It has been a long time since I painted with oil and cold wax. I’ve kept up with my daily acrylic painting in my visual journal and I have been steadfast in working on my Salvage Collages, but my oil paints and cold wax medium sat quietly on the shelves, waiting for my return. Deadlines are great motivators.
Guardino Gallery is hosting their 19th annual Little Things show and work is due this month. Earlier, I completed seven small abstract paintings, but I had hoped to have at least 12 for the show. Everything in the Little Things show needs to be 7×7 inches or smaller, so my pieces are all 5×5 inches, a fun size to paint and a size that keeps the price affordable.
Sunday turned out to be a quiet day and I had the house to myself, so I headed to my painting studio, quickly painted in my daily visual journal, then pulled out my gallon of cold wax and began choosing oil paint colors I wanted to work with. I lined up nine 5×5 boards; six of them had the beginnings of paintings and three I had deemed completed. All nine got a makeover. It felt great to work primarily in a limited palette of warm colors: pinks, magentas, reds, oranges . . . . with dabs, lines, and swaths of other colors to add contrast and variety.
“The Strange Dance of Movement Over Time,” oil and cold wax by Dayna J. Collins“A Cloud of Tenderness,” oil and cold wax by Dayna J. Collins“Secret Yearnings,” oil and cold wax by Dayna J. Collins“The Memory of That Night,” oil and cold wax by Dayna J. Collins“A Field of Feverish Energy,” oil and cold wax by Dayna J. Collins“A Hot and Windless Summer Day,” oil and cold wax by Dayna J. Collins“Words Have No Sound,” oil and cold wax by Dayna J. Collins“Too Many Surprises,” oil and cold wax by Dayna J. Collins“Hushed By the Wind,” oil and cold wax by Dayna J. Collins
These were three of the initial seven that made the cut:
“Whispered Words,” oil and cold wax by Dayna J. Collins“State of Disorientation,” oil and cold wax by Dayna J. Collins“The Pink Light of Dawn,” oil and cold wax by Dayna J. Collins
Little Things 19 opens Friday, November 29, 6-9 pm, at Guardino Gallery in Portland on NE 30th and Alberta.
Time for an update of my year long project of painting in a visual journal every day. Here’s a selection of pages from late summer through early fall. Favorites:
August 11, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsAugust 12, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsAugust 31, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 1, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 4, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 5, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 14, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 16, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 18, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 19, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 21, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 22, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 25, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 27, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 28, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 29, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsSeptember 30, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsOctober 2, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsOctober 5, 2019 Dayna J. Collins
Themes continue to emerge: Play, experimentation, circles, layers, mark-making, revealing, excavation, color, lines . . . . and I’m in the final three months of my project.
Day of the Dead, year 13, opens Thursday, September 26, 2019, at Guardino Gallery in NE Portland. Not only is this a fabulous group show featuring over 50 artists, it is the place to be for the celebration, costumes, face painting, music, food, and inventive art. I’ve participated for many years, frequently getting into the spirit by dressing up.
Stephanie and DaynaMr. and Mrs. Collins
My art for the show has always been assemblages and found object art. This year, I created four pieces, all nestled into vintage wood boxes. Three of my pieces are tall and narrow boxes, each with a single chair, a word, and a minimum of objects. In creating these simple pieces, I was thinking about those I have lost and the desire to sit with them for one last conversation.
lost listen linger
The other piece I created for this show is a variation on a design I created in 2017 for a community read project and then for the 2017 Day of the Dead show; this time around, rather than hanging found objects of remembrance on a branch or a piece of wood, I nestled the items in a box, attaching each piece of string with a vintage and aged thumb tack.
I love this show and I hope you’ll be able to attend the opening reception on Thursday, September 26, 6-9 pm, or visit the show, which will be up until October 27.
I was invited by the Salem Poetry Festival to paint while two poets read a series of their poems during the Salem Poetry Festival. Last Thursday, I arrived early at the Ike Box in downtown Salem to set up my table. I chose to bring four 11 x 14 canvases and two table easels, with the plan to paint two pieces as each poet read their poetry for about 30 minutes each.
The idea was that my painting would be in response to the poems being read. To prepare for the evening of painting, I repurposed four canvases I had bought at SCRAP, painting over someone’s previous painting to prepare it for my use; I painted two of the canvases black and two in hot pink and orange, giving me something to respond to other than a blank, white canvas.
Poet Carol Hottle kicked off the event and my first painting was in response to her reading a series of poems about a transformational experience she had, surviving a horrific auto accident.
My second painting was in response to a series of poems that reflected positive experiences, and I allowed myself to focus on the visual images Carol painted with her words.
When it was time for poet Mike Shuler to read, I listened as he read until I picked up on a poem about children joyfully playing along the banks of a river, and I couldn’t resist painting a bright abstracted landscape.
The second piece I painted was in response to Mike sharing how much he loves hiking in the Cascade Head area, a place that is near and dear to me because it is where Sitka Center For Art and Ecology is located (and where I taught two painting classes this summer).
The whole experience was positive and fun and once I started painting, I tuned out the room full of people and just focused on the flow of words and the flow of paint. At the conclusion of the evening, I invited both poets to choose a painting to take with them.
Salem Poetry Festival Thursday, September 12, 2019 Carol, Dayna, and Mike
What a wild week. Twelve women artists came together to take my Abstracted Play in Oil and Cold Wax workshop at the Sitka Center for Art and Ecology. Some had taken my class previously, a few had learned from other instructors, and quite a few had never worked with oil paint or cold wax, and one was new to painting. There was some gnashing of teeth, lots of laughter, a little whining, a smidgeon of frustration, and in the end, happiness with their success and the beauty of their pieces.
I did demos every morning and afternoon . . .
The women then worked on their own pieces, working in multiples so they had lots of pieces to work on at various stages of the process.
One thing I loved seeing was the camaraderie of how the women supported each other and worked together.
I gave my Artist Talk on Saturday after lunch (they all showed up for my talk, although this photo makes it look like no one did!).
On our last day, we worked in the morning and then in the afternoon cleaned up our supplies, spread out our body of work, and did a walkabout, sharing the highlights of the week.
Here is an assortment of the work created during the week, in no particular order, some on boards, some on Arches Oil Paper, some large and some small:
It was a really fun week.
PS This was the second time I got to teach at Sitka this summer. In June, there was an opening and I was able to slip in a bonus version of this workshop, which I blogged about earlier.
Several people have asked me if I plan to offer a class on how I keep a daily painting journal. Whenever I’ve been asked, I’ve thought, I just paint something every day in a book. But there is more to it than that, so rather than a class, I thought I would share using my blog as the means to convey the details of what I do and the benefits of why I do it.
I’ll start with why I decided to keep a daily painting journal. The simple answer is I wanted to have a prompt or motivation to get me into my studio. I figured if I set an intention to do a small daily painting, I might just linger and do something else and build upon the time I spend in my studio. Many times that has happened, but other times, I do my painting and that is it for the day; but it is something.
Another reason I decided to start a practice of creating a small painting in a journal is that it allows me to experiment and play with ideas. By creating in a small journal, the painting isn’t precious, it isn’t for anyone but me, and it allows me a certain amount of freedom that painting on a large canvas or painting for a show doesn’t allow me.
What I learned along the way:
It’s fun. Sometimes I don’t want to stop and I allow myself to put leftover paint from my current page onto the next day’s page so I have something to respond to the next day.
It isn’t precious when it’s in a journal. It seems my inner critic is quieted by painting on the page of a journal. I approach it as just practice or at best playtime, so the censors are muted.
I was inspired along the way. I often use my daily journal pages as inspiration for bigger paintings, either in acrylic or in oil and cold wax. The pages allow me to play with colors and compositions so when it is time to show up in the studio and create bigger pieces with a deadline or for some other purpose, I have lots of ideas to choose from and use as a spring board, even if the finished piece looks nothing like my journal page.
My process:
It is important to have a dedicated space for doing my daily paintings. I have a table set up in my studio with acrylic paints, paintbrushes, palette knives, a brayer, water, paper towels, and mark-making implements such as pencils, acrylic paint pens, and oil pastels.
I use a 9×9 inch Super Deluxe Mixed Media journal by Bee Paper Aquabee (manufactured in Beaverton, Oregon). The journal has 60 sheets and the pages are 93 lb. weight; the journals retail for $21.25 (and at the time of this blog post, they are on sale at Dick Blick for $10.04).
I cover each journal with handmade paper, using sandpaper to rough up the cover’s surface, then adhering the paper with matte medium.
When I started this project at the beginning of the year, I painted an entry on each side of the page, but after a few days I wondered if I might want to do something with the individual paintings, i.e., pull them out and hang them for a show, or pull them out and mount them to a panel. If I had paintings on each side, I wouldn’t be able to do either of those things, so I quickly abandoned double-sided painting and now use one page for each daily painting. I go through journals more quickly, but I have options if I choose to do something with all or some of the paintings in the future.
I use acrylic paint on the pages. A few times I’ve incorporated collage, but so far the focus has primarily been on creating abstract paintings. For making marks, I use No. 2 and Stabilo pencils, Woody chunky crayons, acrylic pens, and oil pastels.
In my first four journals, my paintings are in the middle of the page, going out toward the edges, but not to the edges. When I started my fifth journal on August 11 (Day #223), I was ready to mix it up and started painting all the way to the edge on all four sides.
I let the paintings dry thoroughly, but for the first few days after I have painted a page, I insert a piece of wax paper to prevent the pages from sticking together.
I number and date each page, and then photograph each painting, which I store on my computer by the “day” number.
I regularly post photos of my daily paintings on Instagram and on my Facebook art page; I share selected photos on Pinterest, and on occasion, I do a blog post highlighting some of my favorite pages. Here are links to previous posts:
I recommend giving a daily painting journal a try, using my methods or coming up with something that works for you. The benefits are more than worth the effort and I love watching my journals stack up.
Daily painting is still happening in my studio (and sometimes when I’m on the road and not at home). One time I forgot to take my painting journal with me, so I painted on little pieces of watercolor paper I had available and then taped the pieces into my journal, a couple of make do entries (you’ll see them below). Here are some selected pages since my last post on May 28.
May 30, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJune 5, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJune 7, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJune 12, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJune 13, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJune 14, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJune 22, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJune 23, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJuly 8, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJuly 13, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJuly 15, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJuly 20, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJuly 21, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJuly 23, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJuly 26, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJuly 27, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJuly 28, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJuly 29, 2019 Dayna J. CollinsJuly 31, 2019 Dayna J. Collins
My show is hung. After working on a variety of pieces over the past year and a half, I can take a deep breath and revel in the accomplishment of creating a body of work and getting to share it at Guardino Gallery. All of the pieces I have been working on for this show have been created out of old books. My Artist Statement pretty much says it all:
Dayna Collins has always loved old books. She hyperventilates at the sight of books which are stained, defaced, torn or marked up. She rips battered books apart, reclaiming their faded fragments, and creates collages using only materials she has excavated. Dayna’s mixed media pieces reflect the passage of time, repurposing the scraps that are worn and weathered, transforming the aged and tattered pieces into something unexpected and beautiful, celebrating their fragile decay.
Here’s the tiniest glimpse of what has been going on over the past 18 months:
Then it became time to begin putting the pieces together into some sort of format for presentation. I ended up using six different formats.
Salvage Collages on vintage blocks.Book boards floating in a custom black frame.“A Lulling Possibility of Happiness,” salvage collage on book board.“A Shattered Sense of Normality,” matted and framed in white.“Secrets Spill Out,” salvage collage on vintage piece of wood.“Hope Carson,” salvage collage on watercolor paper, mounted on cradled panel.
Then there was the Herculean task of titling, mounting, photographing, inventorying, and packing. There were a few hiccups with the floating and the mounting, but after a few tears, I nutted up and found a solution.
Prepping for the “floating” of the book board collages.My photography studio.
It was fun to work in so many styles, using the same materials to create entirely different looks. Unfortunately, it was a challenge for Donna and Gail to hang such disparate styles of work. But they did a magnificent job and created combinations I never would have imagined.
One of my favorite things about having a show at Guardino (this is my fourth one!), is designing the window. As soon as I got notice that I would have a show in July, I started plotting and planning for the window.
It turned out just as I had hoped.
Photo courtesy of ceramic artist Michelle Gallagher.
The show opens on Thursday, July 25, from 6-9 pm. I’m sharing the Feature Gallery with my friend and fellow artist, Michelle Gallagher, who has created a delightful series of ceramic corvids. Their dark beauty compliment my pieces perfectly and we were excited to share this show. Michelle took some great photos, so here is a peek at our show. . . . hopefully this will entice you out tomorrow night for a summer evening of merriment and refreshments (and to experience Last Thursday on Alberta).
Photo courtesy of ceramic artist Michelle Gallagher.Photo courtesy of ceramic artist Michelle Gallagher.Photo courtesy of ceramic Michelle Gallagher.
PS Last weekend our local YMCA had their final book sale in their old building. Of course, I was there first thing on Friday morning, restocking my art supplies . . . .
I’m a tad tardy in sharing about my June class at Sitka Center for Art and Ecology, but it has been fun looking through all of the photos a month later. This class was special because Sitka had a last minute workshop cancellation and I was asked to teach an additional session of my Abstracted Play in Oil and Cold Wax (my August class filled quickly and had a long waiting list).
Sitka is located on the Oregon Coast at Cascade Head (between Lincoln City and Neskowin). I got to stay in Gray House, a cabin located just a short walk up from Boyden Studio, where my class was held.
Gray House
I love the process of preparing to teach – walking the grounds, the lesson planning, and getting the studio set up.
Boyden Studio
Once class got started, it was a whirlwind of activity. I started each morning with a warm up exercise, and then moved into teaching techniques. Students were given lots of time to practice and play – and they all jumped in with a fearless enthusiasm.
This routine was repeated for four days and it was a blur of heightened energy, creativity, and beautiful results.
On the fourth day, we worked in the morning, and then cleaned up in preparation for our sharing and wrap up.
During our class, I did warm ups along with students and also illustrated how working in a visual journal can be great inspiration for creating paintings.
I’m already excited for my next class, August 22-25.
Last November, I was invited by Barbara Bassett to do a show with her at her gallery, Barbara Basset Art Gallery, located at Pudding River Wine Cellars. I’ve long admired Barbara’s work and love the setting of her gallery, so I said yes.
We got together several months ago to plan for our show and come up with a title; we both liked Nature’s Rhythm, as it gave us freedom to create in our own styles.
I wrote a quick blurb about my pieces:
Color is an overriding theme in Dayna’s work. Whether she is painting abstract landscapes or creating more nonrepresentational work, color always finds its way into her paintings, mimicking or exaggerating nature’s wild palette.
We hung our show last week with the help of Sean, the owner and winemaker at Pudding River Wine Cellars.
Barbara worked big, I did a series of 12×12 inch pieces.
We got the show hung quickly, and then we did a timed selfie.
Some of the pieces I will have in the show:
“The Thread of a Path,” plaster, oil, and cold wax, 12×12 inches.“Spellbound By Thoughts,” plaster, oil, and cold wax, 12×12 inches.“Grateful For the Silence of the River,” plaster, oil, and cold wax, 12×12 inches.“A River of Gratitude,” plaster, oil, and cold wax, 12×12 inches.“A Silver Curtain of Rain,” plaster, oil, and cold wax, 12×12 inches.“The Hum of Mosquitoes,” plaster, oil, and cold wax, 12×12 inches.“A Pulsing Wave of Gratitude,” plaster, oil, and cold wax, 12×12 inches.“The Light Glimmers On,” plaster, oil, and cold wax, 12×12 inches.
The opening reception is Wednesday, May 22, 4:00 – 6:00 pm. The Pudding River Wine Cellars and Barbara Bassett Art Gallery are just a ten-minute drive from from Silverton and 15-minutes from Salem, through the beautiful countryside. The show will be up for several months, so if you can’t make the opening, take a short drive and visit this beautiful winery and gallery.