8 Dec 2009
Part 1 of many.
I have always wanted to be an artist.
I most definitely have the passion and the patience for it. But the environment I grew up in was different. I was expected to read my academic books and when I got bored, I had a choice of minding my own business without bothering the adults or browse through the college level books that were crammed in my house.
After I was born my father did his M.Phil and then his Ph.D in organic chemistry. This with a full time job as chemistry professor. The man would happily skip to college to do another degree in this ripe age of 64. For heavens sake, he did his M.Ed after he finished his Ph.D because he was going in to withdrawal. Last phone call, I became aware that he enrolled for Tamil Vedham class on Sundays because he is bored and misses learning. *Rolling eyes*
All this meant that my amma had extra responsibility at home. Oh! add two of my amma’s sisters to the equation. Yes, my two chithis were staying with us and went to school. When I was born the older chithi was 15 years old and the younger one was 13. Later the older one stayed with us and did her med school and the younger one did her engineering. Plus there were the usual obligations for my amma from both her mother’s side and in-laws side. So this translated to more expenses, lesser money, even more work for amma. So unless I was drawing something on my record notebook or for my school assignments, it was highly frowned upon.
But I wouldn’t exactly call it an environment devoid of art. My amma was an expert in kolam, embroidery, basket weaving, stitching and an occasional pencil sketching. When I say kolam it is not the small and simple apartment kolams. I am talking the 4 to 5 feet diameter free hand kolams, with symmetry. May be it was because my amma has been doing all this since she was six or seven, it had already become a daily chore and may be she just wanted to get it over with and move on to the next in her agenda. Or may be because my amma being the oldest daughter, she had been the ‘teacher’ for her four siblings. Though I was her first biological child, I was her last baby, so may be she thought she had time. Plus amma comes from the belief, ‘Kan parthu kai seiyanum’ which translates to you must look at how it is done and start doing it. Both my chithis studied ALL the time, but when they did an occasional art like painting a piece of pottery or drew something, they were awesome. Perfect work, absolute symmetry, great perspective…all this without any kind of practice.
So I must say that I kind of wanted to do art. Though I had owned only a couple of sets of sketch pens, one set of water colors and a few color pencils all through my childhood, I did it in a small way I could. The pictures in my record note books were outsanding. Then there was this phase in college where I was head over heels in to making my own greeting cards. But they were mostly cutesy stuff. So I wanted some one to hold my hands to do serious art.
I took art lessons when I was 23. My first formal exposure being water colors. At the time I took the class, I don’t think it went well at all. I found it so very hard to control the medium. I could follow the demo to some extent, but observational drawing/painting and drawing from memory were Greek and Latin. Perspective left me perplexed. Then there was capturing how the light falls, depth, color mixing, technique, layering, form and movement. I would recreate at home some of the techniques such as masking, texturing, sponging but from my experiments I found I had three limitations.
-I couldn’t bring out the depth.
-I was too careful with the paint. Every time I squeezed out paint, I found something holding me back. “Got to be careful, do not waste” mantra kept ringing again and again in my head. “What is wrong with not wasting?” one might ask, I will come back to it later.
-I was always copying. I would like a painting or a photograph and would want to recreate it.
Around this time, I saw Bob Ross on TV and I was dumbfounded. He made it look like a piece of cake and I believed that acrylics were my destiny. Unfortunately it was a very short-lived experience. I needed step-by-step guiding and the teachers I had were amazing artists but poor teachers. What seemed basic to them was a giant step for me and the gap couldn’t be bridged at all. So I stopped acrylics in 12 weeks.
Oh I must mention the one stroke painting phase! Inspired by Donna Dewberry, I painted everything in the house. Flower pots, plates, lazy susan, wood storage boxes, serving trays…. 😀
Next in line was oils and I must say that I loved it. Th teacher was amazing. All along I had worked on a white canvas, layering it with dark colors. But this time the teacher started me off with a black canvas and helped me bring out the light with every step. The fact that I could finish a portrait was a big deal for me. I was able to come up with a finished product that had depth, but I still had the other two limitations. This was around the time I was having my miscarriages and some old wife tale about heavy metals in oils and smelling turpentine fumes put a complete stop to any further development.
For a long time I had had my eyes on tanjore paintings. So I took a workshop and loved it. Again I must say that I had a wonderful teacher. I have made four tanjore paintings so far. One of which is hanging in my house and the other three are gifts. Lovely hobby, but expensive, both in terms of time and material.
Given my limitations and time restrictions I think my art experiments will be postponed for another 10 or so years. I am not giving up, because I enjoy the process of creating something even if it is a copy, but because I simply do not have the bandwidth for classes and practice. So I was clearing my art storage boxes in the garage, salvaging some stuff for the girls to use. All this got me thinking…..
What is art? How do I define MY art? How do I teach my children to find THEIR art?
Technorati Tags: art, art for young children, art for adults, my experiments with art
17 Responses for "My Experiments With Art"
Love the Ganesha watercolor ones! I am going to reuse those ideas, if I may! I used to do a lot of oil and charcoal, though water is my absolute favorite medium- which I unfortunately suck at! Awesome collection, utbt. Thanks for sharing.
UTBT SAYS: As a person who reused some kind of greeting card or wedding invitation picture, how can I say no. Please do reuse. For the black and white Ganesha with kolam border, I used white out to block the white, colored the rest and removed the white out using rubber cement, FYI.
Lovely!
And 🙂 @ the engineering chitti’s story! Who knows, maybe you and I have already met!
UTBT SAYS: Chox that I am sure of. We would have definitely seen each other at some point of time in the beautiful IIT-M.
That tanjore painting about 2 brothers is something I have never seen… its too good!
I too am good at copying stuff and feel that I can never be a real artist coz I lack imagination… But, after seeing your collection, I realize that execution is what counts. Nice set utbt..
UTBT SAYS: Thanks Reva. I feel the same about me being a real artist and the lack of imagination.
Excellent … the last time I drew something that won appreciation was in 2nd standard.
UTBT SAYS: Thanks CA.
Inspiring UTBT. So many hidden talents under your belt..simply superb. I loved the tanjore one and the various ganesha’s. How do you find time…seriously…I know they aren’t recent, even if it was 5 years ago…
UTBT SAYS: Thanks Sole. I love the Tanjore painting too. All the paintings were made between 2000 – 2003. Now the supplies are sleeping in boxes.
utbt.. you AMAZE me.. how is it possible for someone to be good in whatever they try.. i am jealous NOW..
saw your reply to choxbox.. so you studied in IIT-M.. that was a dream college for me.. I am so happy that I know someone who has studied there
UTBT SAYS: Yeah right, I went to IIT-M! They wouldn’t even let me park my bicycle there.
My last chithi did her Ph.D in IIT-M and I used to visit her often.
I knew you paint well but only now I got to actually see your work. 🙂 I just loved the Koi, old mill by waterfall, coastline, SFO downtown and tanjore paintaing!! awesome work! 🙂
UTBT SAYS: Thanks San.
A teacher, artist, engg, some one with their head screwed right….what other avatars do u hold? Out with it woman. Loved almost all ur paintings! Keep up the work…don’t wait…take some time now and then and do it.
UTBT SAYS: Thanks Shobana.
Time…. *sigh*
I would be in a happy place when I am done with the damned degree. It is like a mirage, looks so close, but refuses to come in to my hands. Arnold Schwarzenegger isn’t helping either.
Another talent! Wonderful paintings. All of them deserve to be framed and displayed. Storing them in boxes is a crime 🙂
UTBT SAYS: Thanks Balaji. You are very kind.
Your work is just stunning to look at. I have some very serious respect for anyone who can put paints to paper and make it look like real life.
Looking forward to your art and kids series. Its been on my mind a lot. How to continue to nuture art in the kids. I feel like I am past the stage where I can fruitfully engage WInkie in art, and like its time he could use some professional lessons. Maybe your post will throw some light on that…
UTBT SAYS: 6 ish right. I am planning on writing, but God knows when I will get to it. So ping me if you have questions. May be the questions will help me think.
Okay…exams must be over. Out with the next post!
UTBT SAYS:
Inspired by ‘If you give a mouse a cookie’ by Laura Numeroff:
If I write a post, I need to write about the the different stages.
If I write about the stages, I need to support it with documented articles.
If I quote articles, I need to show visual examples.
If I need to show visual examples, I need to get samples from Chula and Mieja’s art work.
If I need to get sample from C and M’s art work, need to sort and organize them.
Just kidding 🙂 I am looking to post the next part on Monday. I am going in that pile of art work on Sat after I get the end-of-school-gift-giving-phenomenon out of the way.
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Lovely, lovely, UTBT! Bob Ross and Donna Dewberry on PBS were my inspiration too!! Isn’t One-Stroke Painting such a clever idea for stunning results?! I knew oils were out for me after seeing Bob Ross – there is no way one can do that without some magical talent:)
Loved the fish in your slideshow… in fact, all of them!
And, your 2 chithis growing up with you – same here – my mom’s 2 youngest sisters grew up with us 🙂 And, my mom is a chem teacher – doing her M,Sc and M.Ed after I was born!!
UTBT SAYS: Donna Dewberry and Bob Ross are mesmerizing. The chithis and parent getting a degree is a surprising coincidence.
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