Sharks & Hummingbirds

Dear Reader,

Where’s the escalator? I’m trying to rise, but it’s not working.   Can’t ever go up faster than your bubbles, so they say. Bullcarp!

I’m down 30 or 40 feet in the Pacific just off the coast of Baja, California. I’m here for the color, the bass, garibaldi, lobsters, the waving kelp, and an occasional seal or two and not for the big dark shape, much bigger than me, that just cruised in.

Shark is not my favorite companion, especially in the raw and swimming anywhere near me. I looked for my diving buddy, but Gene Grant was a strong young man and was way ahead of me, churning for the beach. I was a now-and-then diver and when I told people that I was certified, they just nodded and said that I had always been certifiable.

These twelve sharks forming this color wheel, in bright hues and grey bodies, are swimming in a circle like harmless performers at a Sea World show. They’re particularly proud of their 12-tail pattern. Why don’t wet-suited young women ride like water skiers on the backs of sharks, in colorful, big-splash shows? They could call it the “Great White Way.”

Shark Color Wheel

Tra-la-la. Fish, flowers, birds and butterflies, these are a few of my favorite things (you know the tune.) Paper sculpture is at its best when it is complex, and tropical fish, elegant birds, beautiful blooms, and butterfly-bugs are subjects that I have repeated many times with varying success.

I did a series of five large tropical-fish sculptures for a children’s hospital in Minnesota some years ago. I hope you can see that I used a bright, warm selection of color in this example. The client gushed over them, but wished I hadn’t used day-glo paint. Oy! I was cut to the quick. I’ve never owned the glowy stuff.

The effect was the result of simultaneous contrast, where complimentary colors adjacent to each other tend to glow.

Tropical Fish

These images give me excuses to make up a lot of color combinations and shapes. Anything goes when you are entertaining sick children. As I’ve said before, I’m not much for realism or accuracy. I work for symbolic impressions in my concepts, color and composition, but I workmostly for fun.

Sounds very hoity-toity and I wish that it always worked. I have torn up and thrown away bags of paper sculpture that came close, but no cigar.

Humming Birds

Looky the funny pitchur, daddy, they don’t look real at all. Well, little girl, I invented the hummingbirds, flowers, leaves and sky. The image above was done years ago for some client, somewhere, for some purpose, but I’ll be dry-brushed if I can remember who, what, where or why. I’m sure the check was good.

I run all over the color wheel on this one. The flowers are a full-on-no-excuses red. The leaves, baroque in nature, are a warm, neutral green. The birds are combinations of full intensity (pure) color with supporting shades of many tints (addition of white.)

Well, it’s time to wash out my brushes. Thanks for visiting…

I’m going to cut back on my blog to once a month. I’m preparing for a one-man show in October and I can’t do it all and do it well. The ‘tales wag the blog’ when I have to make art to fit the stories.

leo

I’m never content with what I know,
only with what I can find out.

The Shark Color Wheel is available at $1000.
The Grovewood Gallery represents me in the Asheville area.

Bluebird Fistfighter

Dear Reader,

I am sitting here with keyboard in hand making frustrated attempts at writing this here blog. Why frustrated? you may well ask. For several days a blue bird has been attacking his reflection in a window next to my computer. His reflection looks like a bad guy to him, and he is challenging it to a windowsill fistfight. No holds barred, kicking, biting, and woodpeckering.

I’ve got post-its all over the damn glass, and now and then I put my face right up to the window, but the bugger just sticks his tongue out at me. It’s all natural and charming, you say. Well, sure, maybe, but I’m the schmuck who has to wipe up the bluebird slobber while dodging laughing wasps.

It’s finally dark, the little beak buster has punched his time-card and has retired to his corner where his manager and beak repairman get him ready for tomorrow’s bell…
So what do I want to write about anyway? Faces come to mind, and I’ll start with this “Faces” color wheel.

Faces color wheelThese faces are basic Roman female profiles that don’t portray any unique characteristic that might interfere with the circular movement … like a mole or a wart on the nose. The faces are the twelve Itten-inspired hues, tinted to about 20% by the addition of white, in a pale color scheme. For you colorists, mixing tints that seem to match in hue (color) and value (dark & light) is hard, time-consuming work. The headpieces are four-hue targets that move around the circle from warm through cool in a bright color scheme.

The faces that interest me are mask-like images that come from my boyhood life among the Sioux. When I was very young, my Norwegian grandfather, Oscar, took me to Indian dances that were held in an octagonal building in the Black Hills just outside Rapid City. They were put on by the Duhamel trading post, which dated from gold rush, stagecoach, and wild west days.

It was lighted by a bare bulb, and a large fire in the center was the flickering flame illuminating the dancers and the drummers. The warriors dancing in full regalia, the shuffling Squaw dances and the powerful drumming and high singing and chanting were stunning to a wide-eyed boy, to say the least. I never let go of my grandfather’s hand, and 75 years later I remember every detail: the singing, dancing, dust, feathers, horns, buckskin, and drumming …

My palette is warm, even hot, with a few blue-greens to make use of the effect called simultaneous contrast. Hot is hotter when juxtaposed with cold hues. I obtain textures and impressions of age by handling paint and paper roughly. I tear, crush and otherwise abuse paper with rusts, coppers and pigments of any kind available. Severely agitating the surfaces to create variations of texture makes the image come alive.

This is collage in dimension without a plan. Serendipity — what just happens when making art. The trick is to quit before ruining it by going too far. Sometimes I’m having so much fun that I don’t put the tools aside in time.

The next face is a portrait of Ben Black Elk with his three small stripes of yellow face paint. His rough skin, long hair and black eyes are in my memory forever. I intended to keep this piece, but some friends bought it at my first show in a La Cienega gallery in LA. I’ve visited it a few times and offered to buy it back to no avail. They love it, so it’s okay.

Thanks for visiting me.

leo

Giclee prints of the second face, Face From The Past, are available for $200.
Image is 18 x 11” with 2” border on French watercolor paper.

Ben Black Elk is now available as a giclee.  Edition size of 50.  $200.

leomonahan@tds.net