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P.T. Artist Sandra Stowell

P.T. Artist Sandra Stowell

Creating my artwork, work in progress & new work.

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Disappointing News

P.T. Artist Sandra Stowell Posted on June 5, 2014 by SJune 5, 2014

I am disappointed (*@#%!!) that none of my four entries to the current exhibit at Northwind Arts Center were accepted. I will probably never know why, and it is a pity that none appealed to the jurors, who run a very nice art gallery here in town: the Simon Mace Gallery. I am sorry/disappointed that they did not like my work.

I entered three new assembly/sculptural pieces. These, while not exactly momentous, please me. I though/still think they have merit. But maybe they are a little to “crafty”, and read more as assemblage than sculpture, although I make most of my “parts” myself. I don’t think the Simon Mace Gallery every shows assemblage work, nor do they tend toward small works in general.

My other piece was again “pieced”, with collage elements, although all original work, not found imagery. It is a small work, that is best enjoyed close up. But I love it, and am especially disappointed that it was rejected. Aaargh!

It is hard to dismiss the disappointment, but … thank goodness it is: 1) sunny today, 2)  am just back from a wonderful 3 day camping trip, and 3) I just got a little present in mail. So I can just get over this silly disappointment and move on (I hope)!

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Posted in About my art, Exhibitions, Ramblings

Moving on …

P.T. Artist Sandra Stowell Posted on May 27, 2014 by SMay 30, 2014

Labeled ready to goNow that I have three new sculptures finished, labeled, and set to be entered to an upcoming juried show, it is time to move on to the next thing. I am not sure exactly what this will be. I took a one day “break” from art, working in the yard, walking, cooking (and eating of course, with wine for dinner :-).

Then yesterday the “next thing” started, with a visit from good friends Maureen and daughter Noa Piper. Such excitement!  Noa will be coordinating/curating/designing an art display & event at the TK for the Seattle Art Walk in July. And I/my work may be included… this would be excellent. But this is quite short notice, and with not much information to work with yet! Rat x 2

Rat Race

It is possible that I will have some interesting new work to do for that event! In the meantime, a sketch of Ratty, who lives in & about my yard 🙁

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Posted in Hidden images, Ramblings

Further Evidence …

P.T. Artist Sandra Stowell Posted on May 21, 2014 by SMay 26, 2014

Working with wax Just in case anyone needs this, I seem to have further evidence that I am very competitive at times. I had not really planned to submit anything to the upcoming art show at Northwind Arts Center. It has the theme:  Fins, Feather, Fur. This did not inspire me, or fit any of my more recent work.

But the theme did inspire someone else:  Maureen! My art teacher/guru/facilitator rarely enters shows, but she was fired up to enter this one, and working hard. Looking for a Place to Be, arrangement 2 Next thing I know, I am desperately working too, on new clay, wax & driftwood sculptures. Good grief!

I have one piece, Wanting to be Needed (see previous post), completed, and another called Looking for a Place, well in hand! My power tools & construction skills are proving useful, and I am having fun.

After many more crazy fun hours of work, I have a plan for, and much of the work complete for the interior of this found box. The hardest part may be the display:  I want the box open, but the lid up in the air, not just sitting next to it. I have three sticks of wood, representing tree trunks, that I should be able to mount the lid on more permanently.

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Posted in About my art, Ramblings, Sculpture

Not boring now

P.T. Artist Sandra Stowell Posted on May 16, 2014 by SMay 16, 2014

P1020610I found myself annoyed by my new ugly black asphalt “driveway apron”: a useless expensive City requirement for all homes built in the city since 200X?  It cost us $1090 to put in an asphalt “apron” between an old chip seal surfaced street and a very firm & functional rock/gravel/grass “driveway”. It is ugly, and creates problematic hard to “soft” surface erosion edges.

OK, enough ranting. I did what any artist would do: viewed it as a blank “canvas”.

And this is what I did with a can of road marking spray paint today: not fine art but it has cheered me up:P1020605!P1020615 P1020608

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Posted in Ramblings

This is my work.

P.T. Artist Sandra Stowell Posted on May 13, 2014 by SFebruary 22, 2018

When I make my funky yard art it will seem as if I am playing, wasting time, or pursuing an odd obsession.

All of this may be true, but beyond that this is my work.

Nice ambiguity in the English grammar here, of course. Both meanings are good. My new screening panel is not a work of art or even a creation that I am especially proud of. It will soon be a fine privacy screen built from (mostly free) stuff, and I will enjoy the eccentric nature of this “fence” panel, and the visual balance I am creating here.

But my real intention with the above statement is to say that doing this is not mere play, or a way to waste time. I am doing the work I need to do in order to make art. This outdoor shaping, building and assembling serves to energize me, enhance my creativity, and train me to see and make on a larger scale and in three dimensions.

My seemingly casual assemblies of found objects and scrap often do serve useful purposes; they keep out deer, screen & anchor  my trash cans, etc. But the work is as much about building my aesthetic, stimulating my creativity, and keeping me happily engrossed in making art!

East hedge in work Studio from East w_new
Studio from East more New temp fence w Wheelie Man Wheels Tower in work Studio Sign Up Pitchfork Updated 2012

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Posted in About my art, Ramblings

Adding color to prints

P.T. Artist Sandra Stowell Posted on May 9, 2014 by SMay 14, 2014
Soft World wColor

With some color, then …

Soft World print 4 draft 4

It changes to become this!

Ballpoint No I Who is Dancing now

And here I added color to an overlay of two prints, but it isnot done yet…

Ballpoint No I Who is Dancing NowAdding color to prints by hand, using paint or drawing materials, is an old tradition. Hand tinted prints, colored by the original artist (usually the printmaker was not the artist, but the skilled craftsperson!), may be more valuable than editions of prints untouched by the original artist. Of course the value of the print depends most heavily upon the following: the artist must be 1) dead, and 2) famous.

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Posted in Printmaking, Ramblings

Northwind Arts Center painting demonstration

P.T. Artist Sandra Stowell Posted on May 5, 2014 by SMay 9, 2014

I enjoyed watching & listening to the last half of two painting demonstrations at Northwind Arts Center yesterday, when I arrived to sit the gallery desk. The two artists featured in the current exhibit, Kristi Galindo Dyson and Jackie VanNoy, were working and talking about how they work, in conjunction with their current exhibit, Creative Play. Nice!
Four Corners detail

Afterwards the gallery got quiet, so I did some drawing. Inspired by the demo, I used grid lines to get started and an idea from Maureen P.: the notion of compass points and quadrants to represent different phases of my life.This is my doodle, using my water soluble graphite pencils.

Four Corners 1
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Posted in Hidden images, Ramblings

Is it about Art or the Perfection of the Print?

P.T. Artist Sandra Stowell Posted on May 3, 2014 by SMay 6, 2014

Microscope I print 1Or Why I will never be a Printmaker

Yesterday was another fun day at the print shop (Corvidae Press), but my results are not quite as pleasing as on my previous poly litho printmaking attempts.

I made two new plates, one directly from an original pencil drawing transferred to the polyester plate using a laser copier. The other plate is based on two original pencil drawings that I combined digitally in Corel’s PaintshopPro software, after scanning them. However I then drew further onto an inkjet print of this new piece before making a laser copy directly onto the polyester plate material.

So I printed from both of these two new laser toner plates, but I never quite got the darks I wanted on these. Laser toner definitely requires more charging than ballpoint pen on the poly plate, and I may not have used quite enough ink either. I printed only a few prints, none quite satisfactory as is. Almost true to the original drawings, though. My Gamblin Portland Black ink looks alot like graphite pencil in these prints.

But it will be quite easy to touch these up with colored pencil to get a bit more contrast, and color can be added in several different ways. Eventually I am sure that I will use all of these prints. And I expect that even the faintest, least satisfactory prints will become very satisfying artworks.

For me it is not about perfecting the craft of printmaking, even though I certainly enjoy and appreciate excellent printmaking! I am primarily interested in a desirable end result, and in enjoying the process of getting there. So that means I won’t struggle endlessly for perfect registration or creating the perfect plate. After all, once you have perfect printmaking technique you simply have a means of duplicating your fine work, and I don’t need that.

Soft World, two pass print

Soft World, two pass print

So I am an artist who used printmaking, but I will never really be a printmaker! The  print showing a circle inside a circle, with lots of detail (Through a Lens 🙂 has grey colored pencil and water soluble graphite added to increase the contrast. The double “brain” image has had the background digitally “cleaned” of fingerprints & smudges!

Microscope I print 1 wGraphite

Microscope I print 1 with added graphite

Colored pencil tinting poly litho print

Colored pencil tinted poly litho print

Microscope I print 2 w_color d2

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Posted in About my art, Hidden images, Printmaking, Ramblings

Learning a bit more about poly litho printmaking

P.T. Artist Sandra Stowell Posted on April 20, 2014 by SJune 1, 2015

I have been print a bit (and trying to print a bit more) using polyester lithography, or poly litho. Some lessons learned (beyondthe basic process):

  • start with a good plate! I don’t know the sources of the plates I have, so no recommendations yet. But if you are struggling, and you have a new brand of plate, you may be wasting your time: not all poly litho plates are equal!
  • keep your plates and your hands (or gloves if you use them) very clean! Once a plate gets greasy & picks up ink where it should not, it will be hard to clean! It may be best to cut your losses and start over: thorough cleaning will likely remove some or all of your image!
  • keep it simple until you know you have good plate material and understand your wetting solution, etc. (hint: using multiple media types for your drawing is not keeping it simple)
  • using china marker and other greasy media to create your image requires more care if you want clean prints: they may smear, generate fingerprints, etc.
  • “permanent” markers aren’t. I find they don’t stand up well to plate cleaning. And they vary by color and manufacturer.
  • editions are best run all at once, so start first thing in the morning!
  • if the ink seems to be building up a little after several prints, run a cleaning print directly on to damp newsprint before the next inking.
  • remember you probably need to “charge” your plate: lots of inking for the first 2 prints, and those may be discards (or a good basis of further work).
  • it takes longer to “charge” some materials:   ballpoint  does not seem to require much or any charging, if you ink the plate very thoroughly for the first print.
  • mixing materials makes charging & inking trickier. Ballpoint picks up the ink so well, but laser toner needs more work, as does sharpie. The contrast is not always desirable.
  • Ballpoint makes very clear distinct lines that don’t result in much bridging. It is useful to know this if you are trying to work back in to an existing plate done with laser toner or other materials: the ballpoint lines will stand out distinctly on your prints unless you work to integrate it.
  • Ballpoint pen is my current favorite: it is durable, needs little charging, and is OK to draw with (I don’t like drawing with sharpies!).
  • Heat your prepared plate before using: this won’t hurt and may help set the image. I generally use a hairdrier on high for 2-3 minutes holding if very close and moving it slowly around the plate (don’t do this on a glass surface!!).
  • A smoother paper will display fine lines & detail better (Duh!) I am liking Arches 88 silkscreen paper at the moment!
  • It may be helpful to use a larger thin plexi plate on the press bed under your poly plate: this will help you set the press pressure. Use one the same size if you want a platemark…
  • And if you are a multimedia artist, you can always tranform those printing failures into artistic successes somehow!

These are two different prints from a new laser copier plate, not yet fully charged. Note the unevenness of the inking! I printed over the poly litho prints with a transparent water based ink rolled very thinly on a plexi plate. Tthe ballpoint pen lines stand out clearly visible & different: I added rather too quickly to the laser copy plate. I will need to do more work to integrate them with the piece and make it work!

Cave print detail Cave, 8x10 polylitho bleed print

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Posted in About my art, Printmaking, Ramblings

More work, and more fun

P.T. Artist Sandra Stowell Posted on March 5, 2014 by SMarch 5, 2014
Red and Gold Rocks V II rescan rework

WIth digital mods, rescanned and w/colored & graphite pencil added

Painting:  watercolor Rocks II draft 5

Watercolor Rocks II draft 5


Sometimes I work, and work and wonder “why?” I must suppose this angst is just the human condition.  And working does keep me off the streets (by keeping my alcohol consumption down a bit). And, in truth, I crave all kinds of impossible things:  rocks, bones, etc. that can only be imagined,  so I must create them myself… Mind you I don’t ever reach the perfection of the vision, but again, that is the human condition.

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Posted in About my art, Ramblings

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