Category Archives: art

Jet Set

20151030_125759

20151030_125805

20151030_130024 (1)

In my attempt to bring travel into my life, I created this 8th grade art lesson.  Students selected famous buildings – the Eiffel Tower, the Taj Mahal, the White House….  Places all over the world.

20151030_125849

20151030_130011

20151030_125832

This was a materials-driven lesson.  Colored pencil on black Strathmore drawing paper with the addition of Sharpie metallic markers in silver, gold and/or bronze.

20151030_125905

20151030_125810

20151030_125824

20151030_125841

The strength in these works comes from the students’ commitment to creating their own styles and in addition, to utilizing consistency in that style.  I was looking for rhythm and texture here, as well as detail and composition.

20151030_125753

20151030_125954

20151030_125947

I am always inventing my own projects and the only problem-o in sharing them is that another local or otherwise art teacher might stumble across them here and decide to use the lessons with their students.  That’s flattering, not really a problem.  It only becomes so if the projects compete against one another at Scholastic Art Awards.  Judges are always looking for the unique.  Seeing a “lesson” is basically the kiss of death. Then the judges don’t see originality and I have to go back to the drawing board (ha, ha – because I am using it figuratively and literally) and come up with a new inventive project.

20151030_125939

20151030_125931

20151030_125816

But let’s face it – that is my strength.  I have ideas flying out of my butt.  Are you liking that pun?  Flying, get it?  The jet-setters do.

20151030_130016

20151030_130006

20151030_125959

20151030_125921

20151030_125858

20151030_125912

Cow Town

longhorn_36x19-L

The Chittenango Middle School 8th grade teachers take our students to visit SUNY Morrisville.  We’ve done it for several years now. There are four activities plus lunch in the dining hall (!!!) – to see the automotive dept., the dairy management farm, the equine science program and the aquaponics greenhouse.

connect_60x36-L

I’ve gone on this field trip three times and this was the first time I visited the cows.  There I met Assistant Professor Ashley Adams, who loves cow art!

confrontation_20x26-L

So this blog post is for her.  I want to share artwork by my bestie, Penny Santy.  Penny is a graphic artist during the day, fine artist by night.  You can find her website here.

tranquility_36x36-L

Penny has this wonderful series of cow paintings.  I am totally in love with them.  She uses oils and paints in a quaint studio space in the basement of her home in Eastwood, a subdivision in the city of Syracuse, NY.

DarkAndLight_36x36-L

I love the energy in her brush stroke and the juxtaposition of complementary colors used to create shadows.  Not just saying that because she is my friend.  I think Penny’s work would look great in the offices/buildings at the dairy science college!  They are large scale pieces – really breathtaking in person.  I especially love the buttery yellow one!

20151023_135448

20151023_135511

Students in my ninth period A day class created cow portraits in oil pastel on black paper.

20151023_135616

20151023_135459

We drew them on white paper, transferred them to the black Strathmore paper with graphite paper (magic) and painted out the lines with black acrylic paint.

20151023_135710

20151023_135603

I showed students how to build up the color with the oil pastel using a layering technique and encouraged them to create their own consistent style – up and down, diagonal, coloring in circles, etc.

20151023_135738

20151023_135705

I just love the way they turned out.  Each one is 16″ x 20″ – my favorite size for student work!  I am thinking of selecting a couple to enter into the Scholastic Art Awards competition, but I can’t decide which ones will be the most competitive.  I like them all.

20151023_135642

20151023_135731

20151023_135658

20151023_135556

OMG, I love cow art too! <3

Macabre, Meet My Friend Humor

20151104_175357-1

I’m not going to lie – Land of the Lost was my favorite TV show of the 1970s.  I watched it on Saturday mornings at around 10 or 11 am.  There were not that many episodes, so I am sure I watched re-runs of re-runs dozens of times until the shows were ingrained into my skull, which is not a bad thing, lol…right?  Loved the whole concept – it was the first time I had heard/learned the word paradox.  The show might have bad special effects by today’s standards, but I think it still resonates for me (of course, I have the series on DVD, duh). Each episode was written by the premiere Sci-Fi script writers of the day.  I mean, it was a great show.

20151104_183052-1

I also loved/still love Planet of the Apes!  OMG, again, the idea of a paradox.  In Land of the Lost, the only way they could escape the matrix was to have another them pop into it, thus continuing the cycle (paradox).  And if you watch all five POTA films, you discover that time travel causes the paradox and sets the whole ape takeover in motion (whoops, spoiler alert!).  Love that stuff.

20151104_184125-1

Lori Nix likes it too.  She’s a few years younger than me and she’s from the mid-west (Kansas), and so her formative years created for her a fascination with destruction of civilization as we know it.  Pair those two TV/film phenomena with Towering Inferno, Logan’s Run and life in tornado alley and you will come to understand this artist’s obsession with the comedy of demise.

20151104_184043-1

Once in 1993, I borrowed my mom’s car and spent the night at a friend’s house.  It was about a month before the Blizzard of ’93 so it was a brutal winter.  In my defense, my car’s door was frozen open, so the only way I could drive it is if I drove with my left hand and held the door shut with my right.  Anyhow, I got blamed for my father’s car accident because he had to drive Mom to work the next day because I had her car. (It was a minor fender bender).

20151104_184227-1

Nix has a similar story only hers is really more the stuff of legend.  Her mom dropped her off at a movie theater the night of a horrendous tornado that just missed her mother whose car had just pulled into their driveway. She rolled down the windows and ducked for her life, like a character in a horror film, just as the tornado passed over her.  That storm managed to take out every other house on their street.  Lori Nix’s father blamed her for nearly killing her mother.  It’s like we lived in a parallel universe!

20151104_185308-1

And yet, that’s where the similarities end.  I am happy go-lucky me who never watches the news, crime shows or that lot, and steers clear of negative circumstances.  Nix dwells on the eery, macabre damage and destruction of standing at the peripheries of doom, but takes it all  in stride with her immensely dark humor.

20151104_184315-1

NIx and her partner work in tandem, both creating these especially detailed little vignettes – of cars plunging in the drink, of apocalyptic subway cars and laundrymats, of  beautiful places turned yucky-yucky.

20151104_183407-1

This work is painstakingly slow, intimate and fun, similar to creating little puppet theaters.  Apparently, their home in Brooklyn is a bit of a construction site with two cats finding their way into the “environments”.  These were my favorite pictures in her slide show and I have to say, they made me enjoy her talk all the more.

20151104_190030-1

The work is whimsical and silly and yet there is a seriousness to the dedication with which they create the art.  I love that commitment! She is doing a two-week residency at Golden Artist Colors, Inc. in New Berlin, NY, and that’s where I met her.

20151104_180825-1

Nix photographs her vignettes using an 8″ x 10″ camera and these photos take days – to get the lighting just right and to remove any excess cat hair caught in the crossfire.

20151104_184549-1 (1)

The photographs are quite large – 30″ x 40″ and bigger, and have been exhibited all over the nation and the world – Italy, Germany, Australia, and Canada!

Check out her website here.