What is Autrey Art?
Random artworks by Lucy Autrey Wilson
Friday, February 23, 2018
Messing Around with Twin Photographs and Photo Effects
While playing with various alternative Photography techniques, I discovered a Effects dial on my Nikon D750 that takes pictures one would think are worthless. That didn't stop me from using them in the two digital composites revealed above. Top three: Cole (with a cold on the couch), then a combination of that original photo with an effects shot of Cole and Wilson. Bottom three: Matt Taylor with his twin sons, combined with another effects shot of the threesome plus the dog. I think I like the bottom result the best, but can no longer remember how I did it.
Having Fun with Seattle Art and Photography
My trips to Seattle generally result in at least one attempt at a portrait of grandson Wilson. Unlike his twin Cole, he is more amenable to posing. However, like any normal 8 year old, posing doesn't last very long (which I can blame for the my inability to capture his likeness). The result this time is "Wilson and his Toys," a 10 x 14 pen and ink and watercolor painting. To try to improve on the original, I tweaked the resulting watercolor by doing a bit of over painting in Photoshop, then added a background that was a blurred version of a Home Depot product shot. All of the elements are shown above, including a refreshingly more appealing photo of Wilson, walking the dog Riley, while wearing a T shirt in 30+ degree weather.
Friday, February 9, 2018
Magnolias
Latest quilted wall hanging tells the story of white and pink magnolia flowers going from bud to bloom. Center is a patchwork of photos printed on silk surrounded by raw edge applique of various cotton and silk fabrics showing a portion of a Magnolia flower's life cycle. It's amazing how much time these things take! But creating art works wonders in taking the mind off the horrors of our current government.
Monday, January 29, 2018
Sunday, January 21, 2018
I Wish
Now that I've starting writing poems again (for the recently self published Blurb book "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blue Jay") http://www.blurb.com/b/8507763-thirteen-ways-of-looking-at-a-blue-jay, I started going back through poems I've written in the past. Most were done for a family writing collective called "Round Robin." Here's one from 2000 I found particularly relevant to today:
I wish for a fish
A fish of green and violet stripes
In a warm ocean pool
I can swim in
while I'm on a vacation
That lasts forever
In the sun, having fun
Staying eternally young
And in this unrealistic fantasy
The fish will talk to me
And give me words of wisdom
That bubble up through the water
And dry in iridescent drops on my skin
Where everyone else can read them
And learn something
I still wish for an eternal vacation but more realistically, what I'm wishing for today, is a better government!
What's maybe more interesting is how often one does get what one wishes for. I had totally forgotten this poem, but realize now my trip to the Galapagos last year, where I snorkeled with beautiful fish, was exactly what I had wished for 17 years earlier.
I wish for a fish
A fish of green and violet stripes
In a warm ocean pool
I can swim in
while I'm on a vacation
That lasts forever
In the sun, having fun
Staying eternally young
And in this unrealistic fantasy
The fish will talk to me
And give me words of wisdom
That bubble up through the water
And dry in iridescent drops on my skin
Where everyone else can read them
And learn something
I still wish for an eternal vacation but more realistically, what I'm wishing for today, is a better government!
What's maybe more interesting is how often one does get what one wishes for. I had totally forgotten this poem, but realize now my trip to the Galapagos last year, where I snorkeled with beautiful fish, was exactly what I had wished for 17 years earlier.
Tuesday, January 16, 2018
"Sewing Tools Used and New" - a Recently Finished New Art Quilt
This quilt happened for a couple of reasons:
1. I started collecting old scissors on a trip to Indiana in 2013, after enviously noting my artist aunt Reva's scissor collection. This forced me to take a class on flash photography, and buy a flash attachment for my camera, in order to accurately photograph my old scissors. That done, the scissors were photoshopped into a polka dot star pattern I designed.
2. On a trip to the Galapagos in 2017, a fellow traveler was always sewing and I spent a couple of hours doing a watercolor of her pin cushion, which I liked a lot. So I printed it onto fabric.
3. I made the mistake of going into Britex Fabrics in SF (before they moved this year), thinking I would only look, and exited with scissor and pin cushion fabrics plus some complimentary blue and white fabric as well. I needed to do something with them.
Once all of the above happened, I thought I'd put all the elements together and make a quilt I could enter into a cool quilt contest. The problem is my craft abilities are inferior to my creative abilities so the finished quilt, being slightly imperfect, would probably never get accepted in a craft quilt contest. Additionally, after photographing the quilt, I transformed it in Photoshop to neatly fill a unified space and find it now looks slightly more warped than it really is. So the only place this quilt will be featured for now is here. It will be live for viewing at my Marin Open Studios this coming May, however.
Art Quilts In Process
I now have so much fabric, I feel obligated to do something with it before it takes over the entire house. So I am doing a lot of quilting these days. One of my self imposed guidelines requires each quilt include some original art and/or photograph, which further expands the fabric library. The top two images are for a giant quilt tentatively called "Birdmen of Marin," because it will ultimately include 80 2x2 photos that I shot in and around Marin County, combined with 4 wooden artist model photos done in an applique rose fabric + some original bird art. The third image down is for a different quilt of funky birds in primary colors. The one featured here is blue. The final in process quilt depicted here is called "Magnolia from Bud to Flower" and includes magnolia photos printed on silk, then cut up, together with some applique magnolia buds and flowers in a mix of cotton and silk that is still being worked on.
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