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Val Mann Art

2D and 3D art to supplement your life

  • About
  • Work
  • Contact
  • Available Work
  • Buy via WSG gallery
  • Sign up for Classes

A New Year, A Clean Studio

Forgotten Cardinal, 8 x 10", watercolor

It happened quite by mistake....the cleaning of the studio at the new year....I was deeply obsessed with painting little feathers in watercolor, and had been for several months, when I looked up from my painting table at the wreck of a studio that surrounded me.  I had a slight panic as I remembered a friend was coming over around the first of the year to shoot a photo of me 'in situ' for her upcoming show of photographs of artists and our muses.  My 'in situ' was a dump!  

So I took a break from doing what I loved and started doing what had needed to be done for a long while.  After several days of purging, donating, recycling, moving and insulating, I can say that for the first time since I've been both an artist AND a mother, and that's been 21 years now, I have organized my studio, at least partially, in a way that makes sense.  Book making tools and adhesives on 1 shelf, watercolors and brushes on 1 - okay, 2 shelves, etc.  

I do a fair amount of teaching of watercolors and different techniques, so it's hard to part with things I think have potential (not quite as bad as Howard Finster...), but I think I'm on a good trajectory for continued progress.  For instance, I teach in programs for at-risk youth and I teach classes for adults that might just be 1-time classes.  I don't want purchasing art supplies to be a barrier, so I have amassed utility knives and needle-nosed pliers, to name a few.  I helped a friend's son clean out her studio when she passed, and redistributed 12 SUV loads of art supplies.  As I was cleaning (I kid you not) 200 paint brushes of years of acrylic and oil paint, I thought, 'yes, the high school can use these, but those kids are not going to clean these properly to get years of use out of them' and kept 20-30 decent brushes to use with my students.  Most students don't get to use good quality brushes when they are starting out and I'm telling you, good tools make a difference with the student's experience.  

So the supplies are a bit more organized, the place is a little cleaner and the year is off to a productive start.  Here are a few of the little watercolors I made at the end of 2016 and so far this year.  The cardinal skeleton was found by a friend and it had been sitting in the studio for about a year and a half, so painting that was the carrot at the end of the stick for cleaning the studio.  

The watercolors have been a big healing /mind clearing exercise after August 2016's 'The Gun Show', but I will get back to working on that project again soon, because......

Fallen Cardinal, watercolor, 6 x 8"

Fallen Cardinal, watercolor, 6 x 8"

3 Wild Feathers, watercolor on Yupo, 6 x 9"

3 Wild Feathers, watercolor on Yupo, 6 x 9"

Two Tiny Turkeys, watercolor on paper, 6 x 10"

Two Tiny Turkeys, watercolor on paper, 6 x 10"

tags: bird study, birds, bird art, prepared bird specimens, nature art, bird skeleton, watercolor painting
Wednesday 01.11.17
Posted by Valerie Mann
 

Building a Better Bird

Knowing full well that I can't outdo Mother Nature, I'm still weaving a bird shape, inspired by the lockers and drawers full of these little jewels of nature at the U of M Ruthven Museum of Natural History.  The U of M museum hosts 2/3 of the world's species of birds in its ornithology collection.  I am always in awe when the head ornithologist, Janet Hinshaw, and grad student Sara Cole open a locker and pull out a drawer.  The colors! The sizes!  The adaptations!   

With that in mind, check out the photo of the Frigate Bird below my wire bird.  I took the snapshot at Dry Tortugas National Park in March 2012.  This beauty just soared on the thermals all day long above the pre-Civil War era fort on the Island - Fort Jefferson.  With a 7-foot wingspan, imagine how much wire that would take to make!

detail, wire woven bird

detail, wire woven bird

Frigate Bird, Dry Tortugas, 2012

Frigate Bird, Dry Tortugas, 2012

tags: Dry Tortugas National Park, Fort Jefferson, Ruthven Museum, U of Mich. Exhibit Museum, prepared bird specimens, bird art, bird sculpture
categories: Bird Art
Wednesday 08.21.13
Posted by Valerie Mann
 

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