Creating a Body of Work

I was talking with the artists in my last workshop, and the questions came up:

“How do artists get all their work to look the same?”

And “How can I get my work to look like that?”

Of course, what we were referencing was the creating of a body of work; and the question being posed pinpointed the issue we have as students of art, which addresses our love of experimentation in the classroom, and then, I think, the lack of follow through in our home studios.

In the classroom, you see, it is a requirement to experiment. You will never learn or stretch enough as an artist if you don’t experiment. But it’s a delicate balance between experimenting and going deeper into your work.

At some point, it would behoove us to leave the road of experimentation and find the more singular path to ourselves, toward our own voice. We need to apply our experiments and move more deeply into those techniques which excite us. Our voice will emerge in the process and our work will begin to hang together.

So the real question is, “How do I move out of experimentation and into creating a body of work?”.

For the answer, I’ll make a nerdy left-brained list of the process of moving into a body of work:

Phase 1:

  • Try out different mediums (different art forms). This is the phase where you get to medium-hop.
  • Settle on a medium that you like (you like encaustic painting? Good choice!). Stop hopping.

Phase 2:

  • Experiment within that medium. Apply all that knowledge you have gathered from hopping around, and try out every technique within your new specialty.
  • Zero in on techniques that resonate with you, and stay with those techniques for a while. This is where you start to limit yourself, hedge in a boundary and play within it.
  • Push these techniques even deeper, getting more personal with them, letting them lead you to new discoveries.

Phase 3:

  • Apply your discoveries to a Subject of your choosing.
    • In school, art students have the luxury of having the instructor set themes for them to work within, like say, “Metamorphosis”. Then the student would think of a subject that defined that theme for them personally. Eventually, the student created their own themes, just from working long enough under the guidance of caring instructors. But you can do this completely on your own, with some thought, some meditation and some diligence.
  • Choose a subject you find interesting. Then look more deeply that subject and apply it to yourself and your life.
  • Stay with the subject you pick for a period of time, long enough to make a series of work.
  • This then is your body of work.

For instance, choosing a subject like “Botanicals” might lead you to look more deeply into Leaf structures, which makes you think about patterns. You then might apply your look at Patterns in nature to a look at Sidewalk patterns all around you. Thinking about “Things that fly”, which is a random subject, might lead you to make a series on how you would look if you were to fly, or what you might see; which might lead you to what you would see as a fly on the wall. “Entomology” might lead you to look into the leg attachments of beetles, which might lead you to what else in nature attaches in that way, making connections between subjects, and on and on, with you always bringing your subject under scrutiny, moving deeper into a more personal realm of investigation.

By following these steps, and moving from phase to phase, you will find yourself moving more deeply into your unique voice, into areas of yourself that you never knew you had. I bet you’ll find healing there, as well as some fun!

So let go in your experimentation and begin the dance toward your own body of work.

In short: Experiment > grab hold of technique > grab hold of a subject > let loose into the realms of yourself.

So when do you start showing work in galleries?

My encaustic students, I would say, fall in Phase 2, with experimentation within wax being the calling for the day. Artists in Phase 1 will bounce in and out of class, or only come once. I know they landed somewhere else. But I also know that if my Phase 2 artists stay in class long enough, they will probably move into Phase 3. This is the phase where I would expect them to create a home studio, and begin sending their work off to galleries. In college we were taught adamantly that you never show your student work in galleries. We were expected not to show our work until the ideas we were generating were our own, and this, after we had mastered our chosen medium, and conquered a set of self-defined techniques.

The interesting thing is that we are, as artists, scattered across this playful grid of experimentation, each of us in different phases, yet working side by side in the classroom. So enjoy where you are at on your path, keeping your eye on the horizon- your future path- looking to where your work may take you; or better yet, where you may take your work.

Charcoal Drawing and Flemish Pears

Since teaching Drawing on Encaustic Wax, I have been playing around with approaches to the still life in my studio. What I mean by this is that I am reawakening my love of drawing still life. As artists we are so bombarded with imagery today- much of it someone else’s imagery: historical imagery or found imagery; and we forget that a portion of an artist’s time used to be just drawing or painting a still life or model in one’s studio.

I mean sometimes you just get sick of drawing from photos or pulling up google images. Well guess what- there’s a whole world of artists working from small still lives every day. But it’s the oil painters and the die-hard pencil artists. It’s just not the encaustic artists. Why?

It’s just not the way we usually approach encaustic painting. Last month, my student Jacob commented, “we should have a live model to paint!” and I said “Yes!” I totally agree.  But it seems tricky somehow, juggling our hot griddles, gloves, paints, ventilation, and working out our ideas in a chunky brush, while we keep our live model happy and our eyes darting back and forth-model to painting-model to painting. But I think it is do-able! Why not?

Since then, I have been engrossed in researching Flemish Oil Painting, and working to transfer these concepts into an encaustic approach. I thought the way the Flemish approached underpainting and layering was particularly applicable to the way we encaustic artists use layering, glazing and burnishing.

So I’ve taken the pear as my current subject (being March that seems the best option for organic form choices) and taken to daily charcoal drawings and encaustic paintings of them. I have started to share my ideas and teach a few friends my approach; and being a documenter, I am collecting a variety of processes that I hope to compile and share in a book of some sort.

If this sparks anyone’s interest, let me know with a comment. I tend to run ahead of the curve- I am pulling in ideas that are old school to oil painters and applying them to this slippery, changing landscape of encaustic art. We’ll see what happens. I’ll keep you posted. Happy Creating!

-Linda

Monthly & Locally

 

Spring, where are your springs! When will you spring upon us! Have we begun to rise from our winter slumber?

Winter Slumber? Are you kidding? If your winter was like mine, you were running nonstop- jumping on and off planes and generally making a disaster area in your studio! Well, I’ve decided to dig myself out of the pile of suitcases and have set my mind to teaching only locally for a while.

With this in mind, I have written up my schedule of  workshops for the year. These are two-day workshops, once a month- the last weekend of each month. I will be presenting fundamental encaustic painting techniques in a series of fun, creativity-boosting weekends.  I do hope this will encourage some of you out-of-towners to travel out to my cute artists town, where things are always hoppin’ and stay for one of the weekends of encaustic painting! Workshop sizes are always small, so you’ll get tons of individual attention.

Also currently, I am sorting and packing everything in my house, as we are putting our beautiful country home up for sale, and moving off to town (two whole miles away!). We’re trading our fishing pond full of bullfrogs for sidewalks, and our fields of waving grasses for cafes, I suppose.

And then, when the dust of this furiously busy season has settled, I’m hoping to find myself sipping lemonade, and again listening to birds and bees, lounging merrily with artist friends, and walking to concerts and performances. This is my mind’s reward for all of this tearing up and stripping away of my house and my schedule. I want to get to the core of the good stuff. For me, part of that will be teaching Encaustics- monthly & locally.  I am really excited. Anybody want to buy a cute country house 2 miles from an artsy college town? It comes with a Studio!

Thanks for stopping in!

-Linda

 

 

Encaustic Wabi Sabi Workshop – Warm and Wonderful

Encaustic Wabi Sabi-Linda Lenart McNulty (640x385)

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Last Saturday the art room at Oberlin’s historic FAVA building was transformed into an encaustic paradise, when ten artists from the Cleveland area took my Encaustic Wabi Sabi workshop!

The students felt like kids at a candy store, only the candy was stained tea bags, onion skin and mulberry bark paper, dead flower heads, petals and leaves, small twigs and porcupine quills!

There was an overflow of oil paints, encaustic medium, smiles and laughter as the students shared colors, visions and surprises on their waxy griddles.

Every student found their own approach and their own voice in their color and textural choices they made, and no two artists’ work looked alike!

After demos and a good three hours of play, the students packed up their goods and we all enjoyed looking at and sharing in each others’ work. I was truly amazed what the students invented and developed in their short time together and I am looking forward to running this workshop again.

Actually, in the approaching 4 week long series of encaustic classes I am facilitating at FAVA, beginning next Saturday, first thing on the agenda is to show the students how to turn their beautiful Wabi Sabi Collages into Paintings. There are still a few seats open if anyone is interested in signing up. In the class series, all of your questions will be answered on encaustic art and process, and there is plenty of time to stretch out and find your voice, so to speak. It’s a good place to start your encaustic journey. Maybe I’ll see you there!

Thanks for stopping by!

Linda