Posts Tagged ‘salt’

Blood from a Stone 2

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

Blood from a Stone 2, abstract art by Amy Crook

Blood from a Stone 2 by Amy Crook, $323

The vivid, rich fuchsia in this piece, against the backdrop of soft black-brown bloodstone watercolor, couldn’t help but remind me of my cartoon of Kristine and her awesome pink-streaked hair. Despite that, I decided to stick with the horror theme from Tuesday’s art and name it after the bloodstone paint.

Blood from a Stone 2, 7″x5″ mixed media on paper, $323, framed, with free shipping.

The vivid pink — which is as close to red as I’ve gotten so far, using dense swirls of blood-red ink — makes this piece extra special hell to photograph. I do love how the salt crystals look like candy here, though I wouldn’t advise trying to lick them.

Blood from a Stone 2, detail 1, by Amy Crook

Blood from a Stone 2, detail 1, by Amy Crook

I totally dig the little ziggurat formations that I sometimes get, though I have no idea how to create them on purpose.

Blood from a Stone 2, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Blood from a Stone 2, detail 2, by Amy Crook

It looks great in its black frame, the pink is gorgeously vivid and the soft, matte paint provides a lovely contrast.

Blood from a Stone 2, framed art by Amy Crook

Blood from a Stone 2, framed, by Amy Crook, $323

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art
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Autumn Winds

Wednesday, August 24th, 2011

Autumn Winds, abstract art by Amy Crook

Autumn Winds by Amy Crook, $299

I’m saving the Weeble this week for Friday, so instead you get a windy Wednesday. This piece uses tea, salt, watercolor, and pen and ink to create a whirlwind of color and shapes that reminded me of leaves tumbling around and around in a little eddy of breeze. I added in the rust-red Japanese maple leaves to add color and strengthen that impression.

Autumn Winds, 7″x5″ mixed media on paper, $299, framed, with free shipping.

Here you can see a close-up of the spot where leaf and salt pool collide; I used my brown pen and very little color leeched out into the salt, making the pools a subtle addition of texture and sparkle rather than a focal color point.

Autumn Winds, detail, by Amy Crook

Autumn Winds, detail, by Amy Crook

This piece looks great in its brown wooden frame, the colors really go well together. It will arrive at your door framed and in upcycled gift wrap, safely packaged for transit.

Autumn Winds, framed art by Amy Crook

Autumn Winds, framed, by Amy Crook, $299

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art, Flowers, Trees and Landscapes
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The Stars Are Right

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011

The Stars Are Right, abstract art by Amy Crook

The Stars Are Right by Amy Crook

The dark skies framing the glowing salt stars are painted in my newest art supply acquisition, paint made from actual Bloodstone. The color looks a bit more brownish to my eye, but the scanner definitely gave it a green tinge more like the actual stone looks before it’s ground up and made into paint. I have a number of the oil paints from this line (I love the Amazonite green), but this is my first foray into the watercolors, and I love the granular texture the paint gets as it dries.

The arrangement of green salt formations really reminded me of a constellation, and the color of course made me think of Cthulhu, especially with the Bloodstone watercolor to ground it, so that’s where the piece gets its name. After all, Cthulhu is merely snoozing until the stars align and new reign begins. In a strictly fictional manner, of course.

The Stars Are Right, 7″x5″ salt, pen & ink and watercolor on Arches cover white paper.

The Stars Are Right, detail, by Amy Crook

The Stars Are Right, detail, by Amy Crook

Above you can see a bit more of what the paint looks like in the sunlight, the warm brown-black setting off the cool green quite nicely. Below, I’ve got the piece in a simple black frame that protects the salt crystals and brings out the color in the bloodstone.

The Stars Are Right, framed art by Amy Crook

The Stars Are Right, framed art by Amy Crook

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Angels, Cthulhu, and Other Myths, Daily Art
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Rain Crow

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

Rain Crow, art by Amy Crook

Rain Crow, art by Amy Crook

A wonderful person who’d just found my site emailed me to ask if I’d done anything with ravens/crows or dragons, and I realized that, despite both of these being themes I really enjoy, I really hadn’t. After doing my little crow sketch the other day, I decided to actually google up what a real crow looks like (yes, still too lazy to look out the window, hush) and used those references to draw this.

All the color in the crow comes from ink pens, which I scribbled with delightful abandon to create the basic shape and color fill on the crow, and then after the salt on the beak had formed, I went back in with plain water and added the gorgeous watercolor-esque wash over the whole crow.

After I put in the ground, I decided it needed something in the sky around it, and the obvious choice for me was salt-pool raindrops in this soft aqua blue pen.

Rain Crow, 7″x5″ pen & ink, watercolor, and salt on paper, nfs (sold).

The real amazing part of this crow is actually the part you can’t actually see except from a very specific angle, this amazing salt formation right over its eye that’s actually in the shape of a fat little black bird, which I photographed framed by one of the water droplets that would later become a salt pool. This formation is incredibly fragile, so I didn’t even put the piece on the scanner, just took photos and have now put it in a shadow-box frame where it will stay protected.

Rain Crow, detail 1, by Amy Crook

Rain Crow, detail 1, by Amy Crook

The salt on the crow’s beak and eye formed with a really neat oil-slick sheen, which is totally lost in the closeup above, so I took another one for you below:

Rain Crow, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Rain Crow, detail 2, by Amy Crook

The frame I found is this soft silver shadow box, though I’m keeping my eye out for another frame that would allow you to pick it up and view the piece from the side, which is the best way to see its amazing secret.

Rain Crow, framed art by Amy Crook

Rain Crow, framed, by Amy Crook

Categories: Daily Art, Sea Creatures and Other Animals, Whimsical and Strange
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On the Horizon

Monday, August 15th, 2011

On the Horizon by Amy Crook

On the Horizon by Amy Crook

I used two different salt techniques on this piece, first making the row of big ‘lights’ and then creating the dark watercolor wash. Then I used small flakes of salt to create the bigger lights along the horizon and the stars in the tall, endless sky. This particular paint leaves gorgeous cloud-like formations, adding a level of texture and detail that’s really hard to see all tiny. If you click on the image, you can see a larger version, I also made a computer wallpaper and two different iPhone wallpapers.

I originally started this with something else in mind, which is why there’s a very straight row of salt across the bottom, but I find I’m far happier with this than the first idea.

On the Horizon, 7″x8″ salt and watercolor on watercolor paper.

You can see some of the detail here, with just a touch of sunlight caught on the peaks of the salt crystals.

On the Horizion, detail 1, by Amy Crook

On the Horizion, detail 1, by Amy Crook

This image shows the subtle sparkle of salt along a few of the deeper pools, where some of the fine flakes dissolved and left tiny crystals just at the edges.

On the Horizion, detail 2, by Amy Crook

On the Horizion, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art, Flowers, Trees and Landscapes
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Iridescence 3

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

Iridescence 3, abstract art by Amy Crook

Iridescence 3, abstract art by Amy Crook, $333

I admit, I wanted to post both of these in the same week because they feel like different sides of the same coin to me. They use similar color schemes and techniques, but where Iridescence 2 is all soft glowing colors and indistinct shapes, Iridescence 3 is all sharp-edged spirals and visible brush strokes.

Even the haloes of complementary color around each salt pool are sharper and more distinct than in the previous piece, with more areas of pure white paper peeking through as a result. I’m not sure which of the two I prefer, though this is the one I’ve got out on display right now.

Iridescence 3, 7″x5″ mixed media on watercolor paper, $333, framed, with free shipping.

This is a closeup of the green salt pool in the lower left, so you can really see how the paint is layered in distinct circles with watercolor’s characteristic dark, sharp edges.

Iridescence 3, detail, by Amy Crook

Iridescence 3, detail, by Amy Crook

The bold black frame works really well with the blue-black and violet-black in the darkest, sharpest of the paint swirls, and protects the fragile salt crystals from damage.

Iridescence 3, framed art by Amy Crook

Iridescence 3, framed, by Amy Crook, $333

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art, Series and Books
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Iridescence 2

Tuesday, August 9th, 2011

Iridescence 2, abstract art by Amy Crook

Iridescence 2, abstract art by Amy Crook, $333

Going in the opposite direction of yesterday’s art, this one expands the color palette along the entire cool end of the spectrum. I used green, aqua, blue and violet pens for my salt circles. Then I supplemented it with a layer of hibiscus tea in its low-saturation periwinkle shades. After that I used watercolors in matching hues, the dark indigo-black and violet softened by swirls of complementary colors around each salt pool. Finally, I used a little bit of salt to add texture to a few of the darkest places, giving the whole piece a layered complexity.

I decided to continue naming them as a series after one of my favorite of the salt pieces, Iridescence, because they had the same quality of seeming as though they were reflective without anything shiny, other than the sparkling salt crystals.

Iridescence 2, 7″x5″ mixed media on paper, $333, framed, with free shipping.

You can see one of the wonderfully complex salt structures here, a little lopsided ziggurat of crystal formations saturated with ink and ever overdyed with paint. If you click on the image you can see it even bigger and really get a sense of the detail, though of course the actual circle is barely the size of a dime.

Iridescence 2, detail, by Amy Crook

Iridescence 2, detail, by Amy Crook

The piece looks beautiful safely tucked into its frame, the soft lines and cool colors offset by the simple black wood.

Iridescence 2, framed art by Amy Crook

Iridescence 2, framed, by Amy Crook, $333

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art, Series and Books
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