Sunday, August 16, 2015

Home Stretch!

Wow, 5 days left until I go back to school - which translates to 4 main work days and one packing day.  I'm trying to plan and sketch one of my last pieces of the summer which was inspired by the challenge #drawthisagain .  I plan to redo my glass squirrel picture again for the third time since 2012.  Let's hope I finish in time!

I'm also trying my best to write up and film the video on subtraction I've been working on and I also promised Lady Avolate (a good friend of mine) that I would try to do a dance video of Last of the Wilds by Nightwish.  While I don't have the editing tools, space or time alone to do it at home, I have already cut the song and am thinking of steps and choreography, so we'll see when that gets done.

Also, just to give you an idea of my progress the last few years, here are my two glass squirrel oil pastel pictures:


The first is from the summer of 2012, right before my senior year of high school and AP Art.

The second is from March of 2015.  It was made during my junior year of college for my Thematic Drawing class.  It was the first drawing I did in oil pastel and also one of the last since the professor hated oil pastels.  She also hated color which explains the sad lack of color.

My next picture (the one I'm working on this week) will also be in oil pastel and will thankfully be in color.  Getting started on it right now! Woohoo!

Sunday, August 9, 2015

And Another One Done!


Woohoo! Just finished this piece a couple of minutes ago.  This piece looked hideous for so long that I'm actually excited it came out looking a little less ugly.  I definitely have trouble following through with my artwork and committing to ideas, so this was a practice of that more than anything else.  I created the base picture with all forms created and shaded with oil pastel - like I would do for any normal artwork of mine - except I left the figure and background lighter than usual.  Instead, I went over the whole thing with black charcoal in the darker areas to give it that extra layer of a smoky, rich black.  I only have 12 more days until I go back to school, so I'm trying to finish up as much as possible and straighten out my BFA ideas before classes begin.  

This piece is based on some Hermione/Lupin fanfiction (don't judge) I stumbled across where she ends up being bitten by a werewolf.  I am in love with the story and it made me start to research more about werewolf art and how artists depict the transformation.  Not to mention, I also just did another 2 hour "photoshoot" session where I just do random poses with random lighting and props and see what pictures inspire me.  I just completed another fabric "photoshoot" which only lasted for an hour since I was getting frustrated by the end, but I got a lot of creepy, twisted forms out of it, so I can't wait to start drawing them.  

I also just saw my new dorm room today and am freaking out since it is half the space I had the last 2 years.  I don't know where I'm going to store all of my at supplies since the desk is just a small board attached to the foot board of my bed.  There is no storage space and I haven't even begun to think where I can work in this tiny space that I will be sharing with a girl who is not an art major.  Needless to say, my anxiety is through the roof.  

Any video suggestions you might have for my artist channel can be left in the comments below, on my facebook page, or my youtube channel.  I am trying to at least do one or two more videos before college starts - but if I get more suggestions, I'll do more.  So far, I have the requested sgraffito video planned and I thought I might do one on what art supplies I'm taking with me to college.  Also, I have another piece (sgraffito) nearly done, so I will post that and show how I made it in my tutorial video.  

Monday, August 3, 2015

New Video!


Hi guys, just posted my new ART That video on my charcoal and oil pastel work.  Next up is a video someone in the comments asked me to make on sgraffito with oil pastels, so now I just have to decide what piece I'll be making for that video.  As always, I would love to hear from you - any comments, concerns, questions, suggestions, etc.  I only have a few weeks left before I go back to college, so I want to get as much done as possible before then.

I want to map out some of my BFA pictures and my theme a LOT more.  I have a huge list of books I want to read and some that also relate to my theme.  I also want to get ALL reference pictures I could ever want or imagine done while I'm at home since I won't be in a room with an art major this year and I will have no real personal space or time to myself.  And finally, I want to share as much as I can here and on Facebook and my Youtube page.  I'm reading a book called "Show Your Work!" by Austin Kleon and I would DEFINITELY recommend it!  It provides me with motivation and makes me want to work and share and build a community and network of artists.  Anyway, that's enough of my rambling for the night.  Good night everyone!

Saturday, August 1, 2015

My Religious Journey (Warning - Long and Sad)

Hi guys!  Hope you are all doing well.  If you have checked out my Youtube page, I have mentioned that I was going to explain the meaning of the theme of my BFA theme, which will be my religious experiences.

Short Disclaimer: I do not mean to offend, these opinions are mine and are based on personal experiences.  I also still identify as Catholic, still go to church and still believe.  I am not anti-Catholic or anti-church as much as I believe reforms are necessary.

Ok, with that being said, this is my story:

When I was little, I got all the normal sacraments, went to religious ed every week and church every Sunday.  However, I went to a small church because it was close by and as a result, we had less than qualified religious ed teachers.  My first teacher was a teenager with a face full of piercings who only read from the textbook without explaining anything.  She left in the middle of the year due to tongue piercing infection.

My next teacher was a baseball coach who just talked about sports with us, so I didn't learn anything with him.  Then I had an amazing teacher named Mrs. Judson.  She actually taught us and a the end of the year, she sewed a stuffed teddy bear for everyone in the class.  I didn't want the year to end when I had her.  But sadly, it did, and the next year I was forced to take a class with a man who spoke of nothing but video games and how they were all leading us to sin.  Occasionally we would watch a movie in the class on religion and religious education, but those were few and far between.

My mother finally got fed up with this long line of ineffective teachers and told our parish that we were going to relocate to another church.  The lady that ran the religious ed program said that that was fine, but we would never be allowed back into their program again.  She even said that in front of ME and MY LITTLE BROTHER.  Because of this, I always felt like I was "kicked out" of this first church and that I was "unwelcome there" and I still feel that when I occasionally go there to this day.

From there, we went to our second parish, which was a larger community in the most beautiful church you could ever imagine.  We got involved in the church's religious ed summer camp which took the place of a year of religious education.  After being in the program for two amazing years, I was able to become a camp counselor and was assigned to a class of kindergarteners.

It was by far, the most rewarding experience of my life.  I found that I loved teaching and working with kids and it is because of this experience that I decided to be an art teacher.  As I worked in the camp, I also felt my faith being restored.  I felt closer to God and I just felt WHOLE.  I loved my kids and I stayed with them as they moved up to first, second and third grade before being placed with another set of first graders my final year.  During this time, I made so many friends, I matured, and I also crushed on the RIGHT type of guy for the first time.  As I worked my way up the ladder, I was given more responsibilities and, after telling the woman in charge of my desire to be a teacher, she made me a co-teacher for a first grade class.

Honestly, I never was a super religious person and no one in my family was either.  But for the first time, I WANTED to go to church.  It was a place to see my kids and connect with people in the community.  I felt like a part of something bigger and I knew that there were people I could always turn to if I needed help.  Doing this camp was the ONE thing I looked forward to every summer, even more than vacations!

After my graduation from high school, I wasn't worried about quitting the camp.  Many teens came back from college to volunteer there over the summer and I wasn't going to be the exception.  The woman in charge even offered me a position as a full time teacher for one of the younger grades!  Everything looked like it was going to be fine but sadly, camp never happened that year.

While I was away at school, we had a new priest come in from the city.  He immediately got rid of the religious ed program and summer camp, saying that it wasn't a recognized or acceptable way of teaching in the eyes of the church.  We showed him letters of support from nuns who loved the program, but he ignored us.  He then got rid of the altar servers, saying that they were disrupting him and the ones that weren't "fired" quit.  I couldn't believe that altar servers - just CHILDREN were being fired from their roles at mass.  Next, the priest stated being difficult with our choir and musicians - locking up the instruments so they couldn't practice and treating them like criminals who wanted to steal the instruments.  They didn't last long either.  The musicians quit first, followed by the singers and finally, the children's choir was disbanded.

After that, he seemed to take his anger out on the other priests in the church.  Our priest from Africa, (amazing man, couldn't say enough about him) was given an inferior role in the church, rarely saying mass and performing tasks like taking out the trash.  You could see the sadness in his eyes every time you went to church and he did speak to some of us about it.  Eventually, he too left us and was reassigned to another church hours away.

The other priest there was also highly respected and had worked at our parish for many years.  Somehow, a spot on his record came up after decades of silence.  He apparently had a relationship with an underage boy that was made known when it had happened and had been swept under the rug.  He was removed from the church and we don't know what happened to him.

Then the new priest, with all others gone, started firing everyone.  Secretaries that worked in the church offices, maintenance workers, even an old gardener who had worked there for years.  All were fired.  He even fired the two women who coordinated the entire religious ed program and they were escorted out by police.  As if two highly respected old women would do anything violent to harm a priest!  He then replaced all the staff with new people - hiring organists who couldn't play, teachers with no certification or experience, and replacing the altar servers with the children of his supporters.

Suddenly, my church had turned into a battle ground where everyone was taking sides.  People were turning against one another and the people who sat next to us in church, though one friends, shunned us for our support of the religious ed women.  Almost overnight the priest had also gained a powerful ally in the mayor of the city. The mayor now frequented the church, spoke at mass, provided funding, and even was responsible for the police escort.

In this incredibly hostile environment, people stopped taking their children to church.  One by one I saw my kids leave me until there were none left at all.  We, the opposing team, created a facebook page and an email account, emailing everyone we could possibly find from the parish.  We planned meetings and I was shocked when my normally shy mother agreed to go with me.  When I walked into that first meeting after a month or two of an empty church, I felt like I was home again.  I saw some of my kids, I saw so many parents I recognized, the musicians, the chior, the ushers - everyone was there.  We spoke of what we knew - separating rumors from truth -  and tried to find a way to bring the parish back together.  We wrote so many letters to anyone who would listen.  We called the archdiocese of NY and when they told us all to stop calling, we started emailing them and sending letters.  We sent letters to anyone with power or influence in the church that we could think of and one girl even sent a long message to the Pope imploring him for help.  Still, we heard nothing.

Finally, we had to act.  There was a chance the church would be closing and combining with another nearby parish because our funding was so low (no one was going to church).  We could not let the church we called home for so many years get destroyed.  In one last - ditch effort, we made our final stand.  We all attended church one Sunday morning and everyone was told to wear blue in honor of our most immaculate mother Mary.  All of the counselors and teachers wore their camp staff shirts with a picture of the church on the back that said "Celebrating 100 years".  We emailed people who had long ago given up hope and had moved on to other churches and begged them to come.

When I arrived at the church that day, I couldn't believe my eyes.  In front of me was a massive sea of blue.  All of my friends and kids and the community I had grown so close to had come back.  I felt powerful again and I felt that I BELONGED.  After weeks of counting only 20 people at mass, that day we counted 200+ and more people were expected to show up after mass to join us.  After weeks of no one singing and no joy in the parish, we sang to our hearts content.  After mass, we went outside to a place where we were legally able to peacefully demonstrate.  We held signs that said OLMC Pray For Us and we all did a decade of the rosary.  Afterwards, we sang.  We sang for an hour or so and it was amazing.  My kids came back to say high to me and they all sang with us as well.  As the mass emptied out, the priest's supporters became very angry.  One man in particular yelled at us as we were saying our hail mary's and cursed at us in front of all the kids.  Cops were called, but they just watched on since we were doing nothing illegal.  We invited news people to tell our story and broadcast the even and we tried so hard to get the event out there - not for the publicity but because we thought that it might get the archbishop to LISTEN to us.

Instead, nothing happened.

Everyone found different churches,the choir leader moved thousands of miles away, and it was like it never happened.  Everytime I go to church now, I am constantly reminded of what we used to have.  I remember how it was in the first pew from the right that I learned one of my kids was partially deaf and it was in the pew behind him that I comforted his classmate when her mother left her for the first time.  It was six rows back in the middle row that I sat next to some of my favorite kids during the end of camp closing mass and it was after mass that we all had a big group hug.  I remember the last year of camp when I was in the center left row, disappointed that I didn't get placed with my kids again until I found out that I was the counselor to many of their younger siblings.  It was in the back of the church during a class on stained glass biblical stories that I stayed in the back with one of my campers when he was feeling sick and was in the third row from the back when I watched him and his classmates receive their first Communion.  I remember the sleepless nights I spent making pictures of all my kids' favorite animals and I remember the year I got a drawing back in return from one of my campers.

In the now-closed religious ed building opposite the church, I remember racing counselors up the stairs to get the campers' supplies at the end of the day and I remember fooling around with them whenever we had a break.  Outside a classroom on the second floor I taught my girl the Hail Mary (since she was ahead of the other students) and the following year I comforted a girl outside the next door as she cried from homesickness.  I was the first one singing and dancing during music class, the one who would get you any art supplies you could dream of during art class, and at lunchtime I was Super Woman, opening any water bottles and stubborn chip bags.  I helped set the camp up, painting backdrops and decorating the gym and I was one of the last ones leaving on the last day.

Now church is just a grim reminder of what once was.  I still don't feel welcome in my own parish and even though everyone is home from college, no one has come back to the church.  I hear that other people are thriving at other parishes, but I just can't move on.  Mount Carmel was my HOME and I can't believe that in a place I once felt such joy and wholeness, I now feel nothing at all.  Other parishes just don't cut it.  Though it is a depressing sight now, I still have the memories every time I step through those doors.  Though make me sad, I can't let them go, can't forget - because that would mean forgetting that community and most importantly, forgetting my kids.

More than anything, I pray that they will be able to move on and forget.  I pray that they were all saved from that priests sexist and mean spirited actions and words and I hope that this doesn't shatter their faith like it has for me.  I'm still a practicing Catholic and I still believe, but these events have left a lasting scar on my soul.

I no longer sing in church, I feel guilty because I have doubt in the structure of the system of churches and its power.  I feel like I don't belong in Christian or Catholic groups on campus because I consder my personal faith as inferior to their own.  I just don't know how to worship anymore or be so closely connected with God.

It has been over three years since my last confession and all I want is to be able to go to camp next week like I always did all those years ago.

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

ART That - New Youtube Series

Hey everyone!  Check out my new Youtube video:


It's on Artist's Block and Motivation and hopefully it's less awkward than my last video.  I'm thinking of making my ART That videos into a series.  If anyone has any topics they want me to cover put it in the comment section below.  My next video will be a quick one just describing my charcoal experiments with some progress pictures.  I'm almost done creating it, I just have to do the voiceover, which I should be able to complete today.  I don't know when I will be able to upload it since this last one took 3 hours to upload.  I might just have to wait until I get faster Internet speeds, which should happen in the next few days.

Friday, July 17, 2015

Charcoal Experiment #2


For the second day in a row I created another charcoal oil pastel piece.  (I apologize for not posting my religious theme story like I promised in my last post, but it's 2 am and this was easier to cover before bed.)

This time, I continued with the whole fabric thing I have going on at the moment.  Funny enough, I'm still referencing and being inspired by pictures I took 2 year ago at college of my roommate with my bed sheet over her.  I'm so glad I organize my reference pictures by year and subject so I can easily access them.

This time, to further experiment, I tried to apply the charcoal to a base layer of Portfolio series water soluble oil pastels instead of my usual Mungyo Gallery soft oil pastels.  The reason for this being that the Portfolio pastels are incredibly cheap and I have tons of boxes of them.  Therefore, I love to use them when I work on huge projects, like when my professors tell me to do 3 feet x 4 feet projects (which actually happens quite often).  My Mungyo pastels are far to precious to waste like that, so I sacrifice a little bit of quality on my larger works so I can save money (college student budget).

This time, my piece turned out quite well with no noticeable changes as far as the charcoal sticking and blending are concerned.  This piece is 5.5"x 8.5" and was created on Strathmore Sketch paper (my favorite kind of all-purpose sketch books).

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Experimentation and a Possible Theme




So this week I've been thinking about my strengths and some possible theme ideas for my BFA.  Originally my theme was impermanence, which I then narrowed down to my religious experiences.

I went back and looked at all my old artwork and found that the pieces I was most proud of were from two years ago during my foundations art year.  Those pieces were drawn mostly from life with some intense shadows and dramatic light sources.  I also found I love the methodical process of drawing fabric.

Though it wasn't my original idea to use religion and fabric together, now I find myself wanting to find a way to fit them together.  I promise the next post will go into my whole experiences with my church, but for length purposes, I thought it would be better to separate the posts.

I also want to say that I am in no way anti-Catholic or atheist or anti-church.  I still identify as a Roman Catholic and go to church regularly.  I've just had some bad experiences with corruption in the church that have made me struggle with my faith.

Now onto what I've been working on today.  I love drawing fabric, but find it's easiest to draw with pencil and charcoal.  The only problem is that I despise charcoal since it can just be wiped away in an instant (done it before by accident) and I hate breathing it in and getting it everywhere.  But now, I think I've found the perfect solution for me.

 My main medium is oil pastel, so I did one layer of pastels, blending them in with my fingers and I had a slight gradient to them to match the lighting of my reference picture.

From there, I did a separate drawing of the same figure on a piece of paper (the same size) mapping out the lights and darks of the piece.

 I then cut of the dark forms with my box cutter (since my xacto knife is mysteriously missing) and cut out the background as well since that too is dark.

Next I ground up some vine charcoal on some scrap paper, wiped my brush in it (just the cheapest paintbrush I could buy) and dabbed it on the stencil over my original oil pastel background.

I then removed the stencil and continued to play with brushes and creating lines and gradients in the picture.
My first test with a snowflake pattern cutout

The oil pastel locked in the charcoal so it doesn't move (unless I blend it out) and stays fixed to the paper.  It also creates that lovely smoky effect that charcoal is known for.  I want to experiment more with this because it sounds like a pretty awesome idea and I definitely need to work with it more.  It would look amazing as a large scale drawing, but I think I may be running low on my preferred Mungyo Soft oil pastels, so we'll see.

 As always, feel free to give me feedback and tell me what I should do next.  I want to make a Facebook page and get more of my art online, so we'll see when I decide to take on that project. Until next time!