I'm back home - bear with me - I've got a lot of catching up to do. I drove 14 hours straight yesterday, from Austin to Atlanta, so I'm a bit of a zombie today and soon enough I'll get painting again. This past week has given me increased respect for both teachers and truckers.
So if you'd like to hear a little about the new adventures of Karin - please read on....
Day 1 - I took a deep breath, jumped in my car, turned on my Tom Tom (which by the way, I could be a walking advertisement for) and proceeded down the dark road, heading west. Yikes. One of my greatest regrets, along the way, was that I couldn't stop in my 82-mile-an-hour tracks and take pictures of some of the most beautiful landscapes. It was just impossible. The bayous beside the interstate in Louisiana, the hundreds of quirky, colorful water towers spaced out for miles, the long shadows of the cars on the highway ..... I saw dozens of paintings in my head. I stopped for the night in Lake Charles, Louisiana - stayed in one of those hotel/casinos, which was quite the visual experience. I had never stepped foot in a casino and if the 50+ security guards would have looked the other way, I could have taken some of the best shots and done some of the best paintings of my life. The gamblers. Ugh. What a subject. Alas...... that's one of many lost photo ops.
Day 2 - Not long after I headed down the road, that road turned into a bridge equivalent to the most nightmarish roller coaster ride on earth. I was the one in the left lane, going 20 miles an hour, screaming at the top of my lungs. I was terrified. I think it was an hour before I pried my grip off the steering wheel. I hate heights.
The landscape soon became flat and absolutely stunning. I was thinking about the song "I Saw Miles and Miles of Texas" as I headed for Houston - where I met two friends for lunch. No time for photos - I had to get to Austin to meet up with Carol Marine, who was my teaching partner in the workshop.
Carol, by the way, is the most delightful person. I have a dozen of her paintings, all bought on eBay, so I'm a big fan of her paintings - but seeing more of her work and watching her paint affirms that this woman is gifted. Really gifted.
Day 3 - My only free afternoon - I waited out the rain and headed west towards Fredericksburg in hopes for some good landscapes - meeting some creatures along the way.
Day 4 - Up at dawn and the first of the 3-day workshop. Twenty students and all were great fun from the very beginning. Carol and I did similtaneous demonstrations - mine resulted from a borrowed photograph from one of the students - which was a great subject to try out.
Day 5 - Our second day of teaching, talking and another dual demonstration - this painting resulting from one of my own photos. What I thought was interesting was the examples of two different painters using two different sources - Carol painting what was right in front of her and me painting from photographs.
It was a completely new experience for me to have 21 people watch me paint. The trick was not to turn around.
I also contributed some figure drawing tips that have helped me.
Day 6 - The last day of the workshop was about painting faces, enjoying the oils and being loose with the brush strokes. I painted a student and Carol painted this fabulous self-portrait.
We spent the afternoon talking about the business part of being an artist - Justin Clayton and Qiang Huang, fellow DailyPaintworks artists and friends - joined the group as well.
I wrapped it up with a great feeling of accomplishment - I did something new and I learned a lot myself. Thanks to all who participated in the workshop - it was my pleasure and truly a privilege. I hope to do it all over again one day.
As I left Austin, I thought the only negative thing about the city was their scary overpasses - otherwise a beautiful place to be. I need to get some sleep, catch up at work and I'll be back to painting in a day or so. It's good to be home.
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
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12 comments:
I was one of the lucky one's that attended the workshop in Austin.....let me tell you it was the BEST!!!!!Both Karin & Carol were sharing so much infomation, we all had to take notes to keep up. The Demos were like dueling banjo's, you wanted to see every minute of both.
What a act to follow!
Thanks soooo much for everything
Mary Spires
Hi Karin. It was a real treat having you and Carol put on a Great Painting Extravagance. As the only guy at the workshop, I can say I saw what "Girl Power"is all about. Glad you were able to cross those bridges & overpasses. Keep those painting coming and have a productive spring.
mark
Would you please tell us some of those figure drawing tips??? Pleeease??? Your paintings are wonderful!
Ann
I'm with Ann, I'd love those tips! Maybe at least a reference resource? Your figures are the best!
After reading your blog I'm really sorry I couldn't attend the workshop! Hopefully, this will just be the first of many.
Welcome back! As one of many addicted to your blog I'm anxious to see the paintings that come from this latest adventure and any tips you're willing to share.
donna
Hi Karin, as a member of your 1st Ever Workshop, I feel fortunate in the fact that we probably gleaned the BEST advice and info and demo - because you presented it "raw"! It was refreshing! You shared such personal insight and motivation to just "get out there and PAINT!" You and Carol are a quite a duo, and ultra-complimentary as a team, much better than an iMovie! Getting out to my studio today to paint those masonite boards - black! Woohoo!
It sounds like you had a blast!!... wonderful paintings, and wonderful seeing you 4 together!
Any chance you would do a workshop in Michigan? =]
Kudos for the excellent workshop with Carol..and thanks so much for the fun post about it. What about a joint painting done by you and Carol now!!
wow, thanks for posting about the workshop. Would have loved to be there!
What a wonderful post and what really wonderful comments! Great stuff!!!
I can see that you and Carol are going to have to repeat this workshop - and it sounds to me like you'll have a big queue of people wanting to take it. I think you need to start a mailing list for people who are interested in taking a workshop.
I'm going to highlight this on my blog on Sunday.
A fan of you two. How about a workshop in New Orleans?
Wow, there's a group right there. Such talent in one place. You guys rock!
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