Showing posts with label art books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art books. Show all posts

Friday, September 7, 2018

Setting Up For Robert Johnson's Painting Workshop At The Art Guild Of Port Washington

In July, The Art Guild of Port Washington was lucky enough to host Robert Johnson for a very rare New York area workshop.  I have a ton of photos from the workshop itself, but I thought you might like to see how we set up for a still life workshop.

I've been to several workshops where there are no set ups and the students are left to fend for themselves, often with lackluster props.  Also, there can be people in a workshop who are new to still life and may not know how to do a proper set up.   And don't get me started on sharing a set up in an expensive workshop.

When we do still life at The Art Guild, everyone has their own set up, already set up the day before the class starts.

We have a lot of props there as two of us are still life artists and there are also a lot of "community" props, things that people have donated and are for everyone to use.

Luckily, my studio mate is a very talented floral designer as well as a painter, so she is able to buy flowers at a distributor for the classes, and she makes the most amazing floral arrangements.




The first thing I do is get my own supplies together and pack them in my paint box.  It is one less thing to worry about in the midst of everything else that is going on.




Next up is purchasing supplies.  For a still life/floral workshop, we gather a few buckets full of flowers, and a variety of fruit ( lemons, red and green grapes, oranges, apples, etc).




We then get all the props in one place.  Fabrics, vases, small objects, crystal pieces and presentation boards to hold up the fabrics and create a background.




And then it begins.  We spend a LOT of time with the set ups.  It's quite rare that we just pull some objects and fruit and create a set up.  They go through lots of changes.  Fruit, objects and flowers go in and out until the still life is just right.  This can take some time and people often look at us like we are nuts, but what is the point in doing a workshop with all of these beautiful things if you are not going to make it the best it can be, right?

































These are some of the set ups that we ended up with.  You may be wondering what the little post it notes on some of the shelves are for.  When using fruit in a still life, I like to include one or two pieces of cut fruit, but I don't want to do that until the morning of the workshop, so we put a mini post it in the spot we want to use for the fruit slice as a reminder.  This way it's easy to just come in and cut the fruit and not have to think about where it belongs.




Two other things I should mention.  Lighting is very important.  In a workshop, there is rarely natural light for everyone, so we use spotlights with daylight bulbs.  We just hook them up at either side of the still life to create shadows and they work very well.  The other is how we actually make the set up.  We use milk crates to create height and then lay wooden shelves on top of them.  If you go to Home Depot, you can just tell them the size you want and they will cut them up right there.  We then stained them with Minwax Dark Walnut.  We clip the fabric to the presentation boards and then you are ready to start styling.

When people see me doing set ups, they will often ask how I know when it's right.  I wish I had an answer to that question, but unfortunately, I don't.  I do follow two basic rules.  The still life should be a triangle and should read from left to right.  But the rest is just having an eye for when it is right.  I take my time with the set ups and if there has to be a ten minute discussion of whether there should be one grape or two on the right side of the still life, that is what happens.  I guess what I'm trying to say is, don't rush in order to get it done quickly and if something doesn't look quite right, change it.  No need to have anything that drags down the set up.

It is also really helpful to consult books on the type of set ups you want to do.  We had Robert Johnson's book open while we were doing these to make sure they were along the line of what he would want to paint.






In addition to Robert's book,  David Leffel and Sherrie McGraw's books are a great source of inspiration for this type of still life set up, as well as any book on Chardin or the Dutch Masters.  I look at them all the time and they are so helpful.

The students were so happy with the set ups and thanked us for making them available, which was so nice.  I want people at a workshop to be happy and if they are paying for the class, they deserve the best you can give. ( Can you tell I recently had a crappy workshop??? :)

I always love a behind the scenes look, so I hope you enjoyed this one.  I'll have a separate post about the workshop itself.  It was amazing.  If you have any questions about setting up a still life or a workshop, leave me a comment.  I'm happy to try and help!

** I just want to make clear as per the rules that I was not comped in any way for anything in this post.  I paid for the workshop and helped out as a volunteer. The props and supplies that were used were purchased by us or were things we already owned.**

Tuesday, November 14, 2017

Michelangelo: Divine Draftsman and Designer at the Metropolitan Museum Of Art

This past Sunday I spent the afternoon at the preview for the huge Michelangelo exhibition at The Metropolitan Museum Of Art.  I'm a MetMember, so I was able to see the exhibit before it opened yesterday.  I'm so glad that the museum had this benefit available as it was packed with people even with the restricted admission.  The show opened to the public yesterday and I have to say it is one of the most incredible exhibitions I have ever seen.  

The exhibit runs from November 13, 2017 through February 12, 2018.  Included are:  133 of his drawings, three of his marble sculptures, his earliest painting, and his wood architectural model for a chapel vault.  There are also complimentary works by his teachers, associates, pupils and artists who worked in collaboration with him.  


Michelangelo, Studies for the Virgin and Child with Saint Anne, Studies of a Standing Male Nude, and Head in Profile


Michelangelo, Young Archer (unfinished)




Michelangelo, Sketches of the Virgin, the Christ Child Reclining on a Cushion, and Other Infants


Piero D'Argenta, Virgin and Child with the Infant Saint John


Michelangelo, Study of a Standing Male Nude Seen from the Back


Michelangelo, Study of a Standing Male Nude Seen from the Back

Bastion (Aristotile) Da Sangallo, Record Drawing of the Elevation of the Tomb of Julius II, after Michaelangelo

Michelangelo, Designs for a Monumental Altar or Facade

Drawing for the Design of the Coffering on the Vault of Sacristy of San Lorenzo



Michelangelo, Sketch for Cleopatra


Finished Sketch of Cleopatra


Michelangelo, Young Man in Bust Length in Exotic Costume

Michelangelo, Portrait of Andrea Quaratesi

Michelangelo, Unfinished Cartoon of the Virgin and Child

Sebastiano Del Piombo, Study for God the Father


Recreation of the Sistine Chapel Ceiling

Michelangelo, Composition Sketches and Studies for Frescoes on the Sistine Ceiling

Andrea Di Pietro Di Marco Ferrucci, Bust of Julius Caesar



Michelangelo, Model of the Vault of the Chapel of the King of France


Closing Time


These photos are just a small amount of the exhibit.  If you are local or planning a trip to NYC, I urge you to visit this exhibition.  I don't know that all of these drawings will ever be together in one place again.  If an in person visit is not in the cards, you can order the catalog here.   The book is very well done.  I can't wait to get mine ( I ordered one. It is way too big to schlep on the subway.) so I can start copying the drawings of the master.  I've recently gotten back into drawing, so this came at just the right time for me to keep the momentum going.  You can also following along on social media using the hashtag #MetMichelangelo.

I hope you enjoyed seeing some of this amazing exhibit.  Have you been yet? Planning a trip around it? Ordering the catalog?  Leave me a note in the comments.  I'd love to start a discussion!

Tuesday, August 8, 2017

Organizing Art Books

I recently posted on Instagram that it was time to get my art books in order, and judging by the responses I received, it seems there are many of us who have a large collection of books and not enough space.



These are my bookshelves in their original messy state.  They weren't too bad, and then this winter during one of our snow storms, I was looking around Amazon and suddenly there were a bunch of Dutch still life books available.  Of course I was all over that and bought them all.  A week or so later, I was wandering around the Strand and happened upon another bunch of Dutch still life books.  Again, I bought them all.  I'd been looking for these books for months and suddenly a bunch cropped up.  What could I do, right?

Once they all arrived, they did not fit on the shelves so I just started shoving them in everywhere.  It was messy to begin with and now things were really out of control.  Aside from that, I could not find anything.  When I saw a book on Amazon I was interested in and could not remember if I already owned it, it was time to take action.

I started by taking everything out of the shelves and throughly cleaning them (what I really mean is my hubs did that part).  There were books everywhere, but I wanted them all out for two reasons.  One, I wanted to go through them and get rid of what I was not using and two, I wanted to group them into categories.

I have a bit of a bookshelf obsession fueled by decor blogs and Pinterest, but arranging the books by color or mixing in decorative items is not practical for me.  I don't have a bit of extra room, and I need to be able to find specific books when I need them.

We piled the books all over, then I began the task of separating them into categories.



I kept all of the art books, but ended up getting rid of three shopping bags of cook books that I was not using.  That made some extra room which really helped.



I ended up with a few categories.  One shelf of technical/instruction books, one shelf of Old and New Masters, two and a half shelves of Impressionist art and one shelf of American artists and a mix of biographies and historical fiction.







One of the first art books I ever bought.  I still look at it today.


And here are the finished shelves...




This reorganization not only looks so much better, but now I can find everything I need right away.  For instance, two weeks ago I was going bonkers over my sunflowers and really needing inspiration, so of course I wanted to look through my Van Gogh books.  I knew right where they were and could pull them out immediately instead of rummaging all over the place.

Of course, I've recently acquired another pile of books, but as many Instagram commenters told me, there is no such thing as too many art books, and I completely agree!