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Working on new art book
happy 2021
Happy 2021!
“The value of things is not the time they last, but the intensity with which they occur. That is why there are unforgettable moments and unique people!”
― Fernando Pessoa
Wishing all my followers a Happy New Year, full of hope and in company of good people!
Tamara
Sketch for ostia antica painting
Sketch for Ostia Antica painting, done in quick lines, using some ballpoint pens, pencil, highlighters and colored pencils.
Always, as soon as I get the idea about the new canvas I want to paint, I make a quick sketch. The purpose of sketching at this point isn’t making a correct documentary drawing any more. For the proportions, materials, light, atmosphere, color scheme, basically all I have to know, has already been investigated and has become clear by now. No secret I sometimes need a plenty of time to arrive to that exact point of the painting process. Yet I always make this final quick sketch just before I start my work on the canvas, just to have some reference points for the further work. As a matter of fact at this stage I always have the entire painting in my mind, together with the whole color scheme. And from here on even picking the oil color tubes works as part of the painting process, the chosen colors go to the palette immediately. So from that point of view I even wouldn’t need a sketch. But as the unpredictable event may interrupt my working process, like a single phone call, so I need to have a sketch. Not to remember what the painting should look like, but just as a sort of a ticket back to my painting planet…..
blue portrait
Blue portrait, oil on canvas, 2020
Blue night outside
Blue night outside, pink flowers on my window, Oil on canvas, 2020
Contemporary still life tangram paradox and flowers
Contemporary still life Tangram paradox and flowers
It’s been already November, as I’ve brought a small bouquet of late fall flowers, some pink baby roses, from the garden to my studio. I’ve put the flowers in a white vase on the table. Just to make me happy. I’ve been working hard on my Ostia Antica landscape painting series. Yet there, on the table, just near the pink bouquet, has been also an old wooden tangram puzzle in bold colors, who knows by which coincidence. Sublime petals of late autumn flowers have been in shades of pink, in a way belonging more to the past summers than to that November day. Yet they have strangely corresponded to the strong vivid colors of the geometric shapes of the puzzle near by. It ‘s been like watching at two worlds at once, like at impressionism and cubism, if you want. Or poetry and math. Or dreams and reality. And, paradoxically, it’s worked together perfectly well.
Tangram paradox
Tangram paradox: A dissection fallacy discovered by Dudeney (1958). The same set of tangram pieces can apparently produce two different figures, one of which is a proper subset of the other. This seems true only at a first glance: in reality the area is the same in both cases, since in the left picture the missing foot is compensated by a larger body. from:
Barile, Margherita. “Tangram Paradox.” From MathWorld–A Wolfram Web Resource, created by Eric W. Weisstein. https://mathworld.wolfram.com/TangramParadox.html
contemporary painting: a mandarin orange
Contemporary painting: a mandarin orange still life made in times of isolation
Setting a still life to paint is sometimes really easy, sometimes not so much. Usually I know what I would love to catch, so to say. Meaning that I see a painting in a way, even before the objects are set on the table in my studio. Obviously sometimes it becomes quite difficult to arrange the objects after the first idea of mine. Yet I always do set the still life composition in my studio, I always need some references according to the light and tonalities to work from.
As this time I was working on the Coleus still life, there was a mandarin orange left near the old white jug on my table. The very moment the certain morning light illuminated the small composition near the scene I was actually working on, I knew I need to paint it.
I often think about the cultural connotations of the paintings, wondering how much of information gets lost in a translation. I believe that quite a lot. There is no doubt the painting can resonate with the observer only when it is at least decent, when perfect even better. Here I am talking about the technical part. Even more the same about artist’s power to impress, communicate certain feelings, atmosphere. But then there are certain meta data, that I am afraid that can not be the part of the perception. Take for example the white creamer jug from the picture. It is an old creamer as were used about a hundred years age. Made of white porcelain, shiny but heavy, sort of clumsy looking but somewhere in the subconsciousness connected with the oldest childhood memories. Kids waiting in the kitchen for our grand grand mother. She used to cook hot cocoa for us, and as it was so hot we got some cold milk in smaller creamer to pour in the too hot beverage. It had to be winter, as in those oldest memories I remember the smell of the hot cocoa and see the orange color of mandarins and oranges in the bowl on the kitchen table. Yet the memories are so distant I just merely remember how old my sister and I have been then, I only do have that perception of distant times. Whenever I take this small creamer in my hands I remember those times passed far, far ago. And always as I buy the first mandarin oranges of the season and bring them home I get that warm feeling the winter is coming, time of snow and warm kitchen.
Painting this small canvas made me remember all those feelings. Yet I am sure, at least I do hope so, the observer would see another story evoked by those two small objects. A mandarin orange and the white creamer. I sometimes wish I could hear those stories my paintings might evoke. And keep asking myself, is painting a good painting only telling my story or is it just bringing coded structure permitting other people to attach their memories, feelings?
Anyhow, I like this small canvas, just the way it turned out. I like the distance between the mandarin and the creamer being filled with certain tension, almost sort of an expectation of something to happen, although on the other side there is this deep calm of a sunny morning light reassuring us everything is just perfect.
self portrait painted
Self portrait painted in times of isolation……
I don’t know how many souls I have.
I’ve changed at every moment.
I always feel like a stranger.
I’ve never seen or found myself.
From being so much, I have only soul.
A man who has soul has no calm.
A man who sees is just what he sees.
A man who feels is not who he is.
Attentive to what I am and see,
I become them and stop being myself.
Each of my dreams and each desire
Belongs to whoever had it, not me.
I am my own landscape,
I watch my own journey –
Different, mobile and alone.
Here, where I am, I can’t feel myself.
That’s why I read, as a stranger,
My being as if it were pages.
Not knowing what will come
And forgetting what has passed.
I note in the margin of my reading
What I thought I felt.
Rereading, I wonder: “Was that me?”
God knows, because he wrote it.
Fernando Pessoa
green vase
Green Vase, oil on canvas still life painting just finished! It’s been a challenge to put together all the strong colors with the delicacy of the green vase with pink flowers! A vase I’ve painted several times by now, has that deep green glaze reflecting the light and turning just into any surrounding color possible. What about yellow? With some help of blue, it can be done! What do you think?