Posts Tagged ‘stars’

Painted Ladies

Thursday, August 6th, 2015

Painted Ladies by Amy Crook

Painted Ladies by Amy Crook

This is the summer of paintings that take months to complete! I started this last month with the off-kilter row houses all leaning together against a midnight sky. Then it sat around for weeks while I contemplated this sky or that sky, and finally I found clouds that match with the same whimsical, half-surreal feel as the townhouses below.

Perhaps this is where the London Addams clan lives, the houses joined up by tunnels and secret passages until it’s really one big, beautiful wall of weird. Instead of a swamp they have walled-up cellars that suspiciously moan. Instead of an unmarked, abandoned well, there’s a root cellar that doesn’t seem to stop going back and down into the deep earth.

Which of these painted ladies would you like to live in?

Painted Ladies, 10″x8″ Japanese watercolor on Arches cover black paper.

Painted Ladies, detail, by Amy Crook

Painted Ladies, detail, by Amy Crook

Above, you can see a the detail of the moon and a few of the lovely, strange roofs it’s shining down upon. Below, the painted ladies are in a frame, like a window to another, odder reality.

Painted Ladies, framed art by Amy Crook

Painted Ladies, framed art by Amy Crook

Categories: Floating Gallery, Flowers, Trees and Landscapes, Series and Books
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Far-Flung

Monday, May 4th, 2015

Far-Flung by Amy Crook

Far-Flung by Amy Crook

May the Fourth be with you! I have scifi art for a scifi sort of day.

Another addition to my City series, this metropolis is definitely in some sort of other realm, whether it’s Lost Carcosa or a galaxy far, far away. The huge crescent moon hangs above a city full of wondrous buildings, a strange skyline of some alien race or mystical future.

The painted sky gives a sense of the city glow that hangs over all urban areas, while the stars hold a subtle iridescence that makes them glow in their own right. There’s even a little texture and shadow in the sliver of moon, crowned as it is by a circlet of bright stars.

Far-Flung, 8″x8″ Japanese watercolor and interference watercolor on Fluid watercolor paper.

Far-Flung, detail, by Amy Crook

Far-Flung, detail, by Amy Crook

Above, the sunlight has washed the buildings bright green, and made the midnight blue sky look even more mysterious. Below, you can see it in a frame, giant moon hanging high above and mysterious celadon buildings below.

Far-Flung, framed art by Amy Crook

Far-Flung, framed art by Amy Crook

Categories: Angels, Cthulhu, and Other Myths, Floating Gallery, Flowers, Trees and Landscapes, Series and Books
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Big Stars Little Stars

Tuesday, April 7th, 2015

Big Stars Little Stars, art by Amy Crook

Big Stars Little Stars, art by Amy Crook

I admit it, I love this painting. The stars are painted in interference blue, which shimmers with a pearlescent blue light when it’s in the sun, and the background has been given a subtle wash of dark purple over the black paper that adds a depth to the page that greatly pleases me. Despite the fact that they aren’t really part of a series, the painting this most reminds me of is Red Sky Firefly.

Every star, little or big, has a wobbly hand-painted halo of light around it, dozens of points of light twinkling in their tiny patch of void.

Where in your life could you use a shimmer of delight?

Big Stars Little Stars, 5″x5″ watercolor and interference watercolor on Arches cover black paper.

Big Stars Little Stars, detail, by Amy Crook

Big Stars Little Stars, detail, by Amy Crook

Above, you can see just a hint of the deep reddish purple permeating the paper, adding interesting shadows to the glow of the interference blue that floats atop like stars in the void. Below, I’ve tucked it in a frame, a hint of alien sky just waiting to come live wherever you need it most.

Big Stars Little Stars, framed art by Amy Crook

Big Stars Little Stars, framed art by Amy Crook

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Floating Gallery, Flowers, Trees and Landscapes, Series and Books
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City of Lights

Monday, April 6th, 2015

City of Lights by Amy Crook

City of Lights by Amy Crook

I found this bigger-than-a-bookmark scrap of paper among my things and I immediately knew what I wanted to do with it.

This fantastical city glows with periwinkle starlight, the buildings limned in white from an unseen moon. The stars floating above have just the tiniest bit of shimmer to them, enhancing the buildings below rather than stealing their spotlight.

It’s a perfect little slice of urban night life, if you love cities, dark skies, and tiny things.

City of Lights, 8.5″x2.5″ Japanese and interference watercolor on Arches cover black paper.

City of Lights, detail, by Amy Crook

City of Lights, detail, by Amy Crook

Above, you can see a close-up of the tiny buildings along this strange skyline, some of them echoing real places and some of them far more alien. Below, you can see the piece tucked into a temporary frame, small but quite the wide panoramic view.

City of Lights, framed art by Amy Crook

City of Lights, framed art by Amy Crook

Categories: Floating Gallery, Flowers, Trees and Landscapes, Series and Books
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Stardust

Friday, February 6th, 2015

Stardust, abstract art by Amy Crook

Stardust, abstract art by Amy Crook

Another painting in my Aglow series, this one hearkening back to Carl Sagan again.

The space is black and blue and violet, lit with the big glow of some celestial body and scattered with the smaller glow of stars, or possibly stardust. The firefly-dots are in interference blue, so they catch the light to twinkle and shimmer.

There are hidden stars in the white, too, which shine only at the right angle.

We are all amazing.

We are all worthwhile.

We are all stardust.

Stardust, 8″x8″ pen & ink, watercolor, and interference watercolor on Fluid watercolor paper.

Stardust, detail, by Amy Crook

Stardust, detail, by Amy Crook

Above, you can see the quote and just a hint of the sneaky extra stars hanging out in the white paper. Below, the painting is in a frame, stars glowing in the sunlight.

Stardust, framed art by Amy Crook

Stardust, framed art by Amy Crook

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Floating Gallery, Series and Books
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Observance

Thursday, July 3rd, 2014

Observance by Amy Crook

Observance by Amy Crook

I almost managed to get all the pieces for July’s Floating Gallery into the blog beforehand, but this one was finished just under the wire. I think this is the single most reworked salt painting I’ve ever done, using multiple applications of both water and very watery paint to give the appearance of scattered stars and nebulae in the sky above the observatory in the mountains below.

There’s a lot of sparkle in this painting, too, each little salt crystal catches the light at a slightly different angle, making the stars twinkle as the light moves over the surface.

Observance, 6″x6″ salt and watercolor on Fluid watercolor paper.

Observance, detail, by Amy Crook

Observance, detail, by Amy Crook

Above, you can see some of the formations of salt and watercolor that catch the light, sparkling into strange shapes in the night sky. Below, the painting is temporarily tucked into a frame, full of subtle color and light despite the dark palette.

Observance, framed art by Amy Crook

Observance, framed art by Amy Crook

Categories: Floating Gallery, Flowers, Trees and Landscapes
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Brass Gates to Midnight 2

Saturday, October 5th, 2013

Brass Gates to Midnight 2 by Amy Crook

Brass Gates to Midnight 2 by Amy Crook

Last year I painted Brass Gates to Midnight, and posted it to the blog even though it never quite felt finished to me. I decided to pull out the old piece and rework it. I spent several hours with my brown and gold paint adding depth and weight to the gates, turning the spirals from insubstantial mist to thick vines frozen in a riot of growth. I added a sheen of starlight on the dark trees, and even gave the tiny fairy tucked in the gates a bit more detail and color.

The inner spaces of the gate remain black, blocking our sight to the lands we can see through the gap and over the top. Are you tempted to push them fully open and wander into the starlit places beyond?

Brass Gates to Midnight 2, 5″x5″ Japanese and iridescent watercolor on Arches cover black paper.

Brass Gates to Midnight 2, detail, by Amy Crook

Brass Gates to Midnight 2, detail, by Amy Crook

Above, you can see the little brown-and-green fairy hiding in among the brass curls of the gate. Is he luring you in, or warning you away? Perhaps it’s a bit of both.

Below, you can see the piece in a frame, like a window onto another set of possibilities.

Brass Gates to Midnight 2, framed art by Amy Crook

Brass Gates to Midnight 2, framed art by Amy Crook

Categories: Angels, Cthulhu, and Other Myths, Flowers, Trees and Landscapes, People, Figures and Faces, Whimsical and Strange
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