What is Autrey Art?
Random artworks by Lucy Autrey Wilson
Tuesday, October 22, 2019
Free Bird Evolution
In 2005 I painted the bottom picture of a bird. The painting is 100% digital. I liked it. So, the next year, in 2006, I painted the same subject as an oil painting. Now that I'm exploring paper collage, I decided to revisit my old favorite subject, and created the top picture in yet another medium.
Sunday, October 6, 2019
Lucy's MOCA Class for families with kids starting this November
I've been spending a lot of time trying to come up with a fun project to do with families with kids that will result in a finished art piece in about 30 minutes. This is for my paper collage art theory class at MOCA (link here: https://www.marinmoca.org/) this coming November. I'm using nice washi paper and some recycled paper from an old telephone book.
For now, after some trial and error (see prior post,) I've decided on a paper collage portrait in the style of Yayoi Kusama. This Pinterest link: https://www.pinterest.com/pin/230809549637151790/?lp=true includes Yayoi Kusama's 2016 self portrait in yellow and purple. It's simple, it uses complementary colors, and it's contemporary. The image above is my self portrait done in somewhat of a Kusama style.
There are several great projects on-line for kids to create collage portraits in the style of Picasso, or Paul Klee or Matisse. I thought it would be fun to do something in the style of a living, contemporary artist instead. I have thrown in a few words of things I love to fill out the negative space. Drawing the words out, inking them and painting them in, however, made the project take longer than desired, so the negative space surrounding the main object may have to stay empty!
Paper Collage and Color Theory
I'm getting ready to teach a few art classes at MOCA (Marin Museum of Contemporary Art) in Novato starting this coming November. The classes are part of their Sunday family days - having fun making art with your kids- program. Link here: https://www.marinmoca.org/
As I haven't been doing much more than nursing this past year, I needed to practice for my paper collage class revolving around color theory. I wanted to tie in my first class with the current 50 FACES exhibit at MOCA and come up with something that would result in a finished portrait in 30 minutes.
First off, I got Sam to pose for me (top) Result looks nothing like him and this fill-in collage technique takes way longer than 30 minutes. I filled out the rest of the image with doodles (a technique I'm planning to explore in more mediums coming up) and tried another approach.
Next up (middle) was a portrait using recycled telephone book pages and some apple cut paper images to illustrate the complementary colors red and green. This also took way too long and didn't come out that well.
Another effort (bottom) was a pen & ink drawing with complementary colors (yellow/purple) filling in the negative space around the main image. Something to consider, but not the final choice.
Catching UP - Greek art
Since returning from Greece this past June, it's been a flurry of medical issues, doctor appointments, surgeries, etc. Things are finally looking up enough for some catch up. Here's the one and only 10x7 travel pen & ink and watercolor painting done in Paros, looking at the view of the Piso Logaras hills from our apartment balcony.
Sunday, August 11, 2019
Seattle Pink Poppies
Sadly I no longer have a reason to travel up to Seattle a few times a year to take photos and visit family (since they moved to Portland). But it's now fun to see how many ways I can edit the thousands of photos I' took in Seattle over the years. The four above are from a Queen Anne poppies garden shot I photographed in 2014, starting with one unadulterated version. The editing fun is almost as endless as the complexities of the original as created by Mother nature.
Monday, July 22, 2019
Marilyn Monroe, Floral Fantasy, and Photoshop CC Collide
I've been compulsively editing my best floral photographs, out of the thousands I've taken since I went digital. This has given me the opportunity to not only go down memory lane, but to experiment with as many digital techniques as I can come up with to try to bring out the essence of each photo. Lately, I discovered a pattern feature in Photoshop CC I was unaware of. Having done some fabric design previously, it was with excitement I realized I could create offset patterns in Photoshop using my illustrator art. This has opened a whole new area in which to play. In these four pictures I started with a beautiful field of flowers shot in Salem, Oregon in 2016 (bottom). Moving up from there, I've combined the original photo with three alternate patterns based on my Marilyn Monroe vector drawing.
Friday, June 21, 2019
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