Sunday, December 22, 2013

Why I Painted Hands For My Self Portrait






Most semesters, I end up painting a self portrait. I've painted my face several times and I'm pretty sick of it, so I painted my hands in beginning painting.

Afterward I came across a little note I meant to make into a scrapbook page along with a photo of my hands. (I haven't scrapbooked in a long time...) Here's how it goes:

These Hands

     These hands do not often get manicures or even hand cream. They usually have uneven nails and ragged cuticles. They keep their own box of bandaids in the bathroom.
     These hands are strong. These hands can be gentle. They can cook meal, pat a back, or steer a car. They can wring out wet cloths, mop floors and paint delicate paintings.
     These hands love to hold pens and pencils and paintbrushes and needles. These hands suffer horribly when their owner is nervous, bored, or anxious.
     These hands held 3 just born babies and felt each part of their tiny warm bodies just to be sure all was right. These hands rocked and tickled and spanked and saddled. They nursed booboos, opened hundreds of juice box straws, braided hair, wiped away tears and held smaller hands and even learned to speak a little sign language.
     These hands made customized dresses, dozens of Halloween costumes, painted ghouls' faces and carved pumpkins, decorated Christmas cookies and lovingly wrapped each present.
     These hands have felt the sympathetic, loving squeeze of teenage children and recognized the adults they are trying to become. 
     These hands are not beautiful to anyone but me. They are not small and delicate like my grandmother's or soft and smooth like my mother's. But they are mighty. They never saw anything that they didn't think thy could do.

So there we go.My hands represent me more than my face. Now...what to do with a painting of giant hands.

Friday, November 8, 2013

Cedar Mama


I've discovered I love carving wood. It's time consuming and can be hard on your hands, back and shoulders but I love the results. I could seriously see myself doing more of this is I weren't already in love with painting. Or if I were twenty years younger. Sculpture is tough on the old folks. This piece is called The Beginnings of Unconditional Love and was made for my beginning sculpture class. It's only about 8 inches tall and made of a solid chunk of cedar from a tree that Pop had to cut down. (Shout out to Pop for always keeping an eye out for tree trunks that want to be art in their after-life) The design came from a scribble drawing I made for an online art course a few years ago. You close your eyes and scribble on a piece of paper then look at it for awhile until a design emerges. This is what I saw in the scribbles.



It's a little silly I guess, but I have just always loved this little shape. I've had it in the back of my mind for awhile and have wanted to carve it for more than a year. So when I needed to start a new project, I found my chunk of cedar and hauled it to the wood shop at school.


I set about removing corners and extra bits with a band saw; a reductive process. I almost left it like this, cause it's so texture-y and awesome, but I stuck to the vision and ground and chiseled her down and then sanded and sanded and sanded till she was smooooooth. I'm pleased. Little mama, little one...






Tuesday, November 5, 2013

What's Been Going On?

   



  Well, What HAS been going on? A lot, but there isn't much to show for it. I'm taking three studio classes, beginning painting, beginning ceramics, and beginning sculpture. None of these classes feels like a beginner classe. Learning lots, working lots. 
     
     This is my first ever oil painting. A still-life (obviously) using only black and white paint. No pre-sketch, just diving in.









    

  This is the first color oil painting. Same still life, different angle. It's pretty lame but I promise I've gotten better since then.

    I have four LARGE paintings rotating on the easels at school. Large for me anyway. The smallest is 3' x 4'. 














Some of the handiest things I've learned this semester is how to build and stretch canvases and how to build frames for artwork. So cool. Now I can make any size I want.














Here is Sister helping me gesso the canvases and another small one we found in the closet. She knows I'm used to having Gus' help on all outdoor projects and she does her best to fill his shoes.















I also finished this about two weeks ago for the sweet grandbaby we are expecting mid-December. This was so much fun. I've missed quilting. This is the first quilt I've made in probably 7 or 8 years. Lots of work but nice. The border is from the fabric in her crib bedding. So sweet!








I have a couple of sculptures I wouldn't mind posting but I need to take a photo or two. I'll try to do that this week. Meanwhile... if you'd like to check it out I made a website... michelletaff.com  I have a couple of the sculptures up on the site and a few of the watercolors from this summer's class. Not a lot on there yet. It's time consuming and time is a precious commodity these days.

Monday, August 19, 2013

Happy Last-Week-of-Summer








This is really the only painting I've finished all summer. No I take that back. I took a watercolor class and have a few smallish paintings. I'll post them tomorrow, maybe. This is named "The Call". The background has parts of the poem by Christopher Marlowe that start "Come live with me and be my love..." Sorry, I don't even know the correct name of the poem, but I like it, and find myself rolling those words around in my mouth sometimes.

This is of course based on the brown pelicans we saw in Galveston. I'm a little disappointed with this one. It's been finished for probably two months, but I only photographed it this morning. Guess that means I have no plans to rework it. Moving on.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Mamas and Babies





I made this some time ago. It's pretty small around 8 x 10 I think. The date embedded in the photo says June 17, which was the last time I posted so I must have been dying to add this to the post. However, it was a gift for a baby shower in the middle of July, so I had to sit on it. Her baby's room is yellow and grey and has an elephant theme. Welcome Baby Liam! Come soon! Ahhh... Babies are so sweet. Especially little elephant babies. Here are the process photos:


The sketch



The Progression

Monday, June 17, 2013

Summertime is Art Time




     At least I hope it is. I'm trying to make art, like crazy!!! I've had a couple of failures and a couple of not-quite-right pieces, like the one above. But I had a blast making it and want to do more. What do you think? It is based on the pour art of Holton Rower. Sorry I don't have a website to link to, but google him, check out his work. He is AMAZING!!!

     I have actually been working. I'd like to show you, but I'm not quite ready yet. I finished a gift that my daughter commissioned this afternoon. Darling, but I don't want to ruin the surprise for her friend though, so I'll wait to post. Also I am trying to make some little drawings that I can print on cards. I'm not sure there is a market for greeting cards with my silly drawings on them, but I'm going to give it a go. Four, possibly five drawings are finished but they will be posted when I'm ready to sell. In the meantime here are a few sketchbook scans:





These last two sketches feature the cute boutonnieres (apparently I spelled that word wrong on the drawing) from Mara's wedding. What? Yes, my daughter is married, and I am officially old. Also they feature some of the gifts given to John and me by the two Chinese college students that stayed with us in May. Awesome guys.  Here they are, Dwight first, then Eason. If you are able to read this in China, guys, know that we think of you often and miss you!





Friday, April 12, 2013

Art in the Park



Just finished two paintings this evening. Here's the first. Don't know if I should call it Faith or The Clown. The quote says "Faith is the bird that feels the light when the dawn is still dark" by Rabindranath Tagore. I like birds. They make me happy. You know, except in real life. This is painted on roofing felt, or tarpaper. Here it is framed:





Here is the second. It's called Jawbreakers. Not sure this photo does it any favors. It is actually not misshapen like this. Acrylic on gallery wrapped canvas.

Getting ready to head out to the Goodman Museum in Tyler  to do Art in the Park tomorrow. It's going to be a gorgeous spring day and I want to sell everything (just about) I've ever made. Come see me!

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Riding out April



Springtime and a girl wishes she had lots of time to do spring-y stuff but instead she is writing papers and reading boring text. Still... I have been meaning to post something for some time now. I know it's been months since I managed the last post. So, a sad little scan of a sad little sketch I did over spring break of flowers from the front of seed packets. I did get these seeds planted and I have a few sprouts. Not so many as I would like. When May comes along I'll have a little more time to fuss with flowers.


I tried very hard to get past the drawing slump over spring break as well. Here is my pep talk to myself. The inset is from a sketch I did last semester trying to find something to make into a print.


This is a sketch I did about one of my dreams, something I always say I will do but have never done before. Let me tell you what the journalling says, you know,  just in case you were at all interested in what I dream about:


I dream. A lot. I always have. I don't really understand those people who say they never dream. But I do feel sorry for them. My dreams are colorful, action-packed, odd, sometimes terrifying. Sometimes when I wake I know exactly what a dream meant - usually highlighting some insecurity or fear or preoccupation. But most times I'm stumped. I have re-occuring dreams (like flying, which I don't have much anymore) or that my teeth crumble (which also don't happen much anymore, thank goodness) and saving the baby ( I don't know who the baby is, but I am the only one who can save it).
     Saturday morning I dreamt I had been betrayed by someone I trusted. They turned into a Doberman and I started pulling pieces of broken glass out of my mouth. I actually had a chance to paint this but the sketch turned out better. Guess I'm pretty rusty.


Here is the little painting. It's on tar paper, which is my new obsession. Kind of bumpy for faces though. Sorry about the glare on the lower left side. I didn't think tar paper would catch the light like that. And no, it's not a self-portrait.


Saturday, January 26, 2013

A New Sketchbook for a New Year



A zoo rhino based on a photo Kinzey took when she and Caleb, Carsen, and I went to the zoo while they were visiting just after New Year's. She has a close-up (I'm sure that's the technical name for it) lens on her camera and she got better pictures than I did. This guy will start off the new RED moleskine that John gave me for Christmas.


These shoes went into the clothes and closet moleskine. Just a little (read a lot) off proportionally. Here's another, older shoe sketch in the book. Have I shown you? I didn't think so


I like shoes.And lastly a couple of drawings from a class sketchbook from last semester. We had specific assignments, that's why they have numbers on them. These two sketches are on facing pages but this book is a little too big, can only fit one side at a time on the scanner.