Tag Archives: grand rapids

Three Reasons Changing It Up Expands You as an Artist

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“I am a studio painter,” I have always proudly declared, following it up with, “Plein air is too frustrating; the sun dries the paint too quickly, and the wind blows everything all over. I like my studio.”

That’s what I’d say aloud, but then I’d see plein air painters and find myself envying the time they were able to spend surrounded by nature while exploring their craft.

Nature is good — it’s healing — and outside is where I long to be. So within me, two warring factions were at work: the longing to be in the great outdoors versus the comforts and convenience of my studio.

My avoidance of plein air came to a screeching halt when, this past January, I took a trip to Ethiopia with three other artists. Plein air painting was the major focus, so I had to learn. No more excuses. So I contacted a plein air painter I knew and asked her to show me the ropes.

It is like learning to paint all over again. All my created comforts were gone. I normally use jars of Nova Color paint — many of the colors I mix myself — and my palette is a large piece of plastic on a table next to my painting surface. This can’t be done outside, as the wind blows my plastic over and sends paint flying everywhere … that is, if the sun hasn’t already dried my large dollops of color to a crisp.

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I have to learn new ways and habits, and for this endeavor, I had to step out of my comfort zone. I learned that if I used a paper plate for a palette that I held in my left hand, the wind couldn’t blow it away. If I only squeeze out a small amount of paint, the sun won’t dry it before I could use it. Outside, I traded my big, cumbersome Nova Color jars for tubes of paint by Holbein, allowing me to dispense less paint at a time.

It was a challenge, and, I admit, there was some frustration. But I did it.

Successfully accomplishing this new-to-me process in Ethiopia became the impetus for a new project. Today, I started a new series called “Out and About Grand Rapids” — a series meant to force me to go be uncomfortable until it is natural for me — and the rewards have been big so far.

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• I was outside today, after a very long, very cold winter. Today I spent the day outside along the river that is my backyard. The birds were chirping, the sun was shining, and I thought, “YES, this is good!”

• Any time you venture outside of your comfort zone, you expand yourself, and I know I will be a better painter for stumbling through this new practice until I find myself in a new place of really being comfortable painting outside. And that expands my options as a artist in a big way. As an avid traveler, this is a big deal.

• Speaking of travel, painting outside has taught me how painting a place lets you go deeper into that place. I see Ethiopia differently now that I have painted it on location. I have also painted on the Michigan wine trails on location, and the vineyards became even more endearing to me. I felt more connected to the land than I ever have before. And now, painting in my own backyard and around the city I live in — well, it’s priceless.

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So whether you are a painter or not, whatever scares you, whatever you resist, I encourage you to move towards it and you will be rewarded!

I invite you to follow me this summer as I continue my journey from painting around my home town of Grand Rapids to stealing time away “Up North” on my beloved Leelanau Peninsula and Old Mission Peninsula, expanding my understanding and getting comfortable with being, at times, uncomfortable.

Cheers to learning, growing and being expanded!

Painting of the Week: Pinot Noir Fields (bin616 Pinot Noir)

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ImageStephanie is excited to announce the use of her artwork on the new bin616 line of wines, available exclusively at the Amway Hotel Collection, including JW Marriott, Amway Grand Plaza and Courtyard by Marriott hotels! Her colorful pieces — two figurative, in honor of us, the wine drinkers; two centered on the land, a nod to the farmers, the winemakers and the fruit itself — will appear on bottles of bin616 Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon and Pinot Noir.

Pinot Noir Fields: “Rolling hills, wrapped in vines. Generous the earth in its beautiful bounty!”

“A skip of my heart — my soul stirs and a smile spreads through me as I take in the vista before me. The lush green goes on for miles, over gently rolling hills striped with rows of vines, vines laden with grapes that eventually will become wine. Ahhh… wine country. In this case, we’re talking about Pinot Noir, the wine of surprises. Yes, it’s light, and its colors more ripe ruby than its deeper burgundy and amethyst neighbors, but it surprises with its ability to be complex. At times the layers tell more of a story than you might initially expect. The story it tells — that all wine tells — is about the land. It has been said that wine can not tell a lie: Every rainfall, every sunny day, every visit from the winemaker, everything is recorded right there in the bottle. It is this bottling of truth, of history, that captivates me and serves as inspiration for this painting. The land where wine comes from is as complex and beautiful as the wine that comes from it.

“My process in the studio is more about a feeling, a fire in my belly, than any desire to “copy” nature. I feel no duty to be true to reality; my desire instead is to be true to myself and the process of making something “painterly.” That’s to say, not trying to make a piece about anything but the brush, the paint, the painter’s hand and the artist’s communication with the canvas. In this piece, I worked fast — like I talk, like I do most things — letting intuition be my guide as I contemplated the Pinot Noir fields of my fantasies. I would like to be in this place, and I am inviting you to join me here in contemplation of the land, the grape and the wine … Pinot Noir.”

bin616 artwork will appear at the JW Marriott during ArtPrize, Sept. 18-Oct. 6. For more information, click here