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.

Whales in the Forest

Dear reader,

When I moved to the mountains in Western North Carolina, my palette became warmer because of autumn. The mountains go crazy with color in the fall and won’t be ignored. When I was a boy in the Black Hills, autumn came on a Wednesday and then we had three feet of snow for the weekend. Besides, Ponderosa pine needles don’t change color so there was no change from summer to winter. I lived in Los Angeles and we had four seasons, but they were fire, flood, earthquake and riot. There was no autumn influence in my fifty-year incarceration there.

The personal choice of color is subjective, and we choose color that makes us comfortable. Professional colorists select it to affect emotion, comfort, purchasing, identification and a myriad of results. Artists of every stripe can be objective in color selection to solve problems or accomplish goals, but personal color selection is subjective. Warm color preference is my style and “my style” has been called “the sum of my bad habits.” Now and then, I’ll do a dominantly cool piece, which I usually set aside for a period of time and view with suspicion.

When I got to North Carolina, my wife already had painters working on the living room. They were using a good white and two soft neutrals of the beige persuasion. I’m not comfortable in a visually safe, monochromatic environment so I added a bright, chrome yellow for a wall in the large entrance, a bathroom, two walls in my studio and as accents around the kitchen windows and the fireplace.

When the painters picked up the yellow paint the clerk asked if they were going to paint lines down the highway. But when the job was finished one of them said, “Mr. Monahan, I thought it would be garish, but it works!” I explained that it was the amount of yellow that we used. The contrasts of amounts used (variation of proportion) is the primary consideration in every choice of any element in art. My definition of design for any art is the study of proportion. Big is big when compared to something small, red is brightest when compared with a touch of green, and so on and on and on. Name any art and I’ll show you how the artist has used variations of proportion.

Leo Monahan Paper Sculpture

I began designing the “Spouting Whales” color wheel’s variation of proportion by thinking about a whale’s physique. It is bodied with undulating shapes starting at the nose and ending at the tail in a spiral. The overlapping whales assume hidden bulk. The underbody blends from white into tints (the addition of white) into pure color in a smaller proportion than the upper body, which starts with a modified or neutral version of the same color that blends into a darker value (dark & light) at the center. I toned down the colors with the addition of the direct complement (the opposite side of the color wheel). This is getting “teachy,” but I don’t have another way of describing things. The darker body color is blended with raw umber, an earth tone.

The spouts are the direct complement of the underbelly. For example, the violet whale at the bottom has a yellow spout and the yellow whale at the top has a violet spout. The star shape in the center is visually insistent and the eye starts there then moves out in large spiral shapes and is rewarded by the small accents of the bright spouts. All of the hues (color) have been tinted with white to about 75% for contrast, and the whole wheel is mounted on black to enhance the colors.

Joseph Albers, who had been a Bauhaus student under Itten, modified the color course from what it had been under Paul Klee and Kankinsky, expanded it to a full year and put it into the rational system that I studied under Bill Moore and then taught for many years. Albers was one of the instructors who came to America after the Nazis closed the school and he worked, taught here, and became the famous painter that we know. The list of famous artists that came out of the Bauhaus is impressive to say the least.
Read the history.

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Aspen groves grew near water and took over when forest fires killed the pines. They were favorite places to play when I was a boy in the Black Hills. They could be deep and dark, white but non-threatening. The first forest is narrow (20×30”), and has a strong vertical thrust which is enhanced by the tall narrow trees that move up from dark to light. The negative spaces between the three main trees are very strong, wavy flames that point up to reinforce the vertical direction. Referring back to the list of elements and coordinating principles, the layout is the dominantly vertical direction of trees with a horizontal subordinate of landscape.

The color is limited to variations on earth colors, burnt sienna, raw sienna, burnt umber and raw umber. I don’t use them right out of the tube; I add small amounts of color to give them character. There are dozens of bright color accents in the shapes of the forest floor. The paper is heavily embossed and painted in variations of the earth tones. The color accents hit the higher embossed shapes.

The values (dark and light) are dominantly dark with a subordinate use of white, but the white trees make up the main interest with their negative spaces and textural overlay.

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This forest has a more passive direction (24×30”). While the elements and techniques are the same, the intent is to pull you into the forest instead of up into the top of the trees. The visual flow is along the strong diagonal tree arrangement as they recede among the overlapping horizontal landscape shapes. It’s the same forest with different ideas.

“I wonder whom these woods belong to. I’m not sure I’ll walk through there even though it would be a short cut. It’s dark and gloomy with rough rocky ground and brush. What if I fell and injured myself? No one would ever find me. Wait…what was that? I think I saw something moving. Just another reason not to go in there but it’s probably my imagination. No, dammit, there’s something in there…Oh, jeez, it’s two little boys and a dog.”

“What were you doing in there boys? Is that dog friendly, will he bite?”

“We always play there and my dog will lick you all over. Do you walk in the woods mister?”

“Oh sure, I’m in there a lot, I just I love the deep, dark woods. Big people aren’t afraid of places like this y’know. I’m not going through this time but when I’m here again, I’ll just traipse right in there and wander around and have a lot of fun.”

“Ok mister, we gotta go home for lunch. G’bye.”

“G’bye boys…. Jeez.”

 

Thanks for visiting with me…

leo

The first Forest, Black Hill I, just sold. The second forest, Black Hills II, is available for $3200 at the Cut, Bend, Fold, ColorColorColor exhibit at the Grovewood Gallery in Asheville, NC.