Archive for the ‘Words Words Words’ Category

Salt and Watercolor

Wednesday, March 7th, 2012

From Visual to Physical Texture

Tentacle Deeps 9 by Amy Crook

Tentacle Deeps 9

I’ve seen a lot of artists who explore the same idea over and over, and I never thought I’d find anything I was interested in enough to stick with myself. I was all over the map, artistically, doing everything from bronze sculpture to oil painting, acquiring new materials like some people buy shoes (you know who you are).

Well, I’ve proven myself wrong! As you’ve probably noticed, I’ve been using the salt-and-watercolor technique for going on a year now, and creating a body of contemporary artwork that I’m totally in love with. The ability to create beautiful art out of something as mundane as salt just amazes me.

Today’s Words post is the short version of How it Happened.*

Burning Planet by Amy Crook

Burning Planet

Lots of people use salt to create texture in watercolor or silk paintings, so I decided to teach myself how. You can see a traditional use of the technique in Tentacle Deeps 9. I sprinkled salt onto the damp watercolor paint, and the salt drew the paint to it, creating the flower-like shapes in the background and the texture on the tentacles.

I experimented with just how damp the paint needed to be to get the effect I wanted. In Burning Planet, the paint was actually too wet, and the salt partially dissolved into the paint. As it dried, the salt re-crystallized with the darker red and orange pigments trapped inside — the crystals even sparkle in the sunlight. I was fascinated.

Water Lilies 1 by Amy Crook

Water Lilies 1

With Water Lilies 1, I continued to play around trying to make bigger crystals. The turquoise ink dilutes to a lovely pale blue which is sadly fugitive (the color fades in strong sunlight, and eventually the flowers will be totally white). This was the first time I tried the eyedropper technique I’ve been perfecting ever since, and I fell in love with the strange little pools of salt that formed. They’re a little fragile, but they add a 3D quality to the paintings that’s just plain cool.

I’m a big fan of entropy and randomness (except when it comes to housework, bleh), especially when I can control the parameters.

Rain Crow, detail, by Amy Crook

Rain Crow, detail

I always enjoy the way purple hair dye fades, first the blues and then the reds, going from deep purple to a light reddish-brown over a few months. I like board games where there’s an element of chance to throw a wrench in your strategy, like die rolls or card draws. This salt-and-watercolor technique is like that, too.

For instance, on Rain Crow I got the coolest effect where a crow-shaped tower of salt grew right up out of the crow’s eye, entirely by chance.

Jellyfish Deeps by Amy Crook

Jellyfish Deeps

I’ve tried a bunch of different things with it since then.

For Salted Squid 1, I made a squid-shaped puddle of salt, ink and water, which dried as an even coat of crystals rather than in the cup shape I get from the single droplets.

Something about the paper I used for Modern Snow creates gorgeous snowflakes, an effect I haven’t been able to duplicate with any other paper.

In Jellyfish Deeps, the water refused to bead up and instead made strange-shaped, shallow pools on top of the watercolor wash.

Modern Snow by Amy Crook

Modern Snow

I’ve even used a naturally black paper to create pieces like Moon Dark, which makes the salt crystals stand out pale and stark against the page.

I’ve also made a couple of bookmarks, and I used my Horizon Bookmark to read a book just to make sure it would stand up to the abuse.

My newest toys are iridescent paint and sparkly gel ink pens, and you’ll see them featured in all three of the painting posts this week (Monday, Thurs. & Fri.). I don’t know how long this “salt phase” will last, but I’m looking forward to finding out!

*If you’ve read the Star Trek book that’s a reference to, I love you, fellow nerd. Live long and prosper!

PS – If you click on the salt tag below, you can see every salt painting I’ve posted (as long as I remembered to tag it).

Moon Dark by Amy Crook

Moon Dark

Salted Squid by Amy Crook

Salted Squid

Categories: Daily Art, Words Words Words
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Words on Wednesday & the New Art Week

Wednesday, February 29th, 2012

Small Things, Great Love by Amy Crook

Don’t worry, Tentacle Tuesdays are safe! I’m just switching things up a little to give you some posts with actual, relevant stuff in them besides just the pretty. Well, and the tentacley.

Ahem. Anyway, after talking to several of you over the course of the past few months, I’ve discovered that you want to know more about how I make art and how being an artist fits into my life. I’ve got a few things planned including stuff about my studio and my living room which is also my other studio, about how I choose what to paint and what to paint with, and probably at least one post about my cats. Because this is the internet, so I can post about my cats.

Tentacle Deeps 20 by Amy CrookTentatively, the new schedule is going to be:

  • Monday, painting or drawing
    (often this will be a moon, because New Moon Mondays really amuses me)
  • Tentacle Tuesdays
  • Words on Wednesday
  • Thursday, painting or drawing
  • Friday, painting or drawing
    (because often I have two or three things I want to post together)
  • Saturday Morning Cartoons
    (formerly Weeble Weds and, let’s face it, an awesome childhood memory)
  • Sunday Sketches

Mod Tree by Amy CrookI’m not sure how I’ll feel about not having a day off, but we’ll find out, won’t we? I didn’t want to cut back to only two paintings a week, because I’ve been painting more than that lately even without the tentacles (which I’m several weeks ahead on! So many tentacles…) and it just gets hard to keep track of what’s next to post.

If there’s something you’ve been wondering about, this is a good place to ask. I’d love to have more conversation in my comments, seriously, so really feel free to ask anywhere and I’ll try to answer. Oh, and hey, happy Leap Day!

Weeble Dagon by Amy Crook

Categories: Daily Art, Words Words Words
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Distant Skies at Endgame in Oakland, CA

Monday, February 6th, 2012

Distant Skies, art by Amy Crook at Endgame in Oakland, CA

Distant Skies, art by Amy Crook at Endgame in Oakland, CA

Did you miss the tentacles? Never fear, new art is here! Well, here at Endgame in Oakland, anyway. I decided to theme the show with skies, stars and moons, and so you can see there’s pieces ranging from last week’s Blue Moon to some of my earliest salt pieces like Aglow. It’s funny, it feels like I’ve been working on the salt technique for ages, but really it’s not quite been a year, so this is a good sampling of the things I’ve done over the past year.

As before, the art is upstairs in the open gaming area, and I’m there most Wednesday evenings playing boardgames with the guys, so feel free to stop in. Of course the room up there is open most of the time, so if you just want to take a peek when I’m not around to stare to you, feel free.

The salt paintings are just so much cooler in person, I want you all to see them, I admit it. There’s even one token non-salt watercolor, Mountains of Madness, just for variety. You can click the image above to get a better view of the 13 pieces included in the show.

Categories: Daily Art, Flowers, Trees and Landscapes, Words Words Words
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Abandon All Hope

Monday, January 30th, 2012

Abandon All Hope print by Amy Crook

Abandon All Hope print by Amy Crook

A perfect message for your Monday, really, this print reads:

ABANDON ALL HOPE
Ye Who Enter Here*

*If you have already abandoned all
hope, please disregard this notice.

I saw this quote on a LOLcat ages ago, which of course I totally failed to bookmark, and made a digital poster of it. I could never quite bring myself to list it in my Etsy shop, however, and I think that was because it just wasn’t really my style. So, I took watercolor and Sharpie marker and remade it by hand with scribbly Amy-style Sharpie calligraphy, and I liked it so much I’m keeping the original.

Abandon All Hope, 8″x10″ watercolor and Sharpie Marker on paper, not for sale. However, prints are available at my Etsy shop.

Categories: Angels, Cthulhu, and Other Myths, Daily Art, Words Words Words
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Tentacles at Endgame

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

Tentacle Deeps watercolor series by Amy Crook, on display at Endgame in Oakland, CA

Tentacle Deeps watercolor series by Amy Crook, on display at Endgame in Oakland, CA

If you’ve been curious to see some of these pieces in person, now’s your chance! The wonderful guys at Endgame in Oakland, CA have graciously allowed me to take over one the walls up in their open gaming area for a mini-show of my Tentacle Deeps series. I’m really enjoying the way the whole series looks all together like this, though there are two pieces that didn’t make it up onto the wall — these only go to 11.

I’m usually there on Wednesday nights to game if you’d like to come see me as well as my work, but if you go by when I’m not there, be sure to tell the guys at the counter I said hi!

Categories: Daily Art, Tentacles, Words Words Words
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Recipe: Rice Pudding

Monday, October 25th, 2010

Retired Raisin by Amy CrookLike all of my other recipes, this one is adapted from somewhere else, but I’ve been making it for so long I have no idea where anymore.

3 c. cooked rice (I use jasmine rice because that’s what I use for everything, heh)
3 c. milk
2/3 c. sugar (I find raw sugar gives it a richer flavor)
1/2 tsp. cinnamon, ginger and cardamon
dash nutmeg & cloves
1/2 c. raisins (if you add more than this, add more milk to compensate)
Milk Sugar Butter by Amy Crook2 Tbl. butter
1 tsp. vanilla

Combine everything but the vanilla in a good-sized saucepan and cook on medium heat for ~25 minutes, or until it’s just starting to thicken, definitely thinner than you want for serving. Stir occasionally, and keep watch once it starts to simmer to prevent boilovers and messy stoves, not to mention scorched milk.

Remove from heat, add vanilla, let cool. Eat hot or cold, though I prefer it warm. It’ll completely solidify in the fridge, just stir in some milk if you want to thin it out for eating later.

Rice Pudding by Amy Crook

Categories: Daily Art, Whimsical and Strange, Words Words Words
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Amy’s Mum’s Pumpkin Cookies

Monday, October 18th, 2010

It’s fall and time to make one of my absolute favorite treats! These cookies are practically little cakes with their fluffy texture and delicious icing, and while they’re a long process to make, it’s absolutely worth it.

I make these a little differently than my mother, so I’ve marked my own variations with a * in case you’re not quite so much of a spice nut as I am.

Cannibal Pumpkin by Amy CrookAmy’s Mum’s Pumpkin Cookies

Cream 1 cup of butter or shortening

Add & beat:
1 cup sugar
1 cup pumpkin (puree or canned)
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla

Sift together & add:
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon salt
*1 teaspoon ginger
*1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
*1 teaspoon cardamon
*1/4 teaspoon cloves

Drop on greased cookie sheet (I use parchment paper instead), bake at 375°F for 10-15 minutes. Check frequently for burning. (They will still seem a bit wet inside when they’re golden brown on the bottom, but will finish baking into a cake-like consistency as they cool.) Makes ~2 dozen.

Punkin Cookies by Amy CrookGinger Brown Sugar Icing

Start with:
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup milk
3 tablespoons butter

Put in small saucepan over medium heat and bring to a boil, stirring frequently with a wooden spoon. Boil for 2 minutes, then remove from heat and let cool.

Stir in:
3/4 teaspoon vanilla
*1 teaspoon ginger
*1/4 teaspoon cardamon
1 cup powdered sugar

Add more powdered sugar until the consistency resembles a thick glaze, then frost your cookies. Icing will get everywhere, so i suggest you frost them on parchment paper. *grin*

Scaredy Pumpkin by Amy CrookEnjoy!

For those not in the US, when making your own pumpkin puree, use the smaller pumpkin varieties (approximately 5-7 lbs., 2 1/2 – 3 1/2 kg.). Cut the pumpkin in half lengthwise, remove seeds and stringy fibers, and place cut-side down on a greased baking sheet. Bake at 350 degrees F (177 degrees C) for approximately 45 minutes to 1 1/4 hours (depending on size) or until easily pierced with a knife. Scoop out the pulp and puree in a food processor until smooth. Can strain through cheesecloth to extract all the liquid. Cool before using.

Categories: Daily Art, Things I'm a Fan Of, Whimsical and Strange, Words Words Words
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