Thursday, October 15, 2009

my VanGogh wall



today i painted my version of the VanGogh painting "A Cornfield With Cypresses" onto part of one of the walls in my art studio. i had so much fun creating this inspirational painting where i can always see it when i work. i have really been enjoying painting on a large scale these days. i crank up the music and get in my zone. hours pass by and when i step back i can't believe what i've created. it makes me smile!
this painting takes up 1/2 the wall that it's on. perhaps i'll paint a different painting on the other end of the wall?

painting during open studio

yesterday i hung out in the VineArts Studio for Open Studio day. Open Studio is a weekly time when we open the studio up for public use. from 3pm to 8:30pm every Wednesday we welcome anyone from the community to come in and join us for some creative time (kids, youth, adults, all skill levels). we offer the use of our space & art supplies (we have all sorts of supplies in various medias) for a small suggested monthly donation of $5 (to help replenish the art supplies).
i am one of the studio monitors (representing VineArts). each week i enjoy the moments i get to spend interracting with people and their art. it's a wonderful opportunity to connect, to learn, to teach, to share, to laugh, to cry...with people of all various life & art backgrounds, ages & genders, skill levels & faith beliefs....people who are all on the journey of getting in touch with their creativity. Wednesdays are becoming my favorite day of the week!
and sometimes i even get to create while i'm there!
this week i created a 20x24 oil on canvas of a Van Gogh painting as a study piece for a wall mural i'm going to work on in my own art studio. it's my version of the famous painting. i used Winsor & Newton and Sennelier Oil Bars and applied, mixed, and layered the paints on the canvas with my fingers (no brushes used!). i painted flat on an art table so i could walk around the table and view the painting from different angles. this is how i like to paint in my own art studio.
this week we had around 20 people come & utilize the VineArts Studio for Open Studio.

OPEN STUDIO
location: VineArts Studio
(in the garage building across the street from Vineyard Boise)
days: Wednesdays
times: 3pm-8:30pm
cost: a suggested $5 donation per month
(if you choose to utilize the studio & supplies on an ongoing basis)
what to bring: your creative ideas, a willing heart to have fun!
(you can also bring your own art supplies & artwork from home if you choose)

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

....because i'm an artist


have you have felt that you were created to be creative? born to be different?
recently an artist friend emailed me this fun YouTube video of an old SNL skit of Father Guido Sarducci doing a commercial for art school as he explains the advantages of being an artist.
i think he's got it right. i know now that i chose my vocation well...because i'm an artist.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MK0ITXBWpHE

Friday, October 9, 2009

Facilitating Art & Worship Events


One of the coolest things I get to do as a leader within VineArts is to help facilitate special Art & Worship events for large & small groups. The people who participate in these events with us have usually either never experienced putting paintbrush to canvas before or have never experienced utilizing art as an act of worship to God. These events become opportunities to break down barriers, cut through defense mechanisms, face fears, and bring healing to hearts as people allow themselves to work side by side partnering with God in creating something together in community as an act of worship to God.
Tonight I helped to facilitate another one of these kinds of events in our VineArts Studio. No matter how many times I get to do stuff like this...I am always blown away by what I get to see taking place within people as they connect and create. There's a joy that flows throughout the room when people start letting go of their fears and allow themselves to engage with the art...and ultimately allow themselves to engage with God.
Tonight I got to see people connecting, engaging, and being released through creativity within community. It excites me to see people set free in these ways.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

painting side by side

once again, this last Sunday the Director of VineArts & myself joined the worship team on stage during both morning services at the Boise Vineyard. while the band led the congregation in worship, we painted additional words to the righthand panel of the 3 paneled stage backdrop that coincides with the current sermon series on Paul's prison epistles. this time "unity", "forgiveness", and "faith" were added representing concepts taught from the letters of Philemon and Philippians.
in the past i had difficulties painting when people were watching me. i found it even more difficult if someone wanted to join me in painting something together. but the more active i've been in the arts community within the VineArts ministry at the Boise Vineyard, i have learned to become more comfortable with sharing my creative space with others. this has been a positive & safe experience and has helped me to grow in my creativity and challenged me to strive to see others excell in their creativity in this same way.
it has been such a positive experience that i feel completely comfortable painting on stage side by side with others in front of thousands of people. it's not about the crowds or the stage...regardless of how many people are there...ultimately it is just me and the paint and the canvas expressing my heart to God through art. but to do this kind of thing within such an encouraging and creative community of believers who choose to express their hearts to God too...it is absolutely amazing!
i'm glad that i have overcome my apprehension of painting side by side with others. the act of allowing others into our lives (even our creative lives) can be risky...but i believe we were created to be relational people...and therefore, i have the opportunity to become a better artist and a better person by allowing myself to be in community (working, serving, ministering, painting side by side).

i feel very blessed that i am a part of a church that embraces the arts and expresses their importance in meaningful ways of worship, service, ministry, and outreach. if you're interested to know more about VineArts and what we do (from art workshops, art gallery exhibits, open studio hours, mural & graphic design projects, community art walks, video production, art & worship events, art outreach events, to a writers group and an art home group) you can check out our webpage at: www.vineyardboise.org (click on the ministries dropdown menu, then click on VineArts). once at our page you can click on & watch short videos we made that talk about the various areas of our arts ministry.

photos taken by R.H.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

October Art Show

During the month of October 2009 some of my art is on display at The Garden City Library in Boise, Idaho. I am being featured, along with artist Beverly Chick, in their "Books & Brushes" Art Exhibit (which features local artists each month). The exhibit is located inside one of the busiest libraries in the city.
I have 15 of my impressionistic oil landscape paintings on display (and for sale). Beverly has 14 of her detailed colored pencil & turpenoid animal & landscape paintings on display (and for sale). If you're interested in checking out her work, here is her website: www.chickartisticcreations.com
This is one of the paintings I have displayed in the show:

"More of You" 22x28 oil on canvas. Sagehen Falls, Idaho. c. Lisa Marten, 2006

Thursday, September 10, 2009

a crazy creative idea

I've mentioned before that the great American expressionist painter Jackson Pollock has been a huge influence on my abstract expressionist paintings. There are several of his works that I really like, but one in particular has stood out for me over the years. It's called "Male & Female". Today I painted my own version of that painting...but not on canvas...on one of the walls in my art studio!
I got this crazy creative idea a month ago when film director John Hughes passed away. John was the creative mind behind many of the teenage angst movies we high schoolers of the 80's connected with...movies that starred actors we affectionately called "The Brat Pack". After his death I spent a couple of days watching some of those movies and being nostalgic high school and the 80's. One movie in particular, "Some Kind of Wonderful", became a favorite of mine (on so many levels). It was about a guy who wanted to be an artist who had a drum playing tomboy as a best friend. Both characters struggled emotionally as to where their place in life was to be....and in the end they found true love and acceptance with each other. But I digress...
The artist had this painting on the back of his bedroom door. The entire door. And it when I rewatched the movie and saw that in the scene...I knew what I needed to do. Today I did more than paint a door...I painted a wall. And with each stroke I thanked God for blessing me with this crazy creativity inside of me that can't be squelched. This wall in my studio is a tribute to Jackson Pollock...but also to Some Kind of Wonderful...a chance to hope and dream and be who we really are.....glorious in the sight of God!

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

getting out of your comfort zone

Tonight I got to participate as a leader in a special event that VineArts facilitated for the youth of Vineyard Boise. We held an Art & Worship night for them....an opportunity to get them out of their comfort zones to work together to create something that represents who they are as a youth group. There was close to a hundred teenagers!
We prepped 3 large canvases with outlines of scenes painted on them that represent some core values of what the youth group stands for (1. a scene representing Christ-like behaviour of serving others, 2. a scene representing encountering Christ through worship, 3. a scene representing relationship & fellowship as believers in Christ & participating in baptism and communion).
The youth were encouraged to each spend some time painting on each of the canvases....together! They could paint whatever colors they chose, however they wanted to paint, they could embellish on something someone else had started...they just couldn't destroy what someone had painted.
Throughout the night there was a worship band playing, one of our VineArts leaders spoke to the group as the kids painted (he had inspirational stories, poems, quotes, and things to share), the Youth Leaders helped with some of the logistics and made sure each of the youth were participating at some point in some way, and those of us VineArts Leaders who were there helped with the paint & encouraged the youth individually as they painted...all the while the youth were painting the scenes and spending time in prayer and worship as they felt led.
It was an amazing night of creativity! I always love being a part of these kinds of events. I get to see how a group of people (many who have no art background at all) can let down their walls and let go of their fears and allow the simple act of painting open up whole new worlds for them. For many of the them, painting is not something they do naturally (and that's okay, cuz this kind of event helps to get people out of their comfort zone and paint side by side with each other...artistic talent isn't the point, willing hearts are the point....which this can be a scary thing even for seasoned artists!). Many people also don't connect or understand worshipping God & creating art at the same time...this kind of event gives them an opportunity to actually experience what it can be like to partner with God creatively. It's incredible to watch what happens!
They were unable to finish the paintings tonight in the time we had, but they will have a chance to finish them over the next couple of weeks. The canvases the youth worked on will later be hung up in the youth room as inspirational artwork.









Saturday, August 15, 2009

cathartic creativity

have you ever been compelled to do something spontaneously...as if you were encouraged from within to do or say or be something meaningful?
have you ever had something from the past creep up on you in the present? i mean...where, because of a current situation, you feel transported back emotionally to a place that seems so familiar and you have to remind yourself what was in the past and what is right now.

recently i experienced this sort of thing (and although i won't go into detail of the whats and the whys, for that isn't my point here, rather i want to focus on what happened in the midst of it). instead of reacting or responding like i might normally have done, i chose to paint my way through the emotions...a cathartic & therapeutic experience with art.

don't get me wrong...painting has always naturally been a bit therapeutic for me whenever i allow my creativity to flow. and i have on occasion utilized art to help others experience some inner breakthroughs and freedom in their lives. but rarely have i created art for myself to specifically work through a personal issue of my own. i know, i know...it's about time, eh?!

years ago i drew a pencil sketch of how i saw myself at the time based on what i was experiencing emotionally. this week i felt a deep intense desire to search for that sketch amidst my numerous sketch books and bring it to life through paint onto canvas. i never did find the sketch but it has been engraved in my memory for years and i decided to go ahead with it anyways.

as i cranked up the music and began grabbing paint cans and brushes, inspiration washed over me like a giant ocean wave and i was overcome with a new vision for the painting. it became clear to me that i wasn't supposed to just paint the sketch the way i had drawn it all those years ago...but rather, i was to paint the sketch as it would appear today (with where i am at emotionally now). i was to depict the changes in me (i am not the same person i was when i did the original sketch) and therefore beable to tell my story of emotional and spiritual growth.

now i recognize that i'm speaking very vaguely and i apologize (i don't really want to go into details here). but if you can think about what i'm trying to say...almost 20 years ago i did a sketch about myself that depicted my emotional state during some very difficult circumstances in my life. it was a very dark, lonely, selfish sort of sketch expressing deep hurt and pain in response to negative circumstances in my life. the sketch showed destruction and desolation and it was quite depressing. then this week i was compelled to paint that sketch...but instead of painting it like the original, i knew i was to paint the same concept or scene...but representing where i am today emotionally. i was to still express deep pain and hurt-for we will always have sorrow & grief in our lives, but this time showing a huge difference: instead of selfishness and lonliness, there would be hope, freedom, and community through God's love-for it is through great suffering that the most intense joy is experienced. and through painting it that way it was to show the change and growth in my heart.

and I must say...it really was therapeutic! when i was finished i stepped back from the canvas with tears streaming down my cheeks. it's an amazing feeling when you have been able to look into your heart (amidst all the brokenness and woundings) and see God & His Body and experience His love, His acceptance, His grace, His forgiveness. it's liberating!

the above photo is a bit of the painting i created. this is the center of the canvas. i just wanted to show you some of the emotion that is in it. art can be an amazing tool for understanding.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Painting During Worship

These photos were taken this last Sunday morning. Myself and the Director of VineArts were able to join in as part of the worship team on the stage for the morning services at the Boise Vineyard. Along with the band, we helped to lead the congregation in the worship of God by painting inspiring words and colors onto the backdrop painting. Together we painted side by side.
The thought of creating art as being a viable way to worship God can be somewhat of a foreign concept to many people (regardless of if they're followers of Christ or not). I believe the words of Romans 12:1 in the Bible "So here's what I want you to do, God helping you: Take your everyday, ordinary life---your sleeping, eating, going to work, and walking around life---and place it before God as an offering. Embracing what God does for you is the best thing to do for him." I believe that God placed creativity in each of us (and just as we are all uniquely different in who we are individually...that creativity will look and feel different for each person). Art is one way that many of us are able to express who we are deep down. Just as the singers sing their songs, the musicians play their instruments, the speakers speak their words, the dancers dance their movements...the artists create their art. I believe God wants us to worship him no matter where we are or what we are doing.
What is worship anyways? What does it mean to worship God? Good questions.
Thankfulness. Praise. Gratitude. Awe. Wonder. Joy. Peace. Hope. Love.
Perhaps we should chew on the Bible verses in Philippians 4:8-9 "Summing it all up, friends, I'd say you'll do best by filling your minds and meditating on things true, noble, reputable, authentic, compelling, gracious---the best, not the worst; the beautiful, not the ugly; things to praise, not things to curse. Put into practice what you learned, what you heard, and what you saw and realized. Do that, and God, who makes everything work together, will work you into his most excellent harmonies."
It's all about the SONG.
I've posted before about the performance painting I have done in music venues downtown Boise. It's no different to me whether I'm painting in a church or painting in a club (and I don't believe it makes much difference to God either). It's no difference to me whether I'm painting a landscape in oils or an abstract in mixed media. And it certainly makes no difference whether I am painting a "religious" scene or not. I paint because it's what I was made to do. I paint from heart. And I worship when I paint because it's what I'm compelled to do.
Deep thought: Next time you do that thing you do (whatever that is)...consider for a moment...could you offer it up as worship to God? What would that mean to you? Would you be okay with that? Does it change you at all inside when you do? It's just something to think about.





photos taken by R.H.

Monday, August 3, 2009

drops like stars

i just read Rob Bell's newest book "Drops Like Stars". i'm compelled to recommend it to you. it speaks to the artistic spirit. it speaks to the human heart. i found myself profoundly touched by the message in this simple-yet-memorable coffee-table-style book that houses stunning photography and "a few thoughts on creativity and suffering."
i've been a fan of Rob Bell's teachings, books, and NOOMA dvd films for several years now. if you would like to check things out, you can go to the following websites:

Sunday, August 2, 2009

adding to the backdrop

today myself and the director of VineArts continued painting on the backdrop that hangs on the stage in the sanctuary. we added words and phrases and color to the right hand panel during the 2 morning worship services while the worship band led the congregation in singing. the backdrop is 3 12ftx18ft canvas panels hung up like curtains. the theme of this backdrop goes along with the sermon series that the pastors are teaching us right now. we're focusing on the letters in the New Testament that Paul wrote to various churches while he was in prison. here i added orange and yellow to intensify the color and bring out the stones in the painting that turn into parchment letters as they burst forth (representing the Word of God coming forth to everyone).
here i added blue and a purple-red to distingquish the stones of the prison more. i also did some splatters of various colors throughout to contine to add to the grungy texture effects.


currently we are studying the book of Collossians (the letter that Paul wrote to the new Christian church of Collosai). here the director painted a phrase that the book opens up with in the first chapter "grace & peace to you".

the director also painted the word "fullness" which is spoken of in chapter 2.

another phrase that the director painted was "mystery revealed Christ". Paul talks about that the mystery of who the Messiah was to be was fulfilled in Christ Jesus.



here is the word "Song" that the director painted on the center panel during the worship services for the first Sunday that the backdrop was up. it was the introduction to the sermon series. the word "Song" was painted to represent the common thread throughout the Bible, throughout history...that the Gospel of God is a Song to creation, sung through Christ's life throughout the pages of the Bible and into our lives. we are to "sing the song". it's a metaphor...it means that God's heart has always desired for us to be in relationship with him...and for our hearts to be free.

the word "identity" was also painted by the director on the kick-off Sunday onto the left panel of the backdrop near where the cross is situated on the stage in the sanctuary. it means that our identity should be in the freedom of Christ and life with him...instead of in the bondage of our problems and circumstances.




Refuge in You: a VineArts Exhibit

this week my team and i installed a new art exhibit in the VineArts Gallery. this show is called "Refuge in You". the artists created pieces that dealt with the subject of turning to God as our refuge and shelter when we experience difficult times in our lives.


this is a quick video taken during the opening reception for the exhibit.

Friday, July 10, 2009

The SONG...


If you remember some of my previous posts this year, myself and several others worked together to create another 3 panel backdrop for the sanctuary stage at the Boise Vineyard. That backdrop is now hanging up to help illustrate the new sermon series on the letters the Apostle Paul wrote while he was in prison (Collosians, Philemon, Ephesian, Phillippianes).
The backdrop is representational of physical imprisonment and persecution and also representational of spiritual and emotional imprisonment in our hearts. Going from left to right, the backdrop shows the darkness of this world that we live in. We as humans can tend to mistake our identity in that darkness. But our identity should be in Christ (notice the word "identity" painted near the cross). It is the the love of Christ that pours into the darkness and sheds light. That light permeates into our hearts (even through the bars and walls that may be oppressive obstacles). It is His light that breaks down the walls and sets us free.
The word "song" is painted in the center panel towards the top, to remind us that the Bible (and the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus) is really God's song (His story) being sung in the lives of the humans he created. Some choose to sing the song (even amidst great adversity and hardship). Others choose to sing only one verse and then they move on to other songs. Some choose to keep the song locked up, buried, and even will persecute others who try to sing the song. This happens because they haven't allowed the song to fully grow within their hearts to allow themselves to experience the freedom that the song really brings.
We were created to see that song.
It's not about breaking out of prison. It's not about finding an easy way out of our problems and difficulties (like a "get out of jail free" card). It's not about escaping this world of darkness, nor is it about lying down and letting the darkness overcome us, or letting our hearts become cold and angry. It's about letting God's love to set us free in our hearts...that no matter what our circumstances...we will be free. It's about singing the song in amidst all of it...and allowing the light to shine into it. It's through the song that we are set free.
If you haven't read the "Singer Trilogy: The Singer, The Song, The Finale" by Calvin Miller...I highly recommend it. It's a creative allegory about this song I'm talking about.
The plan is that a couple of us from VineArts will continue to paint words and phrases onto the backdrop during Sunday morning worship services throughout the 8 month sermon series. The additional words and phrases will be painted on the right panel (which shows the stone walls being blown away and the stones turning into parchment letters flying out to all the world). It'll be a way that we all can remember and reflect on what we're learning as we continue to embark on the journey of this life. It'll be a way we can recognize that even in the bad times...God is with us.
Art is an amazing thing. So many layers. So many ways God can use art to speak His song to us.

Friday, June 19, 2009

recycling paintings: creating new from old


today i spent some time in my art studio creating a new painting from 2 older paintings that i have done. this is something that i do sometimes. sometimes i end up having paintings that i've done that either i never really liked or they just don't seem finished...like the concept is good but needs to be re-worked somehow. so sometimes i will cut them up and use bits and pieces of them to create a whole new painting. or sometimes i'll just paint something new right over the already existing painting. i did both today. i had a painting that i did 7 years ago that i never really liked (it was an oil impressionistic landscape painting of a calm lake)...so today i used that canvas and painted right over the top of what was already there. i also had a painting that i did 3 years ago and i really liked the concept of it but i just didn't like how the painting turned out (it was a mixed media abstract with some tiles fixed to the canvas)...so today i cut that canvas up in pieces to fit bits here and there within the new painting. i was able to elaborate on that concept and create (what i think) i really intended.
this new painting is a 16x20 that i have titled "STRONG TOWER" and i base it on Psalm 46:1-3 and also the song by the same title written by the band Kutless. i used oil paint, latex house paint, acrylic paint, images printed on paper, text (song lyrics, Scripture, words), tiles, and the cut up canvas of a previous painting to create this new abstract expressionist collage. the photo of the fortress is one that i took last year when i was in Ireland. its of The Rock of Cashel (located on a hilltop, it had been a castle, a cathedral, and a monestary. It was a major center of refuge for many during the 12th & 13th centuries).
Psalm 46:1-3
from The Message
God is a safe place to hide, ready to help when we need him. We stand fearless at the cliff-edge of doom, courageous in the seastorm and earthquake, before the rush and roar of oceans, the tremors that shift the mountains. Jacob-wrestling God fights for us, God of Angel Armies protects us.
Strong Tower
song by Kutless
When I wander through the desert.And I'm longing for my home.All my dreams have gone astray.When I'm stranded in the valley.And I'm tired and all alone.It seems like I've lost my way.I go running to Your mountain.Where your mercy sets me free.You are my strong tower.Shelter over me.Beautiful and mighty.Everlasting King.You are my strong tower.Fortress when I'm weak.Your name is true and holy.And Your face is all I seek.In the middle of my darkness.In the midst of all my fear.You're my refuge and my hope.When the storm of life is raging.And the thunder's all I hear.You speak softly to my soul.Now I'm running to your mountain.Where your mercy sets me free.
I plan to submit this new painting to the upcoming juried/themed VineArts Gallery Art Exhibit titled: REFUGE IN YOU that will run from August through October.

Friday, June 12, 2009

Creating Memories

i finally created a scrapbook documenting my trip to Ireland that I took a year ago (May 2008). i wanted to do something different than just a normal photo album or even a normal scrapbook. so i "revved" it up a wee bit.
i used a normal composition book and printed off my digital photos on normal computer paper. using the same abstract collage painting techniques that i use in my canvas paintings...i created a unique look for each leg of the trip.


to help tell the story, i used the blog posts from my Ireland blogsite:
http://www.uiscebeatha-wateroflife.blogspot.com


with some of the pages i was able to almost create a themed landscape painting with the photos and paint and a little embellishment of writing or sketching.


now i can look through the scrapbook and remember the trip on so many levels.


these are just a few of the pages. i had so much fun creating this scrapbook. i plan to do one for my trip to Paris and for my trip to Germany that i took last fall.


Sunday, May 24, 2009

I'm on YouTube!

Recently the leaders of the VineArts ministry at Vineyard Boise have created over 30 short videos (2-4min each) for public viewing on YouTube. We had a blast making them! The short films range from information about what VineArts is and how to start an arts ministry, discussion about what it means to be an artist who is a Christian and what it means to be an artist in & out of the church, info about the events and happenings that take place within VineArts, and details of how to get involved. Some of the films have a serious side...others have a more silly side.

Go to http://www.youtube.com and type in vinearts and you'll get a list of videos that you can view. Check em out!

I thought I'd give you a taste here with one of the videos that I'm in. This is a call out to anyone in the Boise area who would want to join our VineArts Gallery Installation Team to be a "Gallery Grunt" and work with me installing the quarterly art exhibits in our art gallery. Take a look...I warn you though...this one has a high rating of sillyness...so be prepared!

video taken by J.N.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

walking on a painting

this is me applying some white highlights to one of the 3 canvases that i've been working on to create a stage backdrop. there truly is something so amazingly fun about standing on top of a huge canvas and painting. most people put their canvas on an easle or a table or even hang it on a wall to paint...these 3 canvases are so large that it's just easier to do most of the painting flat on the ground. however, this creates the issue of how to reach certain areas of the canvas. so walking on the canvas is actually required. for this project i've splattered and applied paint with long rollers, brushes, mops, rags, sheets, bubblewrap, foam, and anything else that will help to add color and create texture. even my sneakers have added cool prints of texture to this painting. walking on a painting is definitely a unique experience!

Monday, May 11, 2009

grunge

i'm originally from Seattle. i lived there when the word "grunge" began to describe a style of rock music that sounded as if it was made up of the manky dirt & mingen grit & grime like you'd see & smell at the Seattle shipyards and waterfront. it's a mixture of salt water corrosion, mold and moss, muck and mud flowing from the rain.
it's sort of a good picture of how our hearts can be at times. we can be full of hate & judgments & meanness & selfishness & pride & jealousy & lust & unforgiveness & all sorts of ugliness...whether all this is due to terrible stuff that's happened to us or whether we've been fed lies about ourselves and we've believed them, or whether we find ourselves to blame...we need the love of Christ to wash all that away. when we allow ourselves to have relationship with him and allow him to be Lord of our life, and give our hearts and our circumstances and our struggles to him...he is able to create in us a clean heart. he can fill us with hope & love & joy & kindness & mercy & generousity & forgivenss & peace...and so many more glorious attributes. we truly can be his reflection...if we're willing.
i've been having fun working on a painting project which requires layered texture techniques that create a grungy look. this look seems to be quite popular in graphic design today. it reminds me of Seattle grunge and i've been a bit nostalgic lately.
the project represents exactly what i just described above. the love of Christ can wash away the grunge in our hearts. the hope of Christ can bring joy in the midst of our most difficult and darkest times. but we have to allow him to do the sort of work in our hearts that is required to clean up all that grungy mess.
it isn't easy. it can hurt a lot. it doesn't happen over night. but it's worth it for the freeing of our hearts from the grunge of this world. our hearts are worth it!
this is just a quick picture of what REVELATORART is about...through art, God can speak to us.

Friday, May 8, 2009

Applying Texture

This is me applying texture to one of the three 12'x18' canvases that will make up the next backdrop for the Boise Vineyard sanctuary. Yes, the canvas are on the ground now and we walk right on top of them as we paint with large brushes, brooms, rollers to apply the paint and things like sheets, bubble wrap, and foam, and squirted water to create texture. Today we utilized rollers on extension poles to apply some of the darker base colors of the background. For this painting we are using a lot of layering techniques. We water the paint down quite a bit and also spray water on the canvas as we go. This allows the paint to be a bit transparent. After some dry time the colors, textures, and shapes that we're applying and creating come through and enhance each other layer after layer. When we finished for the day, it felt really good to stand back and look at all three canvases and see the painting begin to come together.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

VineArts Exhibit: "The Creator's Heart"

This last week was the submission dates for our new art exhibit in the VineArts Gallery. Most of our art shows are themed and juried. I'm the coordinator of the installations (they call me "The Grand Gallery Grunt") and so along with our VineArts Director, I have a huge part in each of the exhibits. The Director and I work together from designing and printing entry packets, to sending artists emails and making phone calls, to creating signs, to taking in the artwork submissions, to administrating jury day, to typing up and printing artist statements, to leading a team of "Gallery Grunts" to install the show (which is quite a huge undertaking in and of itself), to designing advertisement postcards, to planning and producing the opening receptions.

Today we had the Opening Reception for a new art exhibit called: "The Creator's Heart".

It was a chance for the artists to mingle with those who came to view the show. We had live music and refreshments.

I made a short video for you. The show will be up for about 2 months.