Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

11.04.2016

Eleanor the Artist

One of my favorite things about Eleanor is that she loves to paint.

We started with her first painting experience here at about 13 months old.  I was definitely the driver in that experience.  Now though Eleanor knows exactly where her paint set, brush and paper are and will go get them out by herself.  I just have to supply the cup of water and then she takes off painting.  It is the best activity in my book because it keeps her happy and entertained and creative.  I occasionally sit down and paint with her but not always.

Since Eleanor's been painting pretty much daily once she turned 2 years old, we've developed quite the stack of her artwork.  I've been meaning to write a post about it for so long.  While there are so many ways to track a child's development I think how they paint and color is an especially fun one.  So here Eleanor's art journey (it's a lengthy post full of more children's art than the average person wants to see, just warning :)).

At two years old, Eleanor's paintings were looking like this...
She was using lots of water in her watercolors and doing lots of long, random strokes.

I love when she started experimenting, using the bottom of the paintbrush to make lines.
Then around 2 and a half years old, Eleanor became much more deliberate.  She started choosing her paint colors carefully and would do more shapes.  Sometimes she would have a specific idea in mind for what she was painting and would tell me all about it: "Mommy, this is a tree and this is Daddy and this is Mommy and this is a biiiiig mountain."
^^"Done! It's peeeerfect, Mommy!"

She also went through a major rainbow phase for a while (and still occasionally does them).  I usually start with the first few half circles and then she finishes the rest. 
Then her coloring started looking more deliberate too.  She'd pick up a crayon, do a little scribble in one section and then another little scribble in another section.  And repeat that with several colors until the whole paper was full.  I love these drawings, they look like bursts of happiness to me.
Out of the blue one day she asked if we could mail a letter to her cousin Wheezy and ever since then we've been sticking her paintings in the mail for various family members.
I think we've convinced her that her paintings can cure all sickness and sadness because if she ever hears anyone isn't feeling well then she said, "Oh I need to color for them!"  She also loves to send them as birthday cards like the one below...
We will go to doctors appointments and while we are waiting in the waiting room Eleanor will start coloring a picture for the "wadies" (ladies, aka receptionists).
And she loves painting with her friends whenever they come over.
^^This was when Aaron and Annie were in town

Then in August, I walked by the chalkboard and found this little guy on the board.
I asked Eleanor if she did that and she said, "Yes, it's Daddy!"  I was shocked because I had never seen her draw a whole person before.  She pointed out which lines were his arms and which were his legs, etc. etc.

And just this past month, Eleanor has started painting people too.  She painted all these people in just one sitting!  I was amazed.  They are all various family members and she even remembers days later which one is which.

Her other recent kick is working on her E's.  She's become very into looking for E's everywhere we go ("Look Mommy! It's an E for Eleanor!!).
^^She gets going on her horizontal lines and just can't stop :)

Her art is slowly taking over the house.  The paintings of family members were up in our dining room and then other paintings are hanging in our kitchen and her room.
Documenting it all on here is actually giving me a lot of relief because I so desparately want to remember all of this but don't want to keep every.single.painting.  The stacks of paintings build up so quickly if I don't keep them in check! I'm hoping to keep photographing her work and then just save the very best of her artwork up on the walls and in her file.

I love this girl and the way her mind works.  She's creative, kind and silly.

9.19.2016

Artists I Love: Cailtin Connolly

One of my all time favorite artists is Caitlin Connolly.  I found her artwork maybe two years ago and I frequently check back in to her website to see her latest work.

I love how Caitlin Connolly depicts womanhood.  She's able to capture all the emotions on womanhood that I've ever had.  She shows women who are strong, struggling, humble, brave, defeated, fierce, confused, hurt, happy, beautiful, protective, nurturing and mighty.  Her drawings touch on every aspect of womanhood and motherhood and sisterhood and I just find them so moving.
As I was preparing a lesson for the young women at Youth Conference on what a holy woman is, I found myself turning towards Caitlin Connolly's artwork to use as a visual for someone who embodies holiness.  I wanted my young woman to have a powerful image to remember that they too can be holy.

I love that Caitlin sells limited edition prints of drawings taken directly from her sketchbook.  Somehow it feels all the more personal to have a sketchbook drawing.  I love picturing the artist getting her ideas down on paper as fast as possible before she loses the image in her mind.  Of course, her paintings are beautiful too but the drawings always stand out to me the most.

And each piece is coupled with a powerful, thought-provoking title.  Titles like, "her arms grew tired as she held the world in its place" and "she became herself with tears" and "she had tough hands but a soft heart."

I have given her artwork as gifts several times now because I see how the piece captures some aspect of a friend or family member's personality.

Here are some of my favorites (it was so hard to narrow down!)...
giving things up

women leading women

 a believing woman

 a woman who listens

 climbing mountains with children

 finding balance

 napping

 passing favors

 protector by day and by night

 she became herself with tears

 women with and without children

trying to understand holiness

And she has very few drawings that focus on men but I love that the ones she does have highlight marriage and fatherhood.  This one always reminds me of Aaron...
I'll show you everything I know

Other artists I love: Beth Allen and Lynne Millar

9.14.2016

My Love for Ebay Art Continues

Two years ago I wrote about a fun/dangerous new habit I had developed and I must admit that that habit is still going strong even now.  I am not ashamed.  My love for searching original art on Ebay grows and grows.  Maybe because I dream of places like this filled with eclectic art, whether it's just one oil painting in a kitchen or a whole gallery wall in a living room...

 ^^Source


 ^^Nickey Kehoe




So since sharing my Ebay love two years ago, I have added four paintings to our house from Ebay....




And I now have my own little eclectic gallery wall (with dreams of many more ;)):

Have gone through the buying process four times and the searching process for two years, here's what I've learned about buying art on Ebay along the way...

1) Double check the size of the painting in the description.  It's hard to tell scale based on pictures alone.

2) Try to buy art that is already framed, even if the frame isn't your style.  Framing is expensive.  If it comes framed then you can at least hang it up as is and then switch out the frame when you're ready to re-frame.  I love my landscape up there with green and pinks but it came unframed so it has sat in my pile of prints for months, living an unfulfilled life.

3) Use the automatic bidder that allows you to input your max bid.  Ebay will then bid up for you in small increments without you having to do anything.

4) Only bid if you really want it.  Seems obvious but I bid on one painting that I had only briefly looked at but thought "Why not? It's so inexpensive and I'll probably be outbid anyways."  Sure enough I won the painting and there went $15.  I like it enough but if I had studied the painting more closely then I wouldn't have bid on it in the first place. (I'm referring to the last seascape painting up there.  It actually photographs much better than it appears in real life.  It's got more purple in it than I prefer and just looks amateur.)

5) Check shipping costs before bidding.  Sometimes a piece is listed for $35 but the shipping is $40.  That piece of artwork may be worth the $75 total price to you but it's just important to make that call before you bid.

I was outbid on this next painting and will forever mourn that it's not in my house.  I love it 100% as is (frame and all).  I love the muted colors and the calm water scene.  The painting was large enough to hold it's own, but small enough that it could be used anywhere and in conjunction with any other painting.  Other people must have seen it's value/beauty too because there was a heated bidding war over it.

And just for fun, I went on Ebay on Friday and found the following paintings for sale right now (or at least they were on sale last Friday, some sales may have ended).  Maybe someone will see this post, buy one of these paints and then let me live through you :)

It has some issues (chipping paint) but you could chalk it up to character.  He's so cute!




^^Love that frame!


^^I'd love to see this one in a different frame.  I love the pinks, greens and blues though.








So there's my Ebay passion for you!  It's a fun little hobby to seek out art that I love.  Hope to update again in two years with some more fun additions to our home art collection ;)