve as the month progresses!

Friday, November 3, 2017

Chinese Watercolors - An Economy of Strokes

Day 3 or the Oriental Art Supply (OAS) daily Asian-style painting challenge. And here is my first attempt at the economy of strokes employed by Chinese and Asian watercolorists. Hmm, it takes some thought before the brush is laid down to the paper. Also it takes careful mixing of color and tone. Too dark or too much (or little) water on the brush, the balance is off. Great practice for watercolorists!

practice .......... practice ......... practice

This one was my best but I'd already muddled up the paper so didn't post this one for the OAS Challenge.


Not too bad either. Actually it looks better dry than while I was painting. There is hope for me!
My Korean calligraphy practice paper was too thin to use with watercolors, so tried Strathmore rough watercolor paper but it was too textured and wasn't good for the one-stroke Asian painting style. Ended up using plain copy paper.