Author Archives: esanford

Mystery Technique #99

Curious about why I’ve been drawing such surprising subject matter lately? You can find out why next month if you’ve signed up for email updates!

ANSWER TO MYSTERY TECHNIQUE #98:

Here’s the initial sketch for the Web of Interbeing project:

My watercolor sculptures start with drawings on tracing paper to make a template for the cuts. The first step was to mark the outer edge of the circle; then I began defining the main shapes with a gold PITT brush pen and added some adjustments in green before switching to erasable Prismacolor Art Stix in green, blue, and magenta. I emphasized the final boundaries with black. To experiment with the placement of the 2 main figures, I drew them on separate pieces of tracing paper with a MICRON .005 black pen.

In this closeup of the final drawing with cutting in progress, you can see some additional figures and a few more changes made by painting over the original lines with white acrylic, letting it dry, and then adding the new lines on top:

Here’s a closeup of the back; the Twinrocker watercolor paper is so thick, I often have to cut out delicate areas on both sides:

And here’s the paper right after I finished cutting out the design:

Winter Woods & the Right Blue

Because of my ANFT Training and the pandemic, I’ve been spending more time in the woods this December and noticing more subtle pleasures, like the profusion of fungi, mosses, and lichens:

And what happens to the dripping springs when the temperature drops:

But nothing compares to the wonder of bluebirds in flight, that striking flash of blue against all the grays and browns of the winter woods. It reminds me of a story by Isak Dinesen about someone searching for “the right blue” and of my own encounter with it years ago in Italy. I rounded a corner in the Vatican, and there it was — the most astonishing blue I’d ever seen! I don’t remember the subject or the title of that Fra Angelico painting, just that glorious color, which I’ve only seen a few times since. Maybe the rarity is part of its beauty.

And continuing the blue theme, here’s the latest version of Once in a Dream. Now the top layer has a new blue glaze:

Wishing you and those you love a new year full of good health and unexpected beauty!

Mystery Technique #98

This is a closeup of the top layer of my Web of Interbeing project with a possible background underneath it. It’s the “rough draft” stage, so I haven’t added any shadows or details yet or cleaned up the edges. It took a lot of steps to get to this stage, and I’ll share them next month!

ANSWER TO MYSTERY TECHNIQUE #97:

Here’s another one of my Energy paintings. This one started with diluted Golden Gloss Medium as a resist. After it dried, I added multiple layers of diluted acrylic with the brushes pictured above. You might recognize the small white rectangle as a piece of a Kroger Extra Strength Erasing Pad. I like to cut them into small pieces and use them to partially remove thin acrylic glazes from the watercolor paper. It’s especially easy to lift the acrylic on top of the gloss medium. To increase the sense of depth, I used a painting knife to apply thicker strokes of acrylic in a few spots.