6.22.2007

etsy and me

I've decided to set up an etsy shop to sell some of my smaller pieces. I'm hearing good things about it, so I'm giving it a try. As of today, you can find it here.
It includes some watercolor pieces, too. And soon I will add other things, including pieces I've shown on this blog. Many of those pieces are for sale, if you're interested, come to my website and hit the 'contact the artist' button.

Here's a sample of something I just listed: (click here to see)

The marketplace for art, at least here in the Midwest, seems to be in flux, so I'm trying what I can. I'm not doing any art fairs this year, I'm trying to get into more galleries, keeping my website current, and now this. All I know for sure is that the work won't sell sitting in my closet.

6.20.2007

website update

I've been busy updating my website, adding more work to it. Some of it is new, like this:

But most of it is older stuff that I just hadn't gotten around to adding--the slow part is getting them photographed.

But now that most of the pieces I want to have are on there, I can start doing the detail stuff, like adding 'next' and 'previous' so you can page through the gallery...check it out by clicking here.



6.06.2007

lazertran continued

Well, I got up my nerve and started working with the 'good' image transfers. I put them on a nice, heavy silk. They came out a little less bright, but that was okay. I picked out three that seemed to go together--closeups of hedge apples that I had played with in Photoshop Elements. I put fusing on the back, decided they would make a nice set of pieces, and started to think about backgrounds. Microwave silk dyeing came to the rescue, I used dark brown and then an acid green to produce a mottled background.

Recently I found some square gallery wrapped artist canvases at WalMart on clearance. At this point, I had pretty much decided to go for a triptych, with each third mounted on a canvas whose edges I had painted to coordinate.

So I cut a piece of the background to size, and started playing. I quickly realized that I wanted to cut into the transfers, a scary moment. But I can always make more. I cut out the hedge apple, then cut some freehand shapes from the remaining part of the picture. Here is the result of the first one:


In some ways I liked it better without the quilting, but it needed the structure to hang correctly. The edges are heat singed to prevent raveling.

The next one continues the theme, but changes it some:




I'm working with the notion of earth being the only planet we've got, that all life that we know about springs from it, and that the hedge apple is a metaphor for that whole idea. So here, the stringy things are either going into the sphere or coming out, depending on my frame of mind.

The third part of the triptych continues the theme, with another variation:



The sphere is farther away, and there is more negative space.

Now the payoff, the three of them together:



I like the way this piece is coming together. The strings become more organized as you look up, the apple is bigger. Now all I have to do is paint the canvases and mount the pieces to them. And post them to my website. And maybe enter them in some shows...

So lazertran does have its uses. I still probably won't buy more right now, because of the difficulty of borrowing a laser printer...but they do have an inkjet version now...