Wow. It’s been a long time since I posted to this blog. I
have been happily involved with our daughter’s move, our new granddaughter and
her sister, the Christmas joy, preparing for a show that starts soon, a
workshop, teaching weekly classes, and a clearance sale of older paintings. Who said that being 70 would give you time to
smell the roses?
Why do I write for a blog anyway? Admittedly, it is a
distraction and just a bit time-consuming, especially when I haven’t been
smacked in the head with inspiration.
When I think about it, though, writing for a blog is
something like teaching. Each topic I select, unless I’ve had that
smacked-in-the-head moment, makes me take time to consider it from fresh angles - as a new
student, perhaps, would see it - and
then verbalize my thoughts. I take a few
more liberties and assume blog-readers are not first-lesson painters, but you
see the point.
The best teachers I have had could hook their course of
reasoning onto something the student was already familiar with and describe the
concept from that perspective. Bill Reese (William F. Reese) would tell his
students that approaching a painting was like decorating a room. You wouldn’t
start with the ash tray. You would paint the walls and put the rug down.
Correspondingly, you should begin a painting by considering the big shapes that
constitute the composition, which is the framework upon which everything else
hangs.
When teaching, I’m sometimes surprised that I can come up
with those parallels or use terminology that I don’t normally use to clarify
what I am trying to get across a student. The same thing happens when I write
for my blog. The result is I learn the most.
Thanks, dear readers, for indulging my learning.