© 2022 SherryMeidell.com

The artwork on this website is copyrighted to the artist Sherry Meidell and may not be used without the express permission of the artist.

THE BLOG

Painting Like a Second Grader .

Bea
Watercolor Demonstration for today’s Watercolor Class.

When I’ve presented projects for all the grades in a school, the second graders seem to be the most creative. They are not worried about rules for the project and how do you start out. They just dive in. If we can remember the second grader inside of us and go back to that age where you find joy in creating, we can turn off our left brain and create like we did when we stood by the easel and took great joy in slapping the paint on paper.
These are some of the things I thought about in the watercolor demo for my class today.
1. Pick a subject that you connect with in someway, something that sparks excitement inside.
2. Don’t listen to the thoughts that are negative.
3. Get you supplies together. Look at your scrap, photo, or sketch until you know what you are going to put down on the paper. Creation starts in your brain. Think design, value and color.
4. Get started. Don’t be frozen by fear.
5. Keep working on the painting until it’s done. Don’t give up in the middle. There are many things that are learned by finishing projects.
6. Get away from your painting and look at it later to figure out if your done or if there are a few more touches to put on.
7. Enjoy the process. Take a look at your finished painting. What do you like? What will you try to change on the next painting.

He took them to town.
He took them to town. Sketch for Picture Book.

 

Dead Skunk on the Side of the Road

Years ago, I was riding my bike.  My eye was on a new white stripe painted on the side of the road. My feet spinning, my hands on the handle bars, my eyes on the road, I followed the white stripe. Suddenly I came across a dead skunk. The person who had painted the stripe, had painted right over the dead skunk. Nothing interrupted his job. He just kept painting down the road.

IMG_1740
The Skunk

The skunk lay under the line for a long time. I don’t know if the winter did him in or a hungry fox drug him off. The skunk is gone but there is a spot on the road where you can still see where the skunk lay.

The Spot
They’ve repainted the line but the remnants remain.

It reminds me to do my best work. To go for excellence instead of speed. Sometimes you have to stop and get the skunk off the road and then paint. I try to remember this when I’m trying to get a character just right. You keep trying until your character feels right to you.
Here are some characters I’ve spent some time on.

timpstoryunderthemountain
Here are the characters. I would probably add a few more in the foreground on the finished painting.
TimpStorydetail
Close up of Characters

 

 

 

join my mailing list