Friday, October 31, 2008

Encaustic Painting (with WAX)






Our latest Highland Artist session included Encaustic Painting: a messy rendition of WAXING...
on canvases, that is.

OFFICIALLY:
Encaustic painting
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A 6th-century encaustic icon from Saint Catherine's Monastery, Mount Sinai.For encaustic tiles see Encaustic tile
Encaustic painting, also known as hot wax painting, involves using heated beeswax to which colored pigments are added. The liquid/paste is then applied to a surface — usually prepared wood, though canvas and other materials are often used.

The simplest encaustic mixture can be made from adding pigments to beeswax, but there are several other recipes that can be used — some containing other types of waxes, damar resin, linseed oil, or other ingredients. Pure, powdered pigments can be purchased and used, though some mixtures use oil paints or other forms of pigment.

Metal tools and special brushes can be used to shape the paint before it cools, or heated metal tools can be used to manipulate the wax once it has cooled onto the surface. Today, tools such as heat lamps, heat guns, and other methods of applying heat allow artists to extend the amount of time they have to work with the material. Because wax is used as the pigment binder, encaustics can be sculpted as well as painted. Other materials can be encased or collaged into the surface, or layered, using the encaustic medium to adhere it to the surface.



We took melted colored wax and squirted it onto the canvas (some were already painted, some of the artists painted them AFTER the wax) and blowdried the wax, making it flow across the work before drying.

I had a ball with it, adding wax to my "WATER SERIES" paintings, giving them texture and sheen. It is definitely something I will try again.

Joan Ware and Kristen Drew had us flowing in wax from one end of the kitchen to the other, mixing up the wax, organizing it on a warming tray and keeping us flowing with medicine syringes (a great way to control where the wax goes on the canvas).

See the photos to see just how much fun we had!

Allison

Selling Your Work on the Internet


I have been experimenting with selling artwork online, particularly with Ebay and have had success, actually sold four paintings this way, one going to Washington State, one finding a home in Texas (just after the storm- so a bit nerve-racking knowing I was shipping in that direction), one to South Carolina and another in the Southeast.

I found the following article on the American Artist website which gives a great bit of detail about the process.

I am searching for a more economical way to sell online. A great plus is that I have had a gallery find me online, which now sells my work.

Blogger has a GREAT search engine, even the artists I write about on here say that my blogs come up when they search their name so a website here is a plus!

Hope you are having a great day and finding your creative spirit stirring.

Allison

The Internet Art Marketby Daniel Grant

A decade ago people questioned whether anyone would buy art that they had only seen over the internet—not in person. Now there are many online means of promoting and selling artwork, and many collectors go online before they head to their nearest gallery. Artists and their work are accessible on their own websites or through links from the websites of galleries, art organizations, and juried shows. Some artists offer artwork for sale on eBay and Craigslist or through one of the myriad mall sites (art-exchange.com, starvingartistsgallery.com, and originalartonline.com, among others). Blogs and YouTube carry artists’ words and pictures. Artists’ pages also show up on social networking sites such as MySpace, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Opportunities for exposure, promotion, and sales abound, but it is still the rare artist who can point to the web as the source of the bulk of his or her earnings. Louisiana painter Marcia Baldwin is one of those artists. Earning a living from selling equine and floral paintings on eBay since 2003, where she is known as M Baldwin with eBay ID mbaldwinfineart, Baldwin was able to reach her personal sales goal of $100,000 in 2005. “The key to selling on eBay is to keep producing,” she says, noting that she paints one or two pictures a day, seven days a week. In the course of a year, she sells as many as 500 paintings, with prices averaging between $289 and $500.

Selling on eBay is not free, and the expenses add up to approximately 40 percent of the gross, perhaps the same as the amount an art gallery would take. The expenses include a 17 percent commission on all sales, and $32 per artwork to list her paintings on the first page of a search (a typical eBay search under the category of “paintings” produces more than 100 pages and 10,000 offerings). PayPal, the online secure payment system for credit-card purchases, takes another three or four percent. There is also the cost of shipping the paintings to buyers (custom boxes, packaging materials, FedEx Home Delivery, and insurance), which averages $30 apiece.

Producing a lot and keeping the prices relatively low for an audience that is bargain hunting is essential for artists using eBay. “You learn how to make paintings quickly,” says Illinois painter Diane Millsap, who creates four New Orleans-themed paintings a week and generally sells between eight and 12 per month, averaging $400 to $500 per piece. Some of these bargain hunters purchase more than one of her paintings and recommend her work to others. Print publishers also have perused her offerings on eBay, which she says has led to print-licensing agreements.

Artist websites present opportunities for sales to a far wider audience, foregoing the percentage-charging middlemen in the brick-and-mortar or online galleries. A website expands the artist’s potential to reach all corners of the planet, but it doesn’t necessarily lead to sales. Artists still struggle to figure out how to make their site stand out from the billions of others.

The answer is search-engine optimization—how to be found by someone looking for something online through a search engine such as Yahoo! or Google. A search on, say, Google for the general category “landscape painting” is apt to produce more than a million potentially relevant websites, with 10 results per page. Web marketers note that it is rare for anyone conducting a search to look past the fourth page, which means that the overwhelming majority of sites won’t be visited. They point to the use of unique and specific “keywords” as essential in elevating a particular site’s standing from back in the pack to the first few pages. When a website is created, certain keywords are written into the site’s HTML code to identify the content of the site, and these are also the terms that someone making a search would type in. There are ways to shortcut the process: Companies may buy advertisements on search engines (the ads appear on the page where the search begins) whenever certain keywords are used, and some purchase keywords so that their websites appear at the top of the list.

“Ads and buying keywords are a game for people with marketing budgets, because it can get expensive,” says Chris Maher, a website developer for artists. “It’s better to just incorporate good keywords—the more specific the better.” Maher notes that landscape painters might want to include the name of their studio, the town they live in, the particular subjects of their paintings, and other unique qualities of their work that might help browsers find their website more quickly and easily.

The algorithms of search engines also tend to give precedence to web pages that are linked to other high-traffic sites with similar content—popularity begets more popularity. One artist who has put this into practice is Linda Paul of Colorado. Paul has been making a living exclusively from website sales of her giclĂ©e prints and painted tiles since 2000, earning more than $200,000 in 2007. “I haven’t spent a cent on search-engine optimization,” she says, but she has promoted links from other websites to her own. “I’ve got 2,000 sites pointing to me right now.” Among her techniques are reciprocal links with other artists, writing blogs and articles on other sites, and promoting her work to print media that have their own websites.
The bottom line is that an increasing number of artwork sales are coming from the web. Even sites that don’t elicit sales are creating valuable exposure. And when you’re an artist, every little bit helps.

Read more Business of Art features.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Alabama Artist Colony

Melanie Morris attended the Alabama Artist Colony workshop at
Lake Martin this past week.

The link to their site is HERE: Artist Colony

We hope it gives you great inspiration.
Melanie will share some of her knowledge in an upcoming meeting.

She studied under Roger Dale Brown, a plein air painter from Nashville who also
happens to be a strong Christian with an incredible story.

He studied art in school, but "got a real job in an optical boutique" and after getting married, moved to California with his wife as she began studying art. He met a muralist by "chance" and began working with him.

He soon found his gift and set GOALS (one of our topics today that we discussed from the Creative Call...along with forgiveness :)). One of his goals was to paint 365 paintings that year (he finished 260) and create 100 studio paintings. He also had a goal of being in a gallery by that October. He was.

He has been painting about 6-8 years now and his work is nationally recognized.

Check out his website with a CLICK HERE

Thanks Melanie for sharing!

He also studied under Scott Christianson (CLICK HERE TO SEE HIS WORK)


Lesson for today?
Take time to learn from other artists...it can change your life.
I began painting with a palette knife 1 year ago this week after Melanie did a demo
(and began this blog 1 year ago as well on this, my annivesary week (Happy Anniversary Chad!))

Do something different. (Melanie introduces us to plein air painting)

Value Christian artists. There IS a difference. Don't we all want our work to express what we know about Jesus to those who don't know?

SET GOALS! Begin now with a plan for taking your art to the next level!

Find a GREAT group of like-minded friends and nurture each other until you all SOAR!

Thank you to my awesome creative call group of friends! I love you! Allison

Have a blessed week!

Printmaking







We spent a day learning about printmaking from Lorraine Mitchell, who learned all about it at UAB in art school.

With pencils and some fun,sharp carving tools, we created designs in blocks of wood, spread ink with fun rollers and printed everything that didn't move, including the dog!


Thanks for another fun way to stretch our creativity!

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

IN FULL SWING






We are in full swing with the CREATIVE CALL.

Here are some fun shots by the pool, as we dive into the creative talents
God has placed within each of us. There is such encouragement among friends, who
support you, encourage you and teach you.

We invite you to join us or any group and see what you can do!

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Inspiration for artists in Birmingham

I just visited a fun site

Click here to see a creative use of talents by a grandmother who has a passion for
photography.

visit the site by clicking here


Her link will also be added below!

Hope you find inspiration!

Allison