Tumgik
anndelize · 5 years
Text
Soapstone Moth
I’ve always been a bit afraid of moths but this particular little critter is in decline which is threatening species like the pygmy possum who depends on it for essential proteins.
I’ve always been a bit afraid of moths but this particular little critter is in decline which is threatening species like the pygmy possum who depends on it for essential proteins.
Working in soapstone (a first for me) was a satisfying experience. I love how the colours and markings in the stone revealed themselves later, once I waxed the sculpture. The rusted dome represents the environment…
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
Artist Interview: Sue Fraser
Magic happens when two celebrated artists join forces in a visual storytelling exhibition. Sue Fraser & Klara Jones.
Magic happens when two celebrated artists join forces in a visual storytelling exhibition that centres around the Grimm brothers tales. Picnicking With the Wolves opens tomorrow (Friday 24 Jan) at East Gippsland Art Gallery. Klara Jones and Sue Fraser  are both masterfully skilled artists who will be enthralling viewers with their combined work in this much anticipated exhibition.
I have…
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
Facial Expressions: 'Anxiety'
Facial Expressions: ‘Anxiety’
This is my second digitally painted portrait on the iPad Pro. I am currently focussing on facial expressions, this one shows anxiety although I’m not sure how (or whether) the bright yellow in the background affects the reading of this work. It might be too cheerful.
I did use a blue background which I also incorporated into the skin tones of my subject, this I feel definitely adds successfully…
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
4/100 Portraits: 'Anxiety'
This is my second digitally painted portrait on the iPad Pro.
This is my second digitally painted portrait on the iPad Pro. I am currently focussing on facial expressions, this one shows anxiety although I’m not sure how (or whether) the bright yellow in the background affects the reading of this work. It might be too cheerful.
I did use a blue background which I also incorporated into the skin tones of my subject, this I feel definitely adds successfully…
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
3/100 Serenity in Green
3/100 Serenity in Green
I am the proud new owner of an iPad Pro and Apple pencil. What incredible tools for an artist, especially paired with the ProCreate App!
In this digital portrait I tried to create a painterly style with soft edges and visible brush strokes. I am also experimenting with colour as an emotional trigger. My current (uni) project is about emotion as visible on facial expressions.
What I really like…
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
Serenity (in Green)
I am the proud new owner of an iPad Pro and Apple pencil. What incredible tools for an artist, especially paired with the ProCreate App!
In this digital portrait I tried to create a painterly style with soft edges and visible brush strokes. I am also experimenting with colour as an emotional trigger. My current (uni) project is about emotion as visible on facial expressions.
What I really like…
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
Is it really over? So quickly?
Armed with my iPad and stylus I tackled this year’s Inktober with enthusiasm once I got past the ‘but it’s not ink’ dialogue in my head and focussed instead on doing a drawing a day for practice and fun. The prompts were at times challenging but always enjoyable. With my current focus on portraiture I tried to apply many of the prompts to faces which I had fun with.
I posted daily on a dedicated Inktober page on my site as well as on my Instagram profile but  also wanted to feature all 31 drawings together today, to counteract the collective Inktober-has-ended sulk.
Did you do Inktober this year? Post a link in the comments to your site featuring your drawings, I’d love to see them!
Below are thumbnails of all 31 drawings for this year’s challenge. I hope you enjoyed them as much as what I did drawing them.
    9/31 Precious
27/31 Thunder
4/31 Spell
15/31 Weak
6/31 Drooling
13/31 Guarded
30/31 Jolt
10/31 Flowing
2/31 Tranquil
5/31 Chicken
14/31 Clock
1/31 Poisonous
31/31 Slice
17/31 Swollen
12/31 Whale
16/31 Angular
8/31 Star
24/31 Chop
3/31 Roasted
25/31 Prickly
7/31 Exhausted
11/31 Cruel
26/31 Stretch
18/31 Bottle
23/31 Muddy
19/31 Scorched
20/31 Breakable
22/31 Expensive
21/31 Drain
29/31 Double
28/31 Gift
      Sulking because Inktober has ended? Is it really over? So quickly? Armed with my iPad and stylus I tackled this year's Inktober with enthusiasm once I got past the…
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
31/31 Inktober 2018 'Slice'
31/31 Inktober 2018 ‘Slice’
Ending on a sweet note. This concludes the 2018 Inktober challenge. I hope you enjoyed it as much as I did.  🙂
  I am a member of blogging communities, you will find my posts here too: https://guestdailyposts.wordpress.com/guest-pingbacks/ https://plus.google.com/u/2/communities/103525137929319878376
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
30/31 Inktober 2018 'Jolt'
30/31 Inktober 2018 ‘Jolt’
Shocking revelation!
  I am a member of blogging communities, you will find my posts here too: https://guestdailyposts.wordpress.com/guest-pingbacks/ https://plus.google.com/u/2/communities/103525137929319878376
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
29/31 Inktober 2018 'Double'
29/31 Inktober 2018 ‘Double’
Seeing double?
  I am a member of blogging communities, you will find my posts here too: https://guestdailyposts.wordpress.com/guest-pingbacks/ https://plus.google.com/u/2/communities/103525137929319878376
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Chaim Soutine: Portrait of Madeleine Castaing Chaim Soutine: Portrait of Madeleine Castaing. Bequest of Miss Adelaide Milton de Groot (1876-1967), 1967. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
28/31 Inktober 2018 'Gift'
28/31 Inktober 2018 ‘Gift’
The gift of companionship.
  I am a member of blogging communities, you will find my posts here too: https://guestdailyposts.wordpress.com/guest-pingbacks/ https://plus.google.com/u/2/communities/103525137929319878376
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
27/31 Inktober 2018 'Thunder'
27/31 Inktober 2018 ‘Thunder’
Uh-oh… Run!
  I am a member of blogging communities, you will find my posts here too: https://guestdailyposts.wordpress.com/guest-pingbacks/ https://plus.google.com/u/2/communities/103525137929319878376
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
26/31 Inktober 2018 'Stretch'
26/31 Inktober 2018 ‘Stretch’
How far can it s-t-r-e-t-c-h before it snaps?
  I am a member of blogging communities, you will find my posts here too: https://guestdailyposts.wordpress.com/guest-pingbacks/ https://plus.google.com/u/2/communities/103525137929319878376
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
25/31 Inktober 2018 'Prickly'
25/31 Inktober 2018 ‘Prickly’
Prickly or not, he’s kinda cute.
  I am a member of blogging communities, you will find my posts here too: https://guestdailyposts.wordpress.com/guest-pingbacks/ https://plus.google.com/u/2/communities/103525137929319878376
View On WordPress
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Text
What do you do when one of your good friends is also an incredibly inspirational and dedicated multi-media artist? Well, you interview them of course! 🙂
The Interview
Who are you and what do you do? 
I can call myself an artist after 20 years of self doubt. I do painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, but first and foremost, I draw.
Why do you do what you do? 
Because I cannot stop. I get tetchy and irritated if I don’t draw for a while. Ideas also swirl through my head and, like winding up a clock, sooner or later it is fully wound up and ready to come out as a sketch, drawing, painting, etc.
How do you work? 
I get passionate about my project, read and research as much as I can, talk to friends/artists, sketch ideas as I go. I need to be alone once I start working. People distract me then. I’m currently working on the kitchen table as the studio room I have is too small and cluttered, and cold in the winter. I start the studio day doing household chores so I can then focus on my art without distraction. It would be a dream to have a studio away from the house. It is also helpful to have a few projects on the go, or an exhibition date to work to. Otherwise work (my other job), life, family, friends call me away.
  Klara Jones (detail) Allerleirauh, silicone, paint, human hair, animal skins
What’s your background? 
I’m from a Central European background, Hungary and Romania. I have been told my subject matter and style is quite dark.
I’ve studied only through TAFE (Adult Education College), first with a certificate in art and design, then working towards a diploma in visual arts. Something I never completed, however it gave me skills in film photography and darkroom process, as well as painting, drawing and printmaking.
I found the more teachers one has over time, the more one learns.
I had to leave study to work and picked up a job as a graphic designer based on a folio of drawings.
  Klara Jones. Old man Boogie, pen and ink, tea, watercolour
  What’s integral to the work of an artist? 
The freedom to explore. Supportive friends and family who respect my art as work. Being part of an artist community to share ideas and solidarity.
Permission to allow myself to go into the studio even if it’s not a productive day.
Discipline to stay in there when it’s a beautiful day outside or my art isn’t working out.
What role does the artist have in society? 
In good times, the artist can feed the soul with beauty or thought-provoking work. In bad times, the artist can feed the soul and create a temporary escape. Without artists, there would be no movies, fashion, aesthetics in architecture or cars, furniture, watches, clothing. It is all around us.
  Klara Jones. The Race, oil paint on canvas
Klara Jones. RRH woodcutter, oil on canvas board, old oak frame
What has been a seminal experience? 
That moment for me was in 1986 at the Brisbane Art Gallery, QLD. I went to see the 20thCentury Masters exhibition of works from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. I walked around a corner and saw Picasso’s ‘Woman in White’. The sight of it knocked the air out of me and staring at it was the moment I thought I must learn to create work as beautiful.
Explain what you do in 100 words 
I draw mostly, sometimes whimsical pen and inks, sometimes more serious portraits and nudes. I love the face, the body, the person. It is an endless exploration – from describing the curves and lines that create a figure, to the folly of human character.
I prefer black and white as so much can be described with tone, line and texture. Colour can sometimes confuse the message, although it has its uses for emotion and interest.
  Klara Jones. Death Tree, pen and ink, gold leaf
How has your practice changed over time 
I think I’ve grown more skilled and confident. I used to worry that I wasn’t selling work and making a living from it. For me now, it’s not about earning money, it’s about having something to say and sharing it. Also, I don’t need to worry about what will sell and making it ‘commercially appealing’.
It has always been about making people smile, feel an emotion or to think.
What art do you most identify with? 
The line. Whether it is drawing, etching or big calligraphic brush strokes.
What work do you most enjoying doing? 
Drawing. Whether it’s the feint spidery tickle of pencil on cartridge, the dark, thick smudge of charcoal or the danger of nib pen and with Indian ink (danger being the potential to splat on the page if I am not concentrating).
Or, I could say, whatever I am doing when the flow hits me. When I paint, I fall in and out of love with the painting depending on what stage it is at. I love the technical side as well, so printmaking or working in the darkroom developing photos is great.
  Klara Jones. Samarai Girl, pen and ink, tea, watercolour
Klara Jones. Handless Maiden, graphite on rag paper
What themes do you pursue? 
Human nature and story telling. I’m currently reading Grimm’s tales. It works on so many levels: love, escape, morals, adventure, the protagonist ending with success, good guys, bad guys, tragedy, sometimes magic or a gift, evil, fragility, resistance, honesty, bravery, perseverance.
What’s your favourite art work? 
That is tough. It’s like asking what is my favourite song.
Probably depending on my mood at the time.
Many artworks. Woman in White remains one of my favourite paintings. It is serene, multi-layered but with simple, muted colour. William Dobell’s portrait of Helena Rubenstein in the NGV Australia. A wood bas relief of Salome from the 14thC in the NGV International. Eastern European religious icons. Otherwise, anything by Caravaggio or several Australian and local Gippsland artists.
Describe a real-life situation that inspired you? 
Warsaw National Museum, a student, Erik, from the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts, was painting a 1:1 scale of Jan Matejko’s ‘Battle of Grunwald’. Size of the original is 10 metres wide x 4metres deep. Erik was painting it in twelve panels over two years. His dedication to the project made me think to lift my game.
I also know two art teachers, who are partners. They both work fulltime and raise a child. They each take a turn in the studio after work whilst the other sorts out the family, dinner and housework. This is discipline. And it works.
Klara Jones. At the Opera, pen and ink ,and tea
Klara Jones. Angel Faith, pen and ink
Why art? 
Art is important to life. My life. Also to everyone. To live without it would make life dull.
What is an artistic outlook on life? 
Seeing beauty in small things or trying to draw attention to the everyday.
Problem solving by not always thinking logically.
What memorable responses have you had to your work? 
My first solo exhibition. I had no idea if anyone would turn up. It was crowded and I sold 2/3 of the work on opening night. As much as selling the work wasn’t so important, it was validation that it was worthwhile and people connected with it.
A few people said they had cried when they saw pieces I had made.
  Klara Jones. Inktober 28
Is the artistic life lonely? What do you do to counteract it? 
It can be lonely. When I’m busy or have limited time I don’t notice it.
I might take a little break or an evening off. Spend time with my partner or call family or a friend.
When people come to visit I cannot work and have to pack up and pay attention to them. I must be careful not to spend too much time alone.
What do you dislike about the art world? 
One comment about me once, “but she only draws.” No he hadn’t seen anything else I have done over the years but the comment was still insulting. 
I see drawing as a means in itself, not a means to an end.
Art investment that follows trends, rather than talent. 
Pretentiousness with only mediocre work.
Snobbishness – when one must have the right CV to become short-listed for an art prize and come from the ‘right’ art school. It should be judged on how accomplished and imaginative the artist is and the artwork should speak for itself.
  Klara Jones. Cat and Mouse, charcoal, gesso
What do you dislike about your work? 
That I only draw.
Sorry, no, that’s not true.
That I don’t draw enough.
That I don’t do anything enough.
That I can get distracted.
That I thought after 20 years I would be more accomplished. I see art and skill as levels. Always chasing the next level and hoping not to go backwards.
What do you like about your work? 
I like when I get it right and cannot criticise it. I enjoy looking at some pieces even years later.
Should art be funded? 
Well, YES!
What role does arts funding have? 
It allows artists the chance to explore their ideas without compromise, pays for art material, allows communities to have projects when they couldn’t otherwise realise their ideas. There is a cultural aspect to a society and part of the government’s job is to promote the culture within the society. 
  Klara Jones. Lady Bear, pen and ink, tea, watercolour
What research do you do? 
Internet, reading books on topics, techniques, visiting galleries, talking with fellow artists, or non-artists, on topics I might need to learn. 
What is your dream project? 
The one I am doing – Grimm’s tales.
Then the next one…
Name three artists you’d like to be compared to. 
Sue Fraser, local Gippsland artist.
Kathe Kollwitz, German expressionist artist.
Aubrey Beardsley
Favourite or most inspirational place 
NGV International and NGV Australia in Melbourne. After his death in 1904, Alfred Felton left money to the National Gallery of Victoria, which has been used to invest in artwork, making it one of the best galleries in the world. I always have a little thrill when I see ‘Felton Bequest’ next to an artwork.
Klara Jones. Girl Sheets, pen and ink, tea, watercolour
Klara Jones. Girl Monkey, pen and ink, tea, watercolour
What’s the best piece of advice you’ve been given? 
Don’t start the details too early in a drawing. Keep it general for a while until you know it is correct.
Also, if the eye is in the wrong place (for example), even if it’s the best eye you have ever drawn, rub it out and correct it.
Professionally, what’s your goal? 
To be professional in my art and its presentation. To not settle for a lesser work if I can re-do it better.
What wouldn’t you do without? 
Staedler Mars Lumograph pencils. They’re not top-of-the-range, but are still smooth to draw with. I can carry them anywhere. Plus a sketchbook for sketching people, taking notes in galleries or thrashing out ideas anywhere, anytime. These two are the most basic things. Everything else is fluff.
Thanks so much for sharing your thoughts and processes with us Klara.
To see more of Klara’s work visit her Instagram page below:
Klara Jones, Instagram
Artist Interview: Klara Jones What do you do when one of your good friends is also an incredibly inspirational and dedicated multi-media artist?
0 notes
anndelize · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Van Gogh: Bulb Fields Vincent Van Gogh, 1883. Bulb Fields.
0 notes