BLOG

Keep up with the latest art and adventures from Rene Shoemaker Art!

Accepted into a Juried exhibit!

Two silk paintings of mine have been chosen to be in the OCAF 17th Juried Exhibition this year! You may recognize this design of Port Vendres - I’ve done two versions of this location.

This one is on silk broadcloth which is about the weight of painter’s canvas. The silk broadcloth gets smooth and soft with washing, and the dyes lay down on the silk like some watercolors do on heavy paper - you can see the brush strokes, and the way the dye is taken up by the silk quite nicely. The painterly effect here is much different than what happens when dyeing lighter silks.

The church was a wonderful discovery in a French town, Port Vendres, on the Mediterranean coast near the border with Spain. Notre Dame de Bonne Nouvelle -”Our Lady of Good News” is a fitting name for a late 19th century church whose town is a fishing and cargo port. I can imagine the women of the village awaiting the return of their loved ones from the sea and being so glad of their safe return that they prayed to  Notre Dame de Bonne Nouvelle. The church faces the harbor, and I loved the idea of this amazing building inviting people to come in - whether it be by foot, by bike, by auto, or by boat.

Teal City, the second piece that was juried in, is a fanciful place where color rules over order. I see this city bordering, again, on the waterfront, as Manhattan, NY or Sydney, Australia does. The colors are absolutely fantastic together, the material is the same heavy silk broadcloth. While Port Vendres is on the large size, at 29”x 26”, Teal City is smaller and intimate, at 4” x 9”. Both pieces are framed in a beautiful blonde wood frame, and with Teal City, the placement of the silk painting on the mat board within the frame is what inspired me to call it a ‘city’. It floats a little higher than the horizon line, giving me the impression that it is bordering on a body of water. It is an abstract design, totally about the relationship of the colors and shapes, but isn’t it true that all abstract art, when seen, is “read” by the viewer into their own understanding of what it is?

What do you see in “Teal City?”

Come by the OCAF gallery anytime to see the exhibit. The gallery is open 10-4 Tuesday-Saturday. The reception is this Friday night, April 6th, from 6-8 pm! I would love to see you there, and the collection of work displayed by all the artists will be very strong, I am sure. OCAF consistently attracts a great variety of local and national artists.

What a fun evening event it would be to go to with a friend!

Southworks: 17th Annual National Juried Art Exhibition April 6 through May 11, 2012                   Oconee Cutlural Arts Foundation            Reception: April 6, 6-8 pm                        Watkinsville, Ga Free & open to the public                          706.769.4565

Spring into New Ideas


Today is the first day of Spring. I love it!

Once again, it is a time for re-evaluation. I think I like to re-evaluate more than I like to work.

Oh well, realizing that is part of the process!

It’s a good thing I write (to you, to my journal, to my studio clip-board) so that I can keep some semblance of continuity to my moods and work cycles. Those work cycles not only ebb and flow throughout the day and the week, but by the month and year. We are having an early spring here, and it is definitely making me feel lighter and more free. I have big ideas, and a big art project I have been “thinking about” for the past 4 months - and this week has moved that project out of my head and into reality! I’m building something huge - literally - and I can’t wait to share it with you!

Over the winter, I became obsessed with the “business” of my art life (new website, blog, business cards, etc). Then it came to a point where I realized I really just want to create artwork: play with colors and lines, explore new ideas and media. I’ve been spending more time in the studio than at the computer, hanging out with the family, and entering juried art shows while applying for art scholarships. In the meantime, the wisteria has bloomed, and I do believe that a wisteria bloom is one of the most perfect things on this earth. 

Have I mentioned that I love to create? 

Spring has sprung. Tell me, how do you keep business work from taking over your creative time? What new ideas, sources of inspiration, and creative ideas do you have in your head you would like to share? What is it that you love to create?

          

Spotting my scarves on the street

I saw a scarf I designed and created walking by recently when I attended the opening ceremony of the new Special Collections Building on the University of Georgia campus. I asked the wearer, the former mayor of Athens, GA, Heidi Davison, if I could take her photo. “Yes”, she replied, and began re-arranging the scarf. It was so much fun to document her process of wearing the scarf!

While at the event, I found myself looking around and admiring some of the outfits I was seeing on the ladies there. I saw many interesting scarves, yet I was very happy that I could say: The former Athens-Clarke County Mayor Heidi Davison is wearing one of my scarves!

Beginning Silk Painting Workshop

This last Saturday I led a Beginning Silk Painting class at Loft Art Supply in Athens, Ga. It was tremendous fun and it was so exciting to see how the 6 participants approached the design process and to see how their completed designs turned out. I was so worried that our three-hour time frame was not going to be long enough (I had visions of people trundling home with half-finished silks), but everyone finished their paintings -and they were all very beautiful! Here is a photo essay of the experience:

1) The supply table set up.

2) Describing the process.

3) Beginning to design.

4) Consulting on design ideas.

5) Rene describes the process of drawing with resist to keep the colors from mixing together.

6) Transferred design on silk.

7) Amy applying the resist for her design.

8) Mary begins to paint with dye.

9) Jon’s color choice matches his shirt!

10) Rene and Amitabh discuss creating colors.

11) Ken decides on purple.

12) Alice brought flowers for inspiration.

13) Jon’s koi in process.

14) Amitabh’s architecture - almost finished.

15) Mary is proud of her finished silk!

16) Amitabh’s finished design.

17) Amy’s finished squares. She may color the background - we’ll have to wait to see!

18) Alice’s flower scarf - complete!

19) Ken’s purple design - finished!

20) Jon’s koi is ready to swim away!

Now the artists will take their stretched silk home and set the dye the next day. The colors will be even more vibrant once the silks are washed and off the frames.

Wouldn’t you like to come paint silk, too?