Tag Archive for: zentangle

“Pétales Musicales” Painting from the NL Folk Festival

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“Pétales Musicales” – 4′ x 4′ – created live at the NL Folk Festival.

Remember when I wrote that live painting was a stretch of my comfort zones?

Well, I had a great time painting in the Espace Franco at the NL Folk Festival last weekend.  Thanks again to the Réseau Culturel Francophone TNL for the invite!

No regrets! That’s usually what happens when I feel the fear and do it anyway. Sure I was nervous, but excited too. I’m so glad I listened to a higher calling.

In this post, you’ll see the layers and read some stories about the creative process behind “Pétales Musicales”.  For purchasing details, click here.

Symbolism

“Pétales Musicales” (Musical Petals) is as much about listening to the song of your soul as it is about becoming a part of the music around you.

If you honour your unique voice first, you’ll rock this world …. (I couldn’t say folk it… just didn’t sound right).

Live Painting at the NL Folk Festival

My mission was to get the festival’s energy down on canvas.

If music, summer, fun, variety, and community are what you get from this painting, then I did my job!

My “research” started Friday night, sitting on the lawn of Bannerman Park with hundreds of other folks, filling my soul with the music of Emma Peckford, Allan Ricketts, Katie Baggs, Sean Panting, Kat McLevey, Andrew Laite & Josh Sandu (Rube & Rake) and Steve Maloney.

I could hear Jim Payne and Fergus O’Byrne from the bus stop, but I missed Hey Rosetta. They started at 10:30 and I knew I’d be a wreck the next day if I stayed.

In bed by 10pm, I was all set to go early on Saturday morning for set-up!

The weather was cold (9°C at times) and damp, but it didn’t rain (amazing since the forecast called for 20mm on Sunday).

The music, the crowd, my lunchtime fish tacos, and all those who stopped to chat inspired this painting. It came to life layer by layer.

I never knew what the next layer would bring. That’s the beauty of intuitive painting! 

Would you like to try intuitive painting? Get my free step-by-step guide with lots of photos.

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During the Fred Penner concert, I walked around tracing hands of children in the crowd. Thanks to Catie and Freddie of St. John’s, Sam and Anna of Hollyrood, and Ava of Nova Scotia!  You’re at the heart of this festive flower!

On Sunday morning, I woke up raring to go. I started an hour before the festival opened.

I was glad I had my alpaca wool socks, layers of thrift shop fleece (great for paint stains), and my groovy hat!  I love NL weather as long as I’m dressed for it!

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I couldn’t believe it! The thick strokes I used for the petals on Saturday weren’t dry by the time we left on Sunday! We’re talking acrylic paint that normally dries in a few hours…

If you see a few bugs when you look real close, that’s why!… all part of festival and floral life!  Part of me feels bad, but our local black flies have taken a few chunks out of me this week, leaving smears of bright red blood on my face and neck, so part of me doesn’t mind …

The Finishing Touches At Home

Yay for de-humidifiers! The petals dried at home overnight.

I worked on the painting for another 15 hours.  

You can’t see all the tangle pattern details in the hands and shading from far, but when you get up close, there’s a whole other world to explore. Click on the photos below to see them larger.

Then there’s the iridescent 3-D paint. Fun! Fun! Fun! Did I say I love my job!

I spray varnished it yesterday, covered from head to toe in protective gear.  Then I headed to Beachy Cove beach with friends to chill out. Actually, it was sunny and warm. What a contrast!

“Pétales Musicales” is SOLD.

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Studio Sneak Peek: The Couple

Dominique Hurley-wip-DLH_1139Have you seen the movie “The Secret“? It’s a wonderful film about the Law of Attraction.  It brought a lot of what I already believed to the mainstream as it bridged the spiritual and business worlds. It also enhanced my understanding and practice of manifestation.  Anyway, there’s this one scene where Marie Diamond, an expert in feng shui (a Chinese philosophical system of harmonizing people with their surrounding environment), was retelling the story of how she advised an art director interested in attracting relationships to stop painting women with their backs turned to the viewer – something he’d been doing for years.  She suggested he paint scenes with the kind of relationship he wanted to manifest. It worked for him. That’s what I’m now feeling called to do for myself.  My 2015 intuitive vision board also seemed to incorporate a movement in that direction – notice how the couple here is beside a building in colours and patterns much like what I’ve been moved to create with my current painting?

2015 Vision Board piece I haven’t been in a relationship for about 5 years now. I don’t mind. It’s been a fantastic 5 years!  I’ve been following my heart, connecting with my path, growing personally and spiritually, all the while learning to be more unconditionally loving in my relationship with myself and those around me.  Indeed, I’ve been exploring and expressing my love of beauty and the beauty of love in many fulfilling ways. I don’t need a committed relationship, but I’m definitely open to one with the right man for me.  Being in a soul-connected relationship has been a part of my psyche since a very young age. I haven’t been proactive in that area though, being quite the introvert.  After all, you don’t meet a lot of people when you’re a happy hermit in your art cave, or attend events that mostly attract women.  I’m feeling the energy shifting though, and am open to seeing what I’m moved to create with it.

At the dawn of 2015, I sensed that it was time to expand on my painting repertoire of empowered, intuitive, peaceful, playful, blossoming, and spiritually connected women – a visual representation of what I have been manifesting and experiencing in my own life.

Now I’m being called to paint couples, and the visions are coming to me much faster than I can paint them.

In my current painting (see its beginnings in a previous post),  I see the couple as being firmly rooted to the ground and reaching upwards in a joint commitment to growth.  They stand strong, centered, present, and balanced on their own in this pose of dynamic stillness, yet they stand together in a spirit of awareness, support, respect, and unconditional love on a shared path.

This week I sketched them on paper and traced them onto the canvas using white transfer paper. The marks wash off really easily. It’s great.

Dominique Hurley-wip-DLH_1151I then painted in their forms in white titanium acrylic paint (which is opaque). This allowed the colours I used on top to be much more vivid and clear than if I had painted them on all the layers of blue underneath.

I then had fun looking through my new Tangle Pattern Guide – 2015 edition for various patterns to fill each bubble.  I sometimes create my own, but imitation is a great way to expand and it is encouraged by the creators of Zentangle®. I  used shades of greenish blues (turquoise, teal, etc.) for her – a 3-hour session – and darker blues for him – another 3-hour session. I also used rounder smoother patterns for her and more angular patterns for him.  I not only want them to represent a couple, but also the masculine and feminine.  I may still work on his head… somehow the whole square-head thing doesn’t sit well 🙂  . We’ll see…. Once I finished with all the blues, I decided to go in with some gold to unify them.  Fun!

New Toys For the Studio!

Dominique Hurley-wip-DLH_1157I finally received my order of the newly released Liquitex Professional Paint Markers this week. I bought them online on sale over Christmas. I had been looking for fine-tipped refillable markers while in Ottawa to put my Golden High Flow paints in when I came across these.  I didn’t want to make tangle patterns with regular markers – some inks would be incompatible with acrylics. Others aren’t acid-free or archival in nature.  I was also concerned that if I used oil paint markers (which are quite smelly), I wouldn’t be able to paint with acrylics again on top.  There’s a whole fat over lean principle when it comes to the chemistry of paint – something I learned in Vienna.  The 2-4mm chisel points on these are a bit large for some patterns / areas, but that’s OK.  I still really enjoyed working with them, especially since I had to move my studio up to the main floor after a few water pipes broke last weekend in the studio.  I’ve been looking at the affirmation “Let go, let it flow” on my studio wall differently since then. 🙂   We’re now having all our water pipes replaced in the house.  Being in the front office, I didn’t want to risk spilling paint anywhere, so the markers are perfect. I’m also enjoying looking out of doors as I paint and working on a higher surface than in my studio.  I definitely need to get myself a regular height table when I move back to my beloved art cave.

I also got some of the tools I ordered to create my mandala series: a couple protractors and a giant compass that can make 24″ circles if I use the rod it came with, or circles up to 10 feet if I buy a longer 1/2″ dowel  Fun!

I’m thinking ahead to the tree – I’m not sure where to go with it. I’ve got 2 tree shapes that I’m considering.  Which one do you like the most?  Left or right?  Ignore the colours – I was just playing in Photoshop to consider the shapes and how they would overlap with the snowflakes. Also ignore the fact that the one on the left has leaves and the one on the right is so thick and ends abruptly.  I’m thinking symbolism as much as shape – it’s a tough call… folks on Facebook this week have been voting for the one on the left. You?

which one

This painting is far from finished. The intricacies of detail have made this a very meditative practice.  Stay tuned for the next Studio Sneak Peek to see where it goes from here.

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Studio Sneak Peek: Snowflakes

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While staring at a blank 30″ x 40″ canvas during a pre-Christmas morning rebounding session, I received a vision for a painting of a couple standing together in tree pose.  The background was to be filled with large snowflakes in the Zentangle® style.  Saturday’s snowy photo shoot (see previous post) was perfect to get me in the mood.  This is also true of the book “Zen Doodling Mandalas that I picked up in Ottawa over the holidays (a natural purchase since I had already decided to create a dozen 30″ x 30” mandalas in 2015).  As I’m waiting for my $1000 order of canvas to launch that project, I decided to start on my painting of the couple, using the snowflake instructions from one of the chapters in my new book.

Background:

I started this painting process as I do most times – by using sacred palo santo smoke to smudge myself, my space and the canvas.  I then added a drop of blessed water from the Chalice Well in Glastonbury to my spray bottle to wet the canvas (and a dash on myself). It feels great to open myself, the space and the canvas for a whole new creative process.

The background will eventually be quite dark and the figures lighter. At least that’s how I envision it, but I’m going half planned and half intuitively with this painting, so we’ll see what happens.

I started with a very watery mix of white, pearl, interference blue-green, and 4 shades of blue.  Once that was dry, I added a glaze of pearl and 2 interference colours (they shine various colours at various angles).

Cutting Snowflakes:

Using my compass to make circles and a protractor that I printed from an online file to measure the 60 and 120 degree points on a folded circle, I then folded the left corner to the right mark and the right corner to the left mark. Then I folded it again in half.  Then I drew designs and cut them. Unfolding them is so much fun as the results are always a surprise.

Stencils:

I then placed them on the canvas, measuring carefully, and used a sponge to gently tap one shade of blue around them.  Voilà!

Tangle Patterns:

I then added darker circles (-ish… I wasn’t going for precision) to add contrast and spent the rest of the weekend listening to music and painting patterns in various shades of blue, pearl, silver, and interference blue. I have no idea how much of this will show in the final painting, but it was fun.  Here are the final 5 smaller snowflakes.  Click on any image to see it larger.

 

 

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Another Transitional Painting: Life by Design

Life by Design-Dominique HurleyYay! Yay! Yay!  That’s just how I feel about this, my 2nd crossover painting (started in 2014 and finished in 2015).

It’s called “Life by Design“, in honour of all I’m living as a full-time artist this year and all I’m writing about in my new series of articles by the same name.

The figure is one I quickly sketched in Vienna during a live model drawing session, soon after learning about the Zentangle® movement.  When I saw her on my parents’ fridge at Christmas, I just had to make a copy to incorporate her on this work in progress (6-8 layers of paint waiting for an inspiration).

There’s just something about her that makes me smile – it’s that mix of playful, flirty, shy, excited, and brave stance as she looks into a future that’s totally hers to design. I can almost hear her say “Oh Goody! Now what?” It’s  also her special blend of simplicity through fluid lines and complexity through the multitude of patterns and experiences that make her completely unique in this world.

Life by Design-low lighting-Dominique HurleyI spent several hours painting her while listening to the 2015 Thriving Artist Summit (a free series of inspirational and educational 1-hour talks online that runs daily until January 18th – highly recommended for any artist). This painting is definitely infused with all that empowering energy.

I glazed over some of the tangle patterns using various transparent colours, including a special paint that can only be seen from certain angles or in certain lighting.  This is a reminder that no matter our moods or environment, we can choose to let our colours shine.

It was after stepping back and contemplating her for a while that I saw her path shape before her – made of her own substance and colours with an added layer of gold-coloured mica flakes (love, compassion), energizing her life with passion and purpose.

Life by Design-detail2-Dominique HurleySometimes (or often in some cases), our hearts may call us to live outside the box, off the beaten track, – that’s why I so enjoyed painting her path off the face of the canvas and around the side. I remember an art teacher once telling me that I should constrain my subjects more as I often had them go beyond the frame.  I listened and thought about it, but then decided to disagree.  Art was the one area where I could freely express myself and not worry about social norms, expectations, and all the constraints in other areas of my life.  I didn’t want to paint inside the box… and so this path winds off the face of the canvas, beginning and ending in a spiral – symbol of evolution, holistic growth, awareness, and connectivity with cosmic energies.

Life by Design – 12″ x 24″ – acrylics & mica on gallery-wrapped canvas (no framing required).  – SOLD.  Click here for prints.

Go to my shop to see all available originals and reproductions.

By the way, I’ve decided to name my first crossover painting “This Little Light of Mine“, after the song that I often find my self singing and dancing to.  It has been sold.

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New Painting: “On a Wing and a Prayer”

As an English as a Second Language teacher, I’m often familiarizing students with the meaning of idioms/ expressions.  I’m going to go one step further today and share what I learned about the history of the name that came to me so clearly for this painting. Actually, I’ll take it two steps further because I’ll add my own spiritual twist to it.

“On a Wing and a Prayer”  – 12″ x 24″ – acrylics on gallery-wrapped canvas (no framing required) – SOLD

On a Wing and a Prayer-Dominique Hurley.jpg“On a Wing and a Prayer” – the idiom

  • Expression meaning that you’re hoping to succeed at something, although you’re not prepared enough or have very little chance of success.
  • first cited in the 1942 film The Flying Tiger when John Wayne’s character describes a plane that was just attacked by the Japanese as coming in with only one wing and a prayer.
  • was made even more popular in 1943 through Harold Adamson and Jimmie McHugh’s WWII patriotic song Coming in on a Wing and a Prayer

My twist:

On a Wing and a Prayer detail1 -Dominique HurleyWhen I “received” the name for this painting, I had to look on Google to double-check the meaning.  The reference to war notwithstanding, I was surprised at the less than optimistic definition.  I didn’t want one of my paintings to be associated with “only the slightest chance of success”.  So I meditated on it (ie. stared at the painting while rebounding on my new mini-trampoline – a perfect addition to the studio).  It didn’t take long for its message to dawn on me.  When undertaking a new project or looking at the future (as the woman in profile is doing here), we always have a choice to focus on the best possible or worst possible scenarios.  It’s so easy to get caught up in all the details that we miss the beautiful tapestries we are weaving with our lives.  One can choose, however, to trust the vision of our Higher Self, who, like the bird, sees the path before us as well as the bigger picture.  It answers our prayers for guidance, prayers that help us focus not on the impossibilities, but on the infinite possibilities of life.  There!  That’s better, isn’t it?!  I could go on, but I’ll let you add to that positive spin on your own.

On a Wing and a Prayer detail2 - Dominique HurleyInteresting fact about the hidden layers:  As I’ve explained before, my paintings often consist of multiple layers (of paint as well as meaning). These layers are added on intuitively with a spirit of play and exploration until an idea forms.  Well, this is one of those paintings that has a very rich history indeed.  Beneath the layer of crimsons and gold that forms the base to this finished painting was another layer with another 8 hours of zentangle patterns.  It is all but invisible now.  Was that wasted time?  No. It’s simply part of the meditative process that went into creating this piece.  When I ended up covering it up, I didn’t dwell on what I had “lost”, but focused on the new possibilities.  Nothing could take away from the joy those 8 hours of pattern-making gave me.  It’s all part of the process and infuses the piece with that much more love and energy.

On a Wing and a Prayer detail3-Dominique Hurley.jpg

 

 

 

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Bye Bye Drawing Psycho-Baggage

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Eureka!  After 6 months of full time studies at the Vienna Academy of Visionary Art and a month’s art/travel experience in Bali, I’m thrilled to report that I’m actually enjoying our live drawing sessions. I can honestly say that I’m no longer feeling any emotional baggage around drawing.  I’m not saying I’m a master drawer – far from it! But I’m having fun and accepting the results of the practice.  Each task is simply an exploration – of myself, of the materials, of the model, of the exercise in drawing.  Now that’s a far cry from what drawing had been my whole life, so it’s definitely noteworthy. Yay!

In the past 2 weeks, I’ve attended four 2-hour sessions.  You can’t really recognize my style from one to the next, but you can recognize that I’m drawing human beings.  Yay again!

On my first day back from Bali, our model didn’t show up, and so I suggested we each take turns modeling (thus the clothes).  It was great and helped us appreciate a model’s work much more so.  We only held our poses for a short time.

Instead of sitting down with a small drawing pad and pencils like I used to do after a long day’s work, I’ve been standing at an easel with vine charcoal and large-scaled paper.  The results are much freer.

This was the most fun – I went in straight away with a marker and tried zentangling again.  Loved that!  Loved it very much!

Dominique Hurley_IMG_7348Not only am I enjoying my life drawing sessions at school, I’m bartering for them:  I’ve been helping out with a few tasks in preparation for our year-end exhibition. Bonus!  I look forward to 2 more sessions next week before my week in Italy.

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Oh So Much Fun!

tile_mt_008_sm-8-800-600-80Thanks so much to my friend Paige in Saskatoon, who clued me in on a creative movement that seems to be sweeping the bookshelves, classrooms, homes, and Internet.  Have you heard of zentangle?  It’s basically a meditative organized way of doodling, usually in black ink on white and in an abstract manner, like this one from Maria Thomas, one of the founders (www.zentangle.com).  You make sections and fill each one with different patterns (there are dozens of books available that show you how to do these patterns – Paige, let me know how you like your zentangle mandala book when you get it…).  There are no mistakes, no erasing, and no drawing experience necessary – just seeing where it evolves while in a relaxed creative state.  Fun! There are also lots of videos online that teach some of the patterns, including this one that was inspired by the Art Nouveau posters of Alphonse Mucha, whom I mentioned in my previous post – the reason zentangle was such a big part of my day today (thanks again Paige!).

war-horse-zentangle-jani-freimannYou should see what some people are doing with it (click here for image gallery). Doesn’t it have a bit of a tribal art/tatoo feel to it? Many artists are already selling their zentangle work, like Jani Freimann  (www.fineartamerica.com), whose horses I like.  But the possibilities are endless, and an hour or so surfing the Internet today while waiting for my paint to dry proved it.  I tell you, this zentangle thing is no secret (even if I was out of the loop)…   Of course part of me wishes it weren’t so popular, but I’m aware that this is a fear-based scarcity reaction to getting all enthusiastic about something new and not wanting it to be all over the place.  In the spirit of abundance and love, however, it’s my pleasure to share it with all of you – try it – you’ll probably like it.

Interestingly, this is not actually totally new to me or to the world – even though the name and extent might be.  I’ve long since played with meditative patterns (mostly swirls, spirals and dots) in my artwork and had already planned to incorporate new ones in both the paintings I’m working on, inspired by the work of two Viennese artists who inspire me: Klimt and Hundertwasser.  Although they didn’t use that name for it, they were zentangling long ago.  Check out all these bubbles of gorgeous patterns.

I’ve had one of these Hundertwasser images on my desk for weeks as I plan to stylize my childhood totem animals at the bottom of this painting in a similar way.  It’s still a long way from that stage though – it now has its 3rd full layer of whites due to 2 glazing misfortunes/ opportunities-for-learning.

My plan also involves covering the female figure and the tree she’s emerging from in sigils (secret sacred patterns I’ve developed).   The figures’ hair was inspired by Mucha’s art nouveau style.   In my second painting, (which you see here with the first localized magenta glaze), the hand at the top will eventually have an eye in the centre and all sorts of zentangle squiggles in it that spill out into a ball of energy spirals that is between them all (I just realized that I don’t  have a photo yet of the sketches I made of that weeks ago – I’ll have to add those later.)

All this to say that it’s just so cool to see how all the things I’ve been exploring and learning about are coming together.  It’s really helping me define what I like and where I’m going.  What a great day!  And it doesn’t end there.  During our session with a nude model, I decided to take one of my 5-minute stylized sketches and fill it with zentangles.  I then did a very quick outline of another pose and filled that one up too.  Again, what fun!  I especially like the tall one – but for my first try at this, it’s not bad.  I wonder how it will be to play with this in coloured acrylic paint in a faster, more intuitive way rather than the carefully planned Mischtechnik layers I’m working on at this school or in black marker.  I’ll eventually find my own unique way of stylizing figures and nature, inspired by all I’ve seen and done along the way.  And as I head in that direction, I’ll keep enjoying the journey.  Yay!

P.S.  May 14, 2014.  I did another zentangle during life drawing class.  Fun!

Dominique Hurley_IMG_7348P.P.S.  In October/November, I started adding zentangle patterns to my paintings (including a couple on drums).

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