Painting a specific city, in this case Charleston, on a grid was a challenging experience. What do you need to give the feeling of this wonderful city? What do you need to change in order for the overall design to work? This was a fun painting, but in some ways agonizing. Enjoy.
I'm here after reading your article in June-July Palette Magazine. I've just returned to New Jersey from San Francisco and am going to try a grid, or something like it, to show Chinatown massaging my exhausted feet!
I am the author of Master Disaster, 5 Ways to Rescue Desperate Watercolors. Based on a course that I have developed over many years, the bones of this book give you a plan to finish your paintings--and even your bombs. The meat of my book and course, though, is to help you structure your life to encourage and accommodate painting. Painters have to paint. This is how to do it.
Going to FACEBOOK
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Are you OVERWHELMED by trying to figure out the best place to blog-- or to
get your word out?
Before my studio become busy-- I wanted to blog as much as po...
REINSPIRED!!
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CUP SERIES #1 CUP SERIES #2 CUP SERIES #3 Add caption I am starting to hold
semi-private lessons in my studio on the variations theme. I have the
luxury ...
Complementarity
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*Complementarity*
by Katharine A .Cartwright
watercolor, 26" x 20" Last month, I was reading a book about Niels Bohr and
came across a short discussion of...
ALCAZAR GARDENS, Acrylic, 36” x 48”
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*STAGES OF PROGRESS… from Start to Finish*
Commissioned by Mark Hilbert
*HILBERT MUSEUM OF CALIFORNIA ART *
*Download the PDF or View on your Mobile Dev...
On Becoming "Good" . . .
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"Cadaques Evening"
Watercolor 18 x 24 inches
A question comes frequently from workshop participants that I find
difficult to answer in more than a single...
2 comments:
Your work is
delightful
Hello Susan,
I'm here after reading your article in June-July Palette Magazine. I've just returned to New Jersey from San Francisco and am going to try a grid, or something like it, to show Chinatown massaging my exhausted feet!
Thaks for the inspiration,
Susan Walsh McLean
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