Working Big, Really Big

January 26 2015 5I’ve begun applying oil and cold wax to my biggest boards ever, 36×48, and let me tell you, it is a vigorous workout covering so much territory.

January 26 2015 7

January 26 2015 6This board’s theme is transformation and is for an upcoming show. And that’s all I’ll say for now.

Abstracted Play: Three Day Workshop

IMG_1251I’ve just spent the past three days guiding six beautiful women through the process of using plaster, oil, and cold wax. This was the first workshop held at The Art Studios at Mission Mill and it was a huge success. We went from this:

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to this:

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The women bonded instantly on Friday and by the end of Sunday, my sides were sore from laughing so much.

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Friday afternoon we painted our boards and applied plaster.

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Then on Saturday morning the ladies sanded and stained.

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Before lunch on Saturday, I had the women applying initial layers of oil and cold wax.

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And by the end of Saturday, the hall was filled with drying art.

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Sunday morning, we were back at it.

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We had snacks available all the time . . . .

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. . . and on Sunday, Howard delivered a salad bar lunch to us.

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Before we knew it, it was time to clean up and prepare for show and tell.

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Here is a sampling of the incredible work the women created. A sampling, I tell you!

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It was an energizing, exciting, creative three days.

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Behind the Scenes . . . . of a new show!

Sealing the plaster with acrylic
Sealing the plaster with acrylic

My current show with Cynthia Herron, Ricochet, was hung last Tuesday and our opening reception was Saturday, but I’ve already been working on pieces for my next show so I thought I would give a peek inside my world of board prep.

 

I picked up my order of boards from Matt in Portland last October, then during November and into December I painted all of them, applied plaster, sanded, and sealed. I’ve already started to apply oil and cold wax to several, but for this post, I’ll leave it at the prep. And I’ll save the information about the show for a later post as well. It’s all very exciting.

Picking up my boards from Matt's workshop in Portland
Picking up my boards from Matt’s workshop in Portland
Frida inspects my new boards
Frida inspects my new boards
Boards prepped for plaster
Boards prepped for plaster
Plaster marathon, boards everywhere
Plaster marathon, boards everywhere
Boards, sanding block, mask
Boards, sanding block, mask
Time to sand the boards
Time to sand the boards
Oh, so many boards to sand
Oh, so many boards to sand
Preparing to stain the plaster with acrylic
Preparing to stain the plaster with acrylic
First plop of paint
First plop of paint
I whipped up lots of fun colors to seal the plaster
I whipped up lots of fun colors to seal the plaster
Painting the big guys
Painting the big guys
Ready to plaster the big guys
Ready to plaster the big guys
Big boards, big spreader
Big boards, big spreader
Underfoot
Underfoot
Truly underfoot
Truly underfoot

Okay, a little hint: Guardino Gallery.

The Anatomy of a Painting

October 2014 (14)

One of the paintings I did for Ricochet (click HERE to learn about this upcoming collaborative show) was month #10, September, 2014, when our theme was WATER. I knew immediately what I wanted to paint: the waterline of a ship.

The back story. We have a boat, which we moor on the Columbia River in Portland. In August, we went out for a weekend of boat camping with our daughters and grandkids. The weather was perfect and in a rare burst of exuberance, I put on my suit and jumped in the river for a float on the inner tube. While I was in the water, I noticed the waterline of our boat. It was a beautiful array of colorful patinas. I had someone carefully hand me my camera and I snapped a shot, thinking what a great painting it would make.

Rapture Waterline

Fast forward to September. I dug out the photos I had taken and also looked on the internet for rusty ship hull waterlines. Oh, so many possibilities. I scooped up all the images and chose one for this project.

Ship Hull 1Then it was paint day with Cynthia.

September 2014 (2)

September 2014 (3)

September 2014 (4)

September 2014 (6)

September 2014 (18)

September 2014 (7)

September 2014 (19)

September 2014 (20)

By the end of the afternoon, it was pretty much completed. I futzed with it a bit more the next day, did the final wax, and called it done.

"Anchored in Memory" 16x16, plaster, oil, and cold wax
“Anchored in Memory”
16×16, plaster, oil, and cold wax

 

I plan to continue exploring the theme of waterlines in upcoming paintings.

Messy, Messy, Messy

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I was asked by the Salem Art Association  if I would like to participate in their high school mentorship program. It took me all of seven seconds to respond with a big fat YES. It is a rigorous program for the students who apply. They first have to complete an application, responding to a series of questions, provide two letters of recommendation from their art teachers or principal, then they go through interviews; there are only 15 available spots. Once they are accepted into the program, they attend two events per month during the school year. As part of the program, artists are invited to mentor students based upon what the student has indicated as art goals. I was invited to mentor three students: Olivia, Madeline, and Simon.

I met with each of the students for an initial consultation so I could get to know each of them and find out their art goals and how I could help them be accomplished. All three students were interested in mixed media, plaster, oil and cold wax, and experimenting. After meeting with all three students, I was excited as they were.

IMG_0947Since all three were interested in some of the same types of experimentation and exploration, I scheduled a couple of mini workshops during their holiday break. For the first workshop, we prepped boards with a variety of materials: gesso (white and colored), plaster, and venetian plaster. They all jumped right in.

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On Friday, we’re getting together again to make decisions about the next step for the boards. Acrylic? Oil and cold wax? Paper? Pencil? So many choices.

LCAC Artful Gift Sale a Success

2014 Holiday sale postcard front low res

I was invited to participate in the Left Coast Artists Collective Artful Gift Sale, which was held last Friday and Saturday at the Multnomah Arts Center in Portland. It was a fun day, I made lots of sales,  I met some great new people, I bought some art, and did some art trades. (Bonus: I got to hang out with Stephanie Brockway, who had her booth right next to mine.) I say it was successful all the way around.

Entrance

Sign

Booth 3

Booth 5

Santa

Dayna in booth

 

Opportunities: To see art, buy art, take a class, tour studios

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An opportunity to buy art

Emerald Pointe Christmas Bazaar

1125 McGee Court NE

Keizer, Oregon

Thursday, November 13, 2014

10:00 am-2:00 pm

I’ll have Funky Junkyard Birds, Curious Elements, cards, and plaster, oil, and cold wax paintings. I’ll also have a few sale items.  (Note: This is where my mother lives. It is an independent senior living community and the Christmas Bazaar is open to the public.)

Art

 

Artful Gift Show

Left Coast Artist Collective

Multnomah Art Center Gym

7688 S.W. Capitol Highway

Portland, Oregon

Friday, December 5, 2015: 10:00 am – 8:00 pm

Saturday, December 6, 2015: 9:00 am – 5:00 pm

I’ll have Funky Junkyard Birds, Curious Elements, cards, and plaster, oil, and cold wax paintings.

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Little Things 14

Guardino Gallery

2939 N.E. Alberta

Portland, Oregon

Show opens Thursday, November 27, 2014 and runs through December

I’ll have a grid of 6×6 inch plaster, oil, and cold wax paintings

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An opportunity to tour the Art Studios at Mission Mill

Front door

Our very first Open Studios, on the second floor,  and the grand opening of Compass Gallery on the first floor. Come see the art fort that Tory and I created: Studio F.

Willamette Heritage Center

1313 Mill Street S.E.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

5:00 – 7:00 pm

I’ll have a selection of Funky Junkyard Birds, Curious Elements, cards, and new paintings.

 

An opportunity to take a class

Dayna Painting September 2014

Oil and Cold Wax: Abstracted Play With a Punch of Texture

Art Studios at Mission Mill

January 16-18, 2015

Friday 1:00-5:00 pm, Saturday and Sunday 10:00 am – 5:00 pm

Limited to six participants

$300

For more information or to register, contact me: dayna@daynajcollins.com/curele

 

Opportunity to see a show

 

"Fairy Tales & Poetry"
“Fairy Tales & Poetry”

Group Dynamics

Salem Art Group

The Art Department

254 Commercial Street S.E.

Salem, Oregon

Opening reception is Wednesday, November 5, 2014

5:00-7:00 pm

 

Welcome to Studio F

Painting 3A year ago, Tory and I put  a deposit on a downtown Salem studio. Due to a series of events and delays, we decided it wasn’t the right space for us. We were sad, but all of our friends kept telling us that something better would come along. Were they ever right.

Front door

About six weeks ago, we were invited to join a group of artists who were forming a collective studio space at the Willamette Heritage Center at the Mill. Our group of artists, about 12 of us, incorporated and are now officially known as The Art Studios at Mission Mill.

Stream at studio

Here is the space when we first walked in and said YES.

Before entrance to studio

Before Tory and Dayna

Before door and window

Before upper window bank

Before corner

While Tory was away on a teaching junket, Howard and I applied paint (that Tory and I had picked out together, of course). Many days we don’t even need to turn on the lights it is so bright in our space!

Painting 1

Painting 4

Hallway studio painted yellow 2

Cabinets were painted with layers of milk paint.

Cabinets 1

Cabinets 2

Cabinets 3

Tory’s husband, Norm, helped us move our furniture and supplies.

Moving stuff to studio

Ta da!

Finished studio

My corner of the art studio

Finished window with flags

And a week later, we were making art.

Finished Tory working

Finished studio Dayna

Art in studio

Later, I’ll post about the studio space as a whole. We have multiple studios, a kitchen, a classroom, and an art lounge. It’s all pretty cool.

Grounds at night

PS Our first Open Studio will be held on Thursday, November 13th, 5-7 pm. Many of the studios will be open, including Studio F.

Frozen in Time

Prevents rust

I’ve always wondered what it would be like to enter a house that had been frozen in time and be able to sort through all of the detritus of a former life. Well, over the weekend I had an opportunity to sort through a garage that had been buried by time – about 50 years worth.

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Howard’s father finally asked for some help in cleaning out his garage/shop. Last weekend, armed with gloves and boxes, we tackled the piles. Tom, who is 92, watched from the sidelines while Howard, Alex (his niece’s son), and myself began to drag stuff out.

Alex and Howard get started

The dragging continued all day.

Alex finds an old motor

Howard finds an old mitt

Rust

Until we finally reached the back of the shop.

Still smiling

We ended up with a pile of scrap metal.

Dayna relaxes amidst the metal pile

Pile of metal

After five trailer loads of stuff to the dump (and more yet to go), we loaded the trailer with all of the hazardous materials and old paint (and several jugs of unidentified liquids).

Trailer with toxins

Alex with unidentified fluid

What all did we find? Well, things had been buried for 50 years, things Howard remembered from his childhood, and some things Howard didn’t remember ever seeing. It was a walk back in time.

Metalic paint

Foxy product

Quilt

Still in the package

Skippy jar with emery dust

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I’ve saved the best for last. While we cleaned and sorted, I was filling boxes with things that I could use in my art and in my Curious Elements. In a box of rags, I even found an old quilt.

Quilt

When I got home, I began to sort through all of the treasures. My sister asked during the process was I feeling overwhelmed or verklempt*. Verklempt, definitely verklempt. (*choked with emotion)

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PS Since we were using Tom’s truck and trailer, when he needed to run an errand, he hopped in his old Model A and tootled off to the store.

Dad driving Model A

Here’s the work crew: Alex, Howard, and Tom

The gang

Did I mention that Tom has a garage in North Plains where he works on his old cars? That’s next to get cleaned out.

 

 

 

i find

 

"The Journey Home: The Ease of Slumber"  Venetian plaster, oil, cold wax
“The Journey Home: The Ease of Slumber”
Venetian plaster, oil, cold wax

As many of you know, I was first introduced to the use of plaster in my art by Patricia Wheeler, a Maine artist who teaches in Oregon every summer. I have taken Pat’s plaster class five times from her at Oregon College of Art and Craft and over the weeks we’ve spent together,we’ve become friends. Pat was aware that I was teaching my version of working with plaster, but recently I received a message from anartist I have never met, telling me I was “ripping” Pat off and I should be digging deeper to create my own work. I was rocked by her vitriolic words and I immediately contacted Pat to see if she was feeling the same way. Here is a portion of what Pat said:

1. Imitate.
Don’t be shy about it. Try to get as close as you can. You’ll never get all the way, and the separation might be truly remarkable. We have only to look to Richard Hamilton and his version of Marcel Duchamp’s large glass to see how rich, discredited, and underused imitation is as a technique. (from Bruce Mau’s An Incomplete Manifesto For Growth)

You are such a joyful and talented addition to any class and, of course, you have reached the place in your work to be teaching your version of the plaster technique. I learned from Fred, one of the best teachers there is, to GIVE IT ALL AWAY, all the secrets, don’t hold back. He has had many people take up and expand his work in found objects. Fred is NEVER INTIMIDATED OR OFFENDED. it expands the field. You will build your own followers. KEEP TEACHING, KEEP BEING THE EXUBERANT painter you are, just wildly creative. Portland is wildly creative and I hear that in your friends response to your teaching, and god there is NOTHING NEW. There is NOTHING, REPEAT NOTHING, about you teaching a class in plaster that offends. As a matter of fact, teach beginners PLEASE and prep them for one of my intensives…KEEP ON, BE STRONG.

 
Her words bolstered that what I’m doing matters. I teach my version of the plaster class at an introductory level. I teach in two days a portion of what Pat teaches in four or five days. I’ve also taken the plaster process to new levels by using it as an under layer for my oil and cold wax painting, in that case, the plaster is an initial layer of texture, one of a series of processes, techniques, and layers I incorporate into my art.

All of this got me to thinking about teaching art classes. I love Pat’s generosity of spirit with regards to teaching. Michael deMeng wrote about this topic several years ago and with his permission, I share a portion of it:

I have absolutely no fear that someone is going to “steal” my style and run with it. Let them, but it won’t be my art. They may use my techniques but it will never be mine and anything I do will not be their’s. It is probable that other artists using certain techniques of mine will grow in directions that I would have never thought of. In some cases perhaps better. So be it! That is a good thing. If nothing else it keeps me motivated to stay on top of my game.

For a more recent take on this topic by Michael, check out his blog post, The Key to Finding Your Artistic Style, and his use of the martini as a metaphor.

I was introduced to oil and cold wax by my friends Katy and Nancy, who had taken a class from Allan Cox at Sitka Center for Art and Ecology several years ago. I was smitten and signed up for Allan’s workshop at Sitka Center for Art and Ecology. I remember running out of prepped and gessoed boards during the four-day workshop (Allan’s process was to put three layers of gesso on our boards), so I found cut pieces of wood in the woodpile at the cabin where I was staying and prepped them using plaster. An idea was born: oil and cold wax on plaster; I’ve used this process ever since.

"i find" Plaster, oil, cold wax on reclaimed wood from the wood pile
“i find”
Plaster, oil, cold wax on reclaimed wood from the wood pile

I then took a class on oil and cold wax from Judi Wise, who introduced me to Rebecca Crowell. I remember lingering over Rebecca’s excellent website, Oil and Wax: Resources for Cold Wax Painting, as Rebecca generously shares every single bit of information on painting with oil and cold wax. I decided I would like to share my experience with oil and cold wax and was invited to teach at a Salem studio. Because the art world is small, I contacted Judi Wise and asked if she would mind if I taught my version of oil and cold wax. Her reply: Yes, of course that would be terrific. No problem on my end; after all, I learned it from somebody, too.

When I teach my classes, I fold in techniques I learned from others, as well as techniques I’ve learned through hours and hours of my own experimentation. My trademark is laying down plaster in a way I learned years ago, then adding layers of oil and cold wax, tearing it away, and adding more layers. This is my style, my brand, my way of using the same materials as someone else. When I teach these processes, I share all my secrets, I give it away. And even with that, what others create will be different than what I teach or create.

I’ve been painting with my friend Cynthia Herron over the past year in preparation for a show in January/February, 2015. Our show, Ricochet, is based on us getting together and painting once a month using a different theme each month. We’ve been working in plaster, oil, and cold wax: our work looks nothing alike, even though we are using the exact same materials and painting the same theme.

In the end, it is all a great big web of generosity, sharing, exploration, experimentation, and evolution. I’m on my journey using all the techniques, skills, and inspiration I can gather together to make it my own.