Sarah's revised artist statement
I remember the first watercolor painting I ever saw. It was a wedding gift, presented to friends of my family. The image was a rendering of the couple's home. I was astonished at the contrast between the colors of the building and landscape and the whiteness of the paper around it. My greatest desire as a 12 year old child was to figure out how to capture the feeling of sunlight as that artist did. I love to begin a piece and see where the materials take me. I think that I am drawn to watercolors for the reason that others seem to be repelled: the material is unpredictable, difficult to control and unforgiving. Experimenting does not mean that I do not plan, a watercolor (or acrylic treated as watercolor) has to be planned ahead so that the whites can be reserved. Colors can be scrubbed away if mistakes are made, as proven so successfully by Winslow Homer, but as the pigment stains the ground, the paper looses its pristine whiteness, and will never be the same. I feel that the negative space in a composition invites me to play with color variations, cool against warm, red against green, with the colors mingling then separating.
Sarah
1 Comments:
Nice. You might break it into two paragraphs to give the reader a moment to digest your ideas.
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