S_V_H 2013 Birthday Painting – introduction

The fun starts tomorrow morning at 8 am.  From start to finish, I will be posting updates all day long, hopefully on the hour, of the progress of this years 2013 Birthday Painting.    The music I will be painting is U2’s Beautiful Day.   This years choice for music comes from the submitted suggestion made by Sara V.   She will receive a sign print in appreciation.  Not only did she receive the most votes, her comments, on why she choose this music for my Birthday, where honest and thoughtful.

Scott Von Holzen

S_V_H Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Summer Allegro image 4 & Jordyn’s final image

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Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons Summer Allegro composite image 4. I am near completion of this base.  The only plans left, before starting to add the music, is to add a second layer of red on the four small vertical rectangles that will each contain a musical trill and one note each.

I am always surprise by how different and the strength  of each of these Vivaldi backgrounds. A lot of effort has gone into each of them to enrich their contribution to the work.  Looking at this background, before adding the music, this artwork could easily stand on its own as a work of abstraction.  How good this look is, or the others  as abstract art, I am not sure, but for now the backgrounds are there to support and visually challenge, what is next,  the music.

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This is Jordyn’s final image. This was a three-day project that amounted to multiple hours of work each day.  Her enthusiasm and concentration, I thought was outstanding for a nine-year old.  Jordyn especially like the work she did on the far left panel of her favorite animal which is a pig.  Her laugh was so different and so real that I knew she loved how it had turned out. Jordyn’s depiction of people is greatly influence by the works of Miro and Picasso. From left to right the panels read as follows: two people playing catch, fireworks with a person watching, houses in town, the city, the farm, and her pig. Many times I offered direction to awaken her efforts or to move this project along, but never did I make the final decision to subject matter, or choice of colors. I let her lead us through  this project with my main duties being brush cleaning,  paint mixer, and guide. This work came all from her, and she deserves a lot of honest praise for it has truly  been earned.  Jordyn’s did more the exceed my expectations. For three days and a lot of hours she let her imagination out and down it came in reds, blues, greens, yellows, an a pink pig.

Scott Von Holzen

S_V_H Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Summer Allegro image & Jordyn a work in progress

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This is Vivaldi’s Spring Allegro.  The image you see enlarged is from three photographs combined.   I knew early that a lot of stripping was going to happen with this work.  Where in the last Spring project, there is no stripping, with this being a summer image those rigid color patterns work well.  Spring is about growth, renewal, change, and so any pattern stripping just did not seem to work.  That is why you saw the squeegee.  In this summer work, I see it as a time when nature is settling into a pattern: there is still  lots of color like Spring, but it is  better organized.  Next up, I am going to try to use squeezes  to carry forward the freshness of Spring that is still present in early summer.

Scott Von Holzen

Now, I would like to introduce Jordyn M Stensen, my Granddaughter, and her first major artwork.  All I did was to give her  six canvases, of three different sizes, and asked her to arrange them on the floor.  I gave her only one suggestion in that how she arranges the canvas they should seem to look balanced.  She tried a number of ideas,  I liked some, and others I would point out the imbalance.  To my surprise she arranged what you are seeing below all by herself.  I really did not offer any changes, telling  her only how well-balanced the image looked.  I asked her if she liked it and she agreed.  She did not want to make any other changes. I then mark the edges and flipped the canvases over.  Together we connected them all. Then we ended this session with two coats of white gesso.

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This is her first image with the basic background colored in.  We spoke a lot about what colors she would like to use on what canvases, but  all the color choices for each canvas where her choice.  I spoke to her a little about the look of Hans Hoffman, and I think she understood. I showed her images and the effect you get when there is a dark color and a light color next to each other.  But she wanted the base coloring  bright and happy, so that is what we have.  I think she has chosen her colors well. She did want an orange color and I did mix one up, but I will have to mix a more yellow orange  for that far left canvas. You see my other duties include brush cleaning and color mixing.  Next  up we are going to have Jordyn let loose her loved for Miro and her passion for Picasso.

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Today, Jordyn created a view of the city, a view of houses, and fireworks or as she said it could be confetti. After some intense painting I spilled the water dish on her pallet full of fresh paint.  At that moment she insisted on cleaning up the painting area, putting everything in its place. Taking breaks from her artwork, Jordyn is also practicing  on the piano Ode to Joy by Beethoven, and Do Ra me from Sound of Music.

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