Posts Tagged ‘blue’

Nebula 2

Monday, April 23rd, 2012

Nebula 2, abstract art by Amy Crook

Nebula 2, abstract art by Amy Crook, $333

This piece really reminds me of a special effect on some old scifi show, a slice of space showing through the opaque curtain of some foggy white nebula. The salt sparkles on the dark blue background, and the iridescent green peeks through in the lighter patches to give it an otherworldly feel.

Nebula 2, 7″x5″ salt and watercolor on paper, $333 framed, with free shipping.

Nebula 2, detail, by Amy Crook

Nebula 2, detail, by Amy Crook

Above you can really see the way the interference green peeks through the salt, only to be subsumed by the midnight blue in the deeper part of the salt pool. Below, you can see it safely tucked into a frame and ready to come live with you.

Nebula 2, framed art by Amy Crook

Nebula 2, framed art by Amy Crook, $333

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

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

Spiral Lakes, abstract art by Amy Crook

Spiral Lakes, abstract art by Amy Crook, $269

This piece is like the inverse of Spiral Islands, with the rich French Ultramarine mixed straight into the salt-saturated solution. To me it looks like a series of thermal lakes that have burst and melted through a thick layer of ice, crusted around the edges and looking down into the deep blue of the ocean, with little floes of ice still floating, sparkling on the surface.

I admit I considered painting in the white the way I did with Islands, but this arctic image came to me so I let well enough alone this time.

Spiral Lakes, 5″x7″ salt and watercolor on paper, $269 framed, with free shipping.

Spiral Lakes, detail, by Amy Crook

Spiral Lakes, detail, by Amy Crook

Above, you can see a close-up of one of the spirals. I really like the way the paint pulls away from the edges of the pool so the color is richer in the middle and fades toward the salt crystals. Below, you can see the lakes in their frame, which you could tuck into a bookshelf or decorate a wall somewhere with a bit of gorgeous blue and unexpected sparkle.

Spiral Lakes, framed art by Amy Crook

Spiral Lakes, framed art by Amy Crook, $269

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art
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Spiral Splash

Friday, April 6th, 2012

Spiral Splash, abstract art by Amy Crook

Spiral Splash, abstract art by Amy Crook, $299

This is another of those pieces that looks different from every angle. From the three dimensional salt to to the iridescent paint, it catches the light and the eye differently depending on how you look at it.

In this case I painted in the swishy, splashy gold spirals, and then added the blue-infused salt water in a bit of controlled chaos. Then I repeated the experiment with blue spirals, so some of the shapes are rimed in cold blue while others are edged in gilt.

Spiral Splash, watercolor and salt on paper, $299 framed, with free shipping.

Spiral Splash, detail 1, by Amy Crook

Spiral Splash, detail 1, by Amy Crook

You can really see the difference in the blue and gold paints in the shot above, with the cold, grainy blue making the left side look like it’s frosted over, while the shining gold on the left adds a rich warmth to the shape on the right. Below, I took a photo of the whole thing from the top down. I especially like the progression of color in the shape in the lower right, the way you can really see that the blue paint settled into the center of each shape while the gold floated to the edges.

Spiral Splash, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Spiral Splash, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art
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Spiral Islands

Thursday, April 5th, 2012

Spiral Islands, abstract art by Amy Crook

Spiral Islands by Amy Crook

This is actually the first piece I started with my salt-saturated solution, before adding the blue paint to the bottle. I was experimenting with the delivery, which is much less precise, trying to make spirals to go with the messy scribbled-pen spirals already on the page. You can see where they intersected, the salt water picked up the brown pigment from the black ink and left the rest behind, giving those pools an orange cast.

After I painted in the blue-black background, the whole thing reminded me of a cluster of islands in some turbulent ocean. I especially like how some of the salt spirals are nearly intact, while others are barely a suggestion of broken lines.

Spiral Islands, mixed media on paper.

Spiral Islands, detail 1, by Amy Crook

Spiral Islands, detail 1, by Amy Crook

Above, you can see a close-up of just one of the salt spirals and how it intersects with the ink spiral beneath it. The two separate pools got different amounts of ink infused into them, so the lower one is visibly orange while the upper curl is barely off white.

Below, I’ve taken a shot of the lay of the land, as it were, and this shining, mysterious little archipelago makes a great computer wallpaper.

Spiral Islands, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Spiral Islands, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Once it’s safely tucked into its frame, it feels even more map-like to me. Here there be dragons, I guess?

Spiral Islands, framed art by Amy Crook

Spiral Islands, framed art by Amy Crook

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art, Free Wallpapers
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Tentacle Deeps 32

Tuesday, April 3rd, 2012

Tentacle Deeps 32 by Amy Crook

Tentacle Deeps 32 by Amy Crook

This tentacle painting is much more subtle and mysterious than the usual, covered almost entirely in salt crystals. There’s a dark violet-black background hiding under all that salt, and then iridescent violet tentacles. Then I inundated the whole thing with my potion of salt, water and paint. After it dried, I went in with black ink and brought the tentacles back up out of the sparkling murk I’d created.

The effect in the end is both murky and sparkly at the same time, and really does make me think of deep R’lyeh where mysteries slumber, waiting to rise up through the blue deeps to the surface.

Tentacle Deeps 32, 5″x7″ salt, sumi-e ink, and watercolor on paper.

Of course it’s terribly hard to catch the feel of this art in a scan or photo, so much of it changes with the light and angle, but I’ve taken some detail photos to try.

Tentacle Deeps 32, detail 1, by Amy Crook

Tentacle Deeps 32, detail 1, by Amy Crook

Above is the usual photo from the bottom of the tentacles, but this time it almost looks like an 80s fantasy movie set after they applied all the glitter. You can see the swirling colors and shapes, and the tentacles dark and mysterious running through it. Below, I took a shot of the longest tentacle and the varying textures in and around it. I liked the way that one turned out with its shining squares on the left and sand-like salt crystals to the right, so I made you yet another wallpaper. Don’t you feel special?

Tentacle Deeps 32, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Tentacle Deeps 32, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Categories: Angels, Cthulhu, and Other Myths, Daily Art, Free Wallpapers, Series and Books, Tentacles
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Blue Moon 2

Monday, April 2nd, 2012

Blue Moon 2, abstract art by Amy Crook

Blue Moon 2, abstract art by Amy Crook

Even though this piece shares a name and some materials with my first Blue Moon, that’s about all they have in common. The blues in this are all muted except for the vivid French Ultramarine moon itself, and even the little halos of iridescent paint became quite subtle painted wet-in-wet.

I made the 7 stars the usual way with paint and salt and water, but the moon was part of my newest experiment where I put paint into some water I had already saturated with as much salt as I could boil into it. Pretty much all of this week’s art was made with this technique, for some fascinating results. Sparkly ones!

Blue Moon 2, 5″x5.25″ salt and watercolor on watercolor paper.

Blue Moon 2, detail 1, by Amy Crook

Blue Moon 2, detail 1, by Amy Crook

You can see little particles of the iridescent paint around the borders of the halo, and I thought the shot of the moon itself came out so well I made a wallpaper for you. Yes, you.

Below, you can see the lightning-like formations around the edges of some of the pools, and the way I brushed the outer rim of the salt pools with the blue-black paint, which sinks into the crevices and gives it deep shadows.

Blue Moon 2, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Blue Moon 2, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Since this one isn’t quite square, I haven’t framed it yet, but it’ll get its lovely black frame before it goes to live in its new home.

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art, Flowers, Trees and Landscapes, Free Wallpapers, Series and Books
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Interfering Blues

Friday, March 23rd, 2012

Interfering Blues, abstract art by Amy Crook

Interfering Blues, abstract art by Amy Crook, $234

This is another of those pieces that’s challenging to photograph, and I totally did it to myself. I had the lovely ultramarine spirals already as a simple, elegant piece, but they sat around for weeks feeling unfinished before I got my new shiny Japanese watercolors. I used the blue from the pearlescent set to paint a second set of ghostly spirals atop the first, which are barely visible from some angles, and from others take on a lovely iridescent blue hue.

I’m definitely doing well with my new year’s resolution to paint more spirals on things, and I have to admit there’s something I find really charming about this particular set. The colors and shapes are very simple and bold, but they work for me.

Interfering Blues, 6″x6″ watercolor on paper, $234 with free shipping.

Interfering Blues, detail 1, by Amy Crook

Interfering Blues, detail 1, by Amy Crook

These pieces are deeply frustrating to photograph. For instance here, the paper is really a nice bright white, but since the shine is even brighter but also blue, I can’t really color balance the way I’d like to. But, at least you can see the pale blue shine on some of the spirals at this angle!

Interfering Blues, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Interfering Blues, detail 2, by Amy Crook

Above is more of a close-up of just one spiral, which captures the full range of color on the paint from a pearly warm white on the right to the shining blue on the left. This is such a nifty image I made a computer wallpaper of it, if you’d like a little more interference blue in your day.

The piece ships unframed for $234, but if you’d like me to frame it for you (or want to talk about anything, really!), feel free to email me about it.

Categories: Abstract and Just Plain Weird, Daily Art, Free Wallpapers
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