~ Home ~ Galleries ~ Price List ~
~ Exhibitions ~ Pastel Fun ~ About the Artist ~ Contact the Artist ~
~ Letters/Replies ~ Email Updates ~ Free Art ScreenSaver ~ Postcards ~
Hollywood Slots Bangor, Maine

The facility will be completed in June 2008


Architect's drawing


My art will fill the rotunda window and in effect be a work of public art for the community and visitors here.
This may well be the largest existing pastel installation.


Construction underway in the winter of 2008

The progress so far...
The supplies and art materials have all been ordered and have been arriving at my door for weeks...

Click for larger photo


Click for larger photo

Boxes, boxes...

...and more boxes!


Click for larger photo

The ceilings in my home studio are not
high enough to accomodate this project,
so I work in a temporary studio. These
beauties greet me every morning when
I arrive at my new studio space.

Click for larger photo

After a bit of nesting, my space feels like home. With books, music, chocolate...
I've got everything I need to be inspired!


Click for larger photo

And thanks to Master Carpenter, Tom Birtwistle, I've got everything I need
to create. Tom and I spent much time discussing what I'd need for an easel for a
project of this size. Tom devised this design. It's simple, adjustable, functional and
it's perfect for my needs.


Click for larger photo

Since I work in soft pastels that will be framed behind glass and in order to fill the
rotunda space, I am creating the art on 16 panels. This will be a polyptych, a work
consisting of four or more painted panels. The 16 - 3/4 " Gatorboard panels
arrived, each one measuring 7' high x 4' wide...I'll need a step stool.


Click for larger photo

One panel fits fine but the easel will accomodate two panels side by side.


Click for larger photo

The panels required many layers to prepare them to accept pastels. The first step
involved coating both sides and all edges with acrylic gesso.


Click for larger photo

When dry, I applied a second layer of gesso to the front of all 16 panels.

The next step was to apply a coat of
Art Spectrum Colourfix Primer to each
panel. This is an acrylic based medium
containing finely ground pumice to
provide a sanded surface that will hold
the pastel layers. Since all of these
media are white, in order to keep track
of the layers, I marked the panels to
show what had been completed.

Click for larger photo


Click for larger photo

To eliminate the white and tie all of the panels
together with a common background color making the whole piece more cohesive, I
applied a diluted wash of turqoise Aquacryl paint .


Click for larger photo

This also gives the panels some visual texture which will come into play as the
composition develops.


Click for larger photo

To eliminate a bit of bowing from all of this treatment, I weighed down the panels.


Click for larger photo

Two panels fit nicely on the easel.


Click for larger photo

And I continue to think BIG.


Click for larger photo

The next step was to project the image I had already created to scale onto each
panel. I put my original image into the projector and transferred it to the large
panels.


Click for larger photo

I then refined the image with hard pastels.


Click for larger photo

In order to ensure that the image will continue seamlessly from one panel to the
next, I placed the four adjacent panels together, made adjustments in the sketch,
and repeated this process for all sixteen panels. The entire image, thus the
painting itself, will only emerge when all sixteen panels are hung and viewed together.


Click for larger photo


Click for larger photo

Now going for the gold. I began the
process of applying 22 K Australian
gold leaf.

This small box which fits in the palm of
my hand holds 500 sheets of gold leaf
sandwiched between thin tissue paper.

1,000 sheets of gold leaf equal the
thickness of a human hair.


Click for larger photo

The leaf is so fragile that it cannot be picked up with the fingers. After applying gold leaf size (adhesive) with a brush, I used a small
piece of acrylic rubbed along my arm to develop an electrical charge. I then used
this piece of plastic to lift the individual sheets of leaf and carefully place them over
the already tacky adhesive.


Click for larger photo

This squirrel hair brush is soft enough to then gently press the leaf into place.


Click for larger photo

This section was formed with 53 sheets of gold leaf.


Click for larger photo

Wait a minute!


Click for larger photo

How'd those get in there?


Click for larger photo

After several hours, once the leaf has dried in place, it is permanent. Using the
squirrel hair brush and a very soft touch, I whisked away any leaf that did not come
into direct contact with the adhesive.


Click for larger photo

Real gold leaf is amazing to work with. Though not easy to use, the resulting soft
glow and richness are worth every bit of effort. I am excited to be
including it in this piece.


Click for larger photo

But what does one do with all the excess gold?


Click for larger photo

Well, I had fun gilding smooth beach
stones!


Click for larger photo

New meaning for the term Goldfinger.
An artist friend described the leaf perfectly when she said,
"It's like trying to hold air!"


Click for larger photo

While I was busy gilding, Tom was busy building.


Click for larger photo

This carrier will allow me to safely transport completed panels to the framer.


Click for larger photo

Good thing we have a Yukon XL (eXtra Long)!
When all the seats are removed, this fits perfectly into the back and holds six
panels at once.


Click for larger photo


Click for larger photo

My days in the studio pass productively from morning...


Click for larger photo


Click for larger photo

...'til night.


Click for larger photo
These test panels await color samples once all my pastels arrive.
And they are arriving...


Click for larger photo


Click for larger photo


Click for larger photo


Click for larger photo


Click for larger photo
I even received some luscious free samples generously sent my way by Karl Kelly,
owner and maker of Mount Vision Pastels. Karl knows I'm working on a BIG
project...look at the size of those sticks!


Click for larger photo

Mountains of Pastels!
And this is only the first of three orders
ready to be sampled on the test panels.







I begin the process of testing each
pastel stick to see how it will look on
the background wash I've chosen.
The colors respond completely
differently than they would on white
paper. I note the color name, number,
tint and any notes that might be
helpful as I work.

I file the pastels by number for later use.
An important part of my work and one
that ultimately saves me much time is to
sort my pastels by value and color
temperature.







I have two trays each for very dark
colors, dark colors...
...medium-dark colors...






...medium-light colors, light colors...
...and lastly, very light colors...






Each section is then arranged by color temperature from warm to cool.
It may seem confusing, but I began this method of sorting and using my pastels
many years ago and find it very useful in my work.




I love these sturdy Roz pastel cases I discovered.




With four trays of individual foam lined slots in each case,
they are perfect for transporting pastels safely.




The pastels are all tested, filed, packed and ready...
and I'm ready to begin painting!







Quickly after beginning to paint with the pastels, I discovered I will need to take
some serious health precautions that I don't normally with smaller scale projects.
The pastel dust was flying and within minutes I was covered from head to toe!
Tomorrow I'll come prepared...




Ok, well, this is a bit unnecessary...
...but I will be taking these measures to
protect my health...and hands.
Though I wear latex gloves, the cloth-
like tape provides an additonal layer of
protection from the rough sanded
surface I've created.







The respirator is essential and I feel
better wearing it...but it's darned hard
to eat the M&Ms this way!


At the end of every painting day,
I always clean my pastels so they are
ready when I am the next morning.








*Note to self: Order more aprons.


The respirator works effectively
and after three days of painting,
it's time to change the filter.





As the painting progresses,






the color palette grows...



and grows...



and grows.
Joy
\'joi\
noun

1. Painting for five minutes and looking up at the clock to discover it's two hours
later.




The painting is progressing well. I have completed 11 of the 16 panels of art.
(In order to keep the subject of the painting a surprise until the July unveiling,
I have obliterated the image.)



The seasons have changed...



the filters are doing their job...


and the color palette continues to grow.
Stay tuned...