Sunday, February 7, 2010

February Project: Mandala



For February, SBHOA classes will be focusing their energies and thoughts into mandalas... the lesson emphasizes the way design grows from the repetition of elements, and has a clever way to make that repetition (especially for children who may never have seen carbon paper ;) ). The docent workshops certainly enjoyed the process!

(Thanks to Cindy Denny for the fine photos.)

January project: Pastel Wolf


Are there wolves prowling your school campus? Or are those just our last HOA project, "Pastel Wolf"?

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Photos from "Grow Well-Explore Art"

Did you check out the displays at the Beach Cities Health District? The halls were literally aglow...
Aha, but don't be frightened by the Myth and Mystery projects, haunting the same spaces!

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Grow Well - Explore Art

Read the Daily Breeze's nice write-up of the show at the Beach Cities Health District here. And come to the opening reception tonight, 4-6 pm. Kids too!

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Color of Snow: The Process in Photos

With some projects, it's easier to show than tell, and our current lesson, The Color of Snow by Birgit Snodgrass, is one of those. Here are the steps in photos--it's absolutely no substitution for the workshop, and the actual lesson is much richer, but maybe the photos can serve as reminders of the sequence.

1. Draw in simple trees with pencil and fill in the trees with Maskoid:Remember to say it clearly: Maskoid is the product we're using. "Mastoid" is a part of your skull. ;)

2. After the Maskoid has dried a minute or two, wet your whole page with a sponge, quickly add watercolor (be sure to leave some lighter "misty" spaces), and before that has a chance to dry, add a generous amount of coarse salt:

3. Let that dry a little (time will depend on how wet the paper is). Then (this is the fun part) peel off the Maskoid:

4. Next, use brown watercolor on a dry brush or old gift card to make the tree-bark texture, and to make the trees more dimensional. Birch trees have horizontal dark marks in their pale bark:5. All done! The salt should stay on the painting until it falls or shakes off--don't try to wipe off the salt or you may smear the painting: