It happens from time to time.
Okay, maybe more often than that.
Okay, maybe more often than that.
Sometimes I bash the feeling back down into hiding with phrases like, "No time for that now! I'm too busy with other things!"
Other times I embrace it full-heartedly.
This time I had an excuse.
A friend's beloved four-legged feline companion had needed to be put to sleep earlier in the week. That's hard. I know this first hand.
Her cat was a beautiful black and white kitty with a lopsided black nose-marking...I knew this from a Facebook picture, even though I've never seen the cat in person. The second I saw the photo I knew I should paint her. With the last of the Whitaker peanut butter chocolate, the unusual animation Rango, and my collection of painting supplies, I set to work.
Her cat was a beautiful black and white kitty with a lopsided black nose-marking...I knew this from a Facebook picture, even though I've never seen the cat in person. The second I saw the photo I knew I should paint her. With the last of the Whitaker peanut butter chocolate, the unusual animation Rango, and my collection of painting supplies, I set to work.
Robert Genn, the author of a bi-weekly newsletter ruminating on various art-inspired topics, wrote earlier this week comparing painting to solving a puzzle. He said, "I commit myself to one stroke or another at the beginning, then look around to see what my next move might be. Thus, I go from move to move--working out the puzzle--until it's either completed or abandoned." His words really resonated with me because they describe the process that happens every time I paint.
Originally I was picturing a spiraling daisy sun because I love the idea of spiral suns. After playing with it a bit, I decided just to have one large sunshine-filled daisy instead and painted over the original version.
The real problem-solving came in when I was trying to separate my whites. White cat cheeks and white whiskers against white daisy petals with more white daisies in the foreground. I was adding shadows and reflected color left, right, and center!
LINKS:
- Robert Genn's muse on puzzle-solving and intuition.
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