Showing posts with label Drawings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drawings. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

On the Lake (In Pakistan) ~My Little Boat Pastel

This pastel was done from a photo I took in 1997, in Pakistan. I was sure that photo was on our way out to Taxila (where the ruins of one of the world's first Buddhist monasteries lies) but my dad seems to think it was a lake not far outside of Islamabad. 

Either way, I loved the colorful boats and put this piece in my last show.

On the Lake, 2014
Pastel on LaCarte 
8" x 10"



Traveling - 
It leaves you speechless,
then turns you into a storyteller.
~Ibn Battuta

Blessings and light!

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Farmhouse in Paradiso ~ Assisi in Pastel

One of the most incredibly beautiful, magical, places I have ever been was Paradiso. It was a short drive from the hill town of Assisi and was ... spectacular. 

There was a house, (or small villa) on the property, as well as a barn, that was turned into a beautiful living space. 

Below, is the lovely barn that was renovated. I took so many photos, one of which was a study for this pastel. This is a preview for more Paradiso posts down the line ...

Farmhouse in Paradiso
Pastel on mounted Wallace



And then a tremendous voice arises
From the Holy of Holies within me,
Saying, "Peace be with you, Life!
Peace be with you, Awakening!
Peace be with you, Revelation!

"Peace be with you, oh Day, who
Engulfs the darkness of the earth
With thy brilliant light!

"Peace be with you, oh Night,
Through whose darkness the lights
Of heaven sparkle!

"Peace be with you, Seasons of the Year!"

~ from The day of My Birth by Kahlil Gibran


Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Plein air in Southern California ~ Lake Casitas


The artist a a receptacle 
for emotions that come
from all over the place:
from the sky,
from the earth, from a scrap of paper,
from a passing shape,
from a spider's web.
~Pablo Picasso

Lake Casitas, is not far from my parents place in Ojai, and while many people go there to fish and camp, Lori and I met for a beautiful day of plein air painting. Lori is also a member of the Pastel Society of the Gold Coast. I started a blog for them, and will be passing that on to you guys, a little later.


Anyway, it the last day of January, and as you can see, it was an absolutely gorgeous. Doing plein air work, you have a limited time, to get the information down on your paper or canvas. Because light and shadow change quickly outside, often, depending on how long you stay out there, you may start two or three different pieces. 

Of course, one of the most important decisions, is the location you choose and what you decide to incorporate into your composition, and what you decide to edit out.

Here is piece #1 ... "The morning piece." Here, you can see I have done an under-painting. Actually, I used hard pastels and a special liquid, called SpectraFix, and spread the pastel with a brush. (Sometimes, I use watercolors paints.) At this point, I now have some values (darks and lights) in place, to play off, with the soft pastels.


Here is Lori Corradi, getting started on her piece.



Every human is an artist.
The dream of your life
is to make beautiful art.
~Miguel Angel Ruiz


So here is the view I picked ...


my set-up ...





I got pretty far on this piece the, below ("the morning piece")  ... but the light started to change, and I was also loosing some of the reflections, of the hills on the water.



So, off I went to the little café, across the lake, to get a sandwich. I brought it back and ate at these picnic tables, you see below. Lori and I were loving the weather, and the view, and were feeling very lucky to be there that day! We also had a very informative conversation about the best ways to meet men. (Not a great number of available, straight men, doing pastels, as it turns out.)




In the following photo, you can see that the reflections of the mountains, on the lake, (to the left side) are pretty much gone. It was time to begin a new piece.



I put in the big shapes, with a dark nupastel (which is a harder pastel stick,) keeping pretty much the same composition, as the morning piece, and trying to stay extra loose, and notice the changes in light and color that happen in afternoon.



Then, a very loose under-painting ...




Below, I have just begun to use soft pastels. You can see the vibrant blue and green ... toward the upper-center, at the base of the hills.



Afternoon painting, (#2, for the day )
The light went behind the mountains so this is as far as I got, on the second piece. I took photos throughout the day, and with what I had gotten on paper, I had enough information to go back and resolve the paintings in the studio.


Back in the studio, Painting #1, the "morning painting"  ... almost done.



And here are the finished pieces. You can see how different they are from each other, and what a different feel and color palette they have. 

Morning on the Lake  
Ojai, California



Afternoon on Lake Casitas 
Ojai, California


Painting is just another way
of keeping a diary.
~Pablo Picasso

If you want to check out the blog that I started for the Pastel Society of the Gold Coast, click here.
It's really just getting started!

I am working on a post, with my photos of the Baths of Caracalla, in Rome. It was so amazing but I actually need to do a little research, because my knowledge of the place is very limited. (Outside of "There was a Roman dude named Caracalla and he built some baths.")  My main objective in going there, to the ruins, was actually to find images to paint! And, boy did I! The place is incredible! Anyway, I will get to that later!

Hope you are all enjoying spring and getting some good weather. And for goodness sake, let's all pray for the crazy weather to stop in the Midwest and elsewhere. 

Blessings and light!
Lucinda

Monday, October 1, 2012

Aubergines (and making things complicated)


I can't believe it was a year ago, I was already a month into my watercolor class! Our first homework assignment was to draw a piece a fruit or a vegetable, with light and shadow and a sense of three dimensionality.  I happened to have two eggplant that my dad had picked from their garden, so I went with those.

Once I got started, I realized I was making things more complicated than I really needed to. An apple would have been much simpler! Eggplant are shiny and reflective and I was doing not one but two of them! Why? To show off my "mad skills" at portraying the shiny skin? Prove something to myself? I don't know but I am glad I took the more challenging route. It was more interesting and I love going completely macro on details. That sort of says a lot about me. 

Yes, sometimes I do make things more complicated and challenging than they really need to be ... but often it's just more fun and interesting that way! At 43, why not embrace it? We all have quirks and perhaps we're just designed that way. So, right now, I am just going with it! I am, however, going simplify my life in certain areas, in places that will free me up, to really go for it in the places where I choose to challenge myself, and just revel in those places I like to make things complicated.

Not sure if any of that made sense outside of my own head, but there you have it!

Having said all that, there is a simplicity to this little drawing, don't you think?  ;)

Two Eggplant, graphite on paper 2011


Above all, challenge yourself.
You may well surprise yourself at what strengths you have,
what you can accomplish.
~Cecile Springer


I have been trying to get myself in the fall mood. Difficult when it's still in the 90s here, so I have been making a pin board on Pinterest of my favorite fall images and paintings ... trying to will the weather to cool off!! 

Music almost always helps me get into a season. It creates such a strong sense memory! 

I can't remember if I've shared this before but twenty-some years ago, living in San Diego, my dad came to visit me one fall. We went to Horton Plaza, where I worked (at The Gap), and we went into the Nature Company (remember those stores?) and they were playing this beautiful piano music by John Boswell. We each got cassette and I listened to it all that fall (in between listening to Pink Floyd, Cat Stevens and the Grateful Dead with my roommates.)

Anyway, it still sounds and feels like fall to me. Here is a song from that album, "The Painter." Hope you enjoy it.


Blessings and  light!
Have a beautiful week!

Oh! And I still get eggplant from my dad so any recipe ideas are welcome! :)

Friday, November 11, 2011

Gratitude and Breathing Deeply and Gently ...



Each moment you are alive is a gem.
You only need to breathe gently for
the miracles to be displayed.

Thich Nhat Hahn

Nasturtiums October 2011
Sanguine chalk on paper
Flower study for "home-work"



When we know how to listen deeply
and how to breathe deeply in mindfulness,
everything becomes
clear and deep.

Thich Naht Hanh

A HUGE Thank You to all the Veterans.
We are forever grateful!

And while on the subject of gratitude ... my sister Penny sent this to me.
It's so beautiful! If you have already seen it, its worth watching again!




Hope you all have a beautiful, amazing weekend!

Blessings and light!



Monday, October 24, 2011

Pumkin Patch, Sunflowers, Hay Rides and a Corn Dance! ~It's October!




"All the way to heaven is heaven."

~St. Catherine of Siena
1347-1380


Charcoal and sanguine on paper
October 2011



This is the Boccali's Pumpkin Patch in Ojai! The sunflowers were enormous this year!





My sister Penny and nephew Benjamin ...









The "Corn Dance"



Every moment lived fully
is a moment of transcendent alchemy,
of fires transforming dull metals
to dazzling gold.

~ Anonymous



Love a hay ride!


I wrote about a scarf in a recent post about Boulder. I was saying how I loved it but didn't buy it. My friend Evelyn read my post, called, and said "WHY NOT?!" Anyway, she told me I should call the store and see if they had any left, and that it would be my (early) birthday present! Sweet, huh? And my birthday isn't even until December! (I'm a Sag, you know.)

Well, it arrived and here it is!!! Isn't it magic?!


I have already worn it 5 times ...


Thanks Evelyn!!!!! I love it!

Hope you all have a magical, beautiful week!
Blessings and light!!!


Monday, October 17, 2011

October ~ Indian Summer

It was hot here last week. Really hot. Now the temperature seems to have settled and hints of autumn come in the late evening.

I have been a bit distracted lately and not keeping up as well as I should with my Italian studies. I keep vowing I'll get back to it but somehow I can't seem to get away from one distraction or another. (Like taking pictures of my desk and it's centerpiece altar of golden fall colors!)

We had an assignment to draw something from nature for my watercolor class which resulted in the sun flower at the bottom of this post. I would like to write more, but I have an audition out in Santa Monica this afternoon and I still haven't done my Italian homework! So, I will be back soon with more of my recent adventures and happy distractions!

My little little altar celebration of fall ...






How, but in custom and ceremony,
Are innocence and beauty born?
~W.B. Yeats









So many worlds,
so much to do
So little done,
such things to be.

~Alfred Lord Tennyson

Charcoal, chalk and red pencil on colored paper
October 2011



Blessings and light!
And I hope you are enjoying
some of the happy distractions of fall!


Tuesday, April 13, 2010

New Work

This piece is another in my series of new works. As I have said before, it has to do with the meanings of being a woman, what makes a woman and what lies beneath the surface. If it is not our female organs, what then do we imagine there in our symbolic places of creativity?

To see more from this series of "layered" pieces and what is behind it, click here.

The Nest 2010 Mixed Media, water color/colored pencil on drawing paper, acrylic ink on plastic film
Please click to enlarge

One is not born,

but rather becomes,

a woman.

~Simone de Beauvoir

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Yosemite Valley

Tomorrow is my once a month pastel workshop in Ojai and last month I didn't make it. I was hoping to have a whole host of work to show the teacher but I've only done 3 pastel pieces since then. Two I gave away for Christmas and this one below. It's from a photo I took on a trip to Yosemite with an old boyfriend, more than a decade ago. The relationship ended a month later but I am glad I got the photo!

I love Yosemite. It's one of my favorite places in California. When you are there, you completely get why Ansel Adams spent so much time there photographing it. It's a magical place that, along with it's beauty and majesty, holds an amazing energy. It's difficult to explain, but if you can get there ... get there.

Yosemite Valley pastel on paper 12/09


"It is all very beautiful and magical here -
a quality which cannot be described.
You have to live it and breath it,
Let the sun bake it into you."
~Ansel Adams

Friday, February 5, 2010

Sawadee!

Sawadee is the Thai version of "Aloha," or at least that is how I translate it! I really miss Thailand. The smiling people and beautiful temples, lovely silks and spices with colorful orchids everywhere ...

I lived in Bangkok for a short time with my family when I was a teenager and spent time there on and off for almost 5 years. What got me thinking about it was that I found one of my friends I met there on Facebook last week! Social networking can be a crazy time-sucker but when you are able to find an old friend (in Israel, no less!) it's pretty wonderful.

"A journey is best measured in friends,
rather than miles."
~Tim Cahill

Sepia Ink on paper

I took a photo of this man during my first extended stay in Bangkok. He was standing completely still in a huge crowd of people, eyes closed, as if he where meditating. I caught the moment in black and white with my old manual 1970s Minolta. Unfortunately the photo was a bit overexposed so I decided to do a pen and ink drawing of him. I actually love this drawing. I say "actually" because I don't often say that about my own work but I think this piece just brings up so many wonderful memories of a city and people I love.

"Once you have traveled,
the voyage never ends,
but is played out over and over again
in the quietest chambers.
The mind can never break off from the journey."
~Pat Conroy

Monday, December 7, 2009

Time and Sofia

This is Sofie at about four and a half.  Gorgeous, right?  And I hardly did her justice. She actually prefers to be smiling in portraits but I haven't drawn one of those and frankly I am not a fan of drawing or painting teeth so I avoid them altogether!  

As of yesterday, Sofie is now 8 years old! I can't believe it.  She is the daughter of Kristen, one of my oldest and dearest friends. I feel like it was only a couple of years ago when I held her as a tiny newborn baby, eyes like saucers, with her delicate little hands and tiny tulip mouth. Kids help you keep track of how fast time is moving.  Not having kids, I fall into the fantasy that I am still that young, single chick in my twenties living in Hollywood.  Then I see my friends' kids and the spell is broken ... but it's worth it.

Happy Belated Birthday Sofia!  Love you Sweetheart!  Auntie Lulu

Sofia 2006, graphite and white chalk on paper

A birthday is just the first day 
of another 365-day journey around the sun.  
Enjoy the trip.  
~Author Unknown