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The Transcription

Originally posted 04-23-2013

A transcription is when you take a master painting and draw from it to understand how it is made.  It isn’t copying because you are not replicating it verbatim.  Instead, you are distilling the image, taking from it what you want, and leaving the rest behind.  It is a tool artists have used for centuries.

Drawing from another’s work is a great way to further your knowledge of painting.  It helps you in understanding what the artist was thinking and how he or she was doing it.  It helps you to understand the painting better, and thereby helps you, as an artist yourself, to bring the lessons you have learned into your own work.

That being said, transcriptions are dangerous.  Yes, they are helpful, but they can also be a crutch.  Don’t know what to do; make a transcription.  The classical art school hang up.  You might be learning about an artist’s process, but you aren’t necessarily learning about yourself as an artist.  This brings us back to the definition of transcription.  You are not making the transcription through the painter’s hand, but your own, yet you are still using their ideas.  This crutch can prevent some from coming up with their own ideas, their own way of working out what to put on the canvas.  But what about those that borrow?

Art also has a long tradition of borrowing from other artists.  My favorite example is Edouard Manet’s Luncheon on the Grass.  The scene of the men and women is taken from a Raphael painting that has since been lost, The Judgement of Paris.  While for the informed art goer, they would recognize the reference, it is but that, a reference!  Manet refers to the scene, but puts his own spin on it, making it modern and consequently controversial.  When using the motif, he had his own ideas and his own agenda.  He wasn’t trying to be Raphael; he could never be, but he could be Manet.

(Below are the two pieces I am referring to.  Since the Raphael was lost, all we have, and Manet had, was an engraving after the painting done by Marcantonio Raimondi.  The scene taken is located in the bottom right hand corner.)

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In the olden days, people would apprentice in a master artist’s studio, they would spend years learning the tools of the craft until one day where they would submit master paintings of their own and be acknowledged as masters themselves.  They would then open their own studios and workshops, and the cycle would begin again.

Today, we have college and graduate programs.  Instead of submitting a master piece at the Salon, you spend two or three years earning your Master of Fine Arts degree at a accredited university.

Recently, I had a critique with one of my professors.  I have been painting still lifes of doughnuts (in depth post to follow).  She advised that I look to other still life painters and try to imagine what they might do.  I was taken aback by this suggestion.  One of my biggest obstacles in this body of work was my paintings referring too much to Wayne Thiebaud, an artist I greatly admire, who is well known for his paintings of cakes, ice cream, and other delectables, as well as other artists paintings cakes or doughnuts.

As a young aspiring artist, I look up to Thiebaud, but with my current subject matter, the doughnut, I do not wish to stand in his shadow.  It is okay if people ask me about him, and whether or not I look at his work (which I do!), but I always breathe a sigh of relief when they tell me that they look nothing like his paintings.

My goal as an artist is not to sit in my studio pondering what someone else would do (I am not Thiebaud, I will never be Thiebaud, nor would I ever want to be him).  Instead, I should take the knowledge I have from my years of study, from looking at the paintings I have seen, all the artists I admire, all the artists I do not admire, and all the transcriptions I have done, and to find my unique, individual voice as a painter, and, then, do all I can to hold onto it.  In the end, that’s what will get me somewhere in this crazy profession, my individuality and my own spin on the world.

(Immediately below is a Wayne Thiebaud painting.  Below that is an Ashlee Rubinstein original.)

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The Joys of Being A Painter

Originally posted 03-03-2013

Being an artist is possibly one of the hardest and most challenging professions today.  No one who is in their right mind would ever choose to do this.  It’s insane.  The materials are expensive.  You rarely sell anything.  You spend long grueling hours in your studio, in seclusion, toiling away, cursing yourself and anyone who ever encouraged you down this path because you are “talented,” what malarky.

But on certain days, it all just makes sense.  The paint flows, the images spill out of you, everything just works, and maybe, just maybe, someone wants to buy a piece.

Sometimes you just get so into the process that you remember why you fell in love with painting in the first place.  That’s how I felt the other day when I was making paint.

Making one’s own paint is a time old tradition that has, for the most part, ceased since the invention of the (paint) tube.  No one has to spend the hours grinding their own pigments and mixing said pigments with oil and binders, filling jars with colors.  It’s all done for you, saving you precious hours that can be used in your studio painting.  But for souls like me, artists addicted to the craft in every way, there is nothing like making your own paint.

First of all, the pigments are gorgeous. (More vibrant than the photos suggest)

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Ultramarine Blue

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Alizarin Crimson Dark

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Alizarin Crimson Light

Second, you have total control over the end product.  You can choose to make the paint thick or thin, however you prefer.  And, you always know what’s in the paint, unlike when you purchase a tube from the store and it can contain fillers that stretch out and dull the pigments.

Third, (unless your studio is stocked with Old Holland or other high quality commercial paints) the paint quality is so much better!

Fourth, it’s not more expensive than buying tube paint from the store.

The thing most artists don’t know is that oil paint is extremely easy to make.  All you need is pigment and linseed oil (you can mix it with other oils, but linseed is pretty standard, especially for beginners).  That’s it.  You mix it together with palette knives, slowly adding the oil until its the right consistency, and wa-la, paint!  Sometimes, if it is a more stubborn pigment, you might need to use something called a muller (the glass tool below)  to make sure the pigment is properly dispersed in the oil.

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Then you just scoop up your paint, put it in a jar (or a tube, if you’re fancy like that), and you are ready to paint.

If you are a painter, and you have never made your own paint before, I totally recommend trying it.  If you live in NYC, I would recommend going to Kremer Pigments in Chelsea.  They have a great selection of pigments, as well as amazing brushes and other supplies, and free seminars on everything from preparing grounds to mixing paints.

Good luck!

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The Progression of a Painting

Originally posted 12-27-2012

Making a painting takes a lot of work, especially making a good painting.  We all know there are way to many bad ones out there.  It takes a lot of layers, a lot of trial and error, and a lot of time.  The secret is making it look like it just flowed out of your hand, like it was nothing, like it was breathing.

If anyone has seen the new Matisse show at the Met, “In Search of True Painting,” http://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2012/matisse

which I greatly encourage, it only proves my point.  No one (or very few) would agree that Matisse is a master painter.  This exhibition shows his process.  He would rethink his compositions on different canvases, resolving problems with trial and error.  Later, when photography was more widespread, he would use the camera to document the many steps his paintings would go through, proving to his doubting audience that his works weren’t one shot deals.

I am no Matisse, but my work involves many layers and attempts.  It is the push and pull of the paint and the brushstrokes, of trying to create some kind of depth and illusion on a flat surface, to create a window into the visions of your mind that makes this process so exciting.

My current body of work is no exception.  I have been working on these pieces for several months.  Some days things go well, while others I feel like I have killed a piece and must find some way to put life back into it.

Everyday, I document what has happened to the pieces, for better or for worse.  Here is an example of what a painting may go through, from beginning to end:

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This is the final result.  This piece is 5×4 ft.  Hope you like it.

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Exhibition at the New York Studio School

Originally posted 12-09-2012

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Friday night my current exhibition opened at the New York Studio School.  It features the paintings I have been working on all semester.  The show will be up until Thursday, December 13th.  If you can’t stop by the school, here are some more photos:

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Since all my current work is in the show, I am starting some new pieces.  I have built a stretcher that is 8 ft x 6.4 ft, and a couple smaller ones.  Very exciting stuff 🙂

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Bring the Mountain to Mohammed, or Rather to the Studio School

Originally posted 10-07-2012

I have been taken over by the ‘Art Spirit.’  Over the last few weeks, I have been continuing my Israel project.  It has taken off to new heights, no pun intended.  I have several canvases going of different sizes.  All of them started off as 20″ x 24″ and some of them I have enlarged to 4′ x 5′.  I’m planning on going even bigger.  I’ve been so busy between this and all the other stuff going on at school that this post is just going to be a lot of photos.  These are all works in progress.  Enjoy!

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4′ x 5′

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4’x 5′

20″x 24″

20″x 24″

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The World is Three Dimensional…

Originally posted 09-21-2012

So apparently there is more to the world than painting.  I have crossed the boundaries of the painting department and ventured into sculpture.  For someone who had trouble with coil pots in middle school, it was not half bad.  I don’t have to adhere to the picture plane and there actually is space.  Who would have thought!

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In the world of the two dimensional, however, I am making little progress, due to all these school activities that have been popping up (will explain later).  One new series I have started is based on my recent trip to Israel.  Using photos I took while in the Old City of Jerusalem, I am recreating part of the Kotel, more specifically, the South Wall.  I have two dyptych (paintings consisting of two canvases meant to be seen together).  Here’s the start of them.

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The first photo is the initial step I took.  I carefully drafted out the image in pencil.

The second image is a base layer of color I added.

The following image is the end of the second step.  I use two colors to lay out the ground work for the color, and using a rag, wiping out the lightest areas.

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My second set is done in the exact same manner, but instead of keeping things so linear, after figuring out what went where, I decided to free-hand the images.

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Hopefully, I can get some actual work done soon…

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WTF, I have a blog?!?

Originally posted 08-09-2012

I have given in to the demands of the 21st century, and have decided to create a blog.  Apparently it’s the hip and cool thing for artists to do today, so why not?  Somebody might actually find the things that I have to say and the images I post interesting.  I hope you do.  I promise to make this as amusing as I can.  In order to do so, please give me feedback: let me know what you like, and more importantly, what you don’t.  Also, if you’d like to know something about, well, anything, feel free to ask, be it about myself or the process of painting.

First my first post, I think I’ll share with you my new studio.  Starting my second year at the New York Studio School, I get my own studio.  I actually share it, but only with one other person, which is an upgrade from last year (I won’t get into that).  I moved in a month ago, and am settled in.  Here are some photos from move in.

Stretcher Bars – Oh the possibilities of paintings to come!

Even more stretchers and loose wood – I don’t believe I collected enough…

And of course, what’s a painter without her paints 🙂

My goal this year is to put together a thesis in order to complete my MFA.  I plan on posting my projects on this blog, giving a step-by-step look as things progress.  I currently have three or so projects begun.  Some of these are continuations of previous works I have done, while others…let’s just say I may not always know what I’m doing or where it’s going, but isn’t that the fun part!  I will post these projects in the days to come.