Flow freely

subtropic autumn

This week’s watercolour and ink painting is inspired by the autumnal colours of nature in the garden.

The following poem recounts the words that flooded my mind this morning as I made coffee; before starting to paint.

Flow freely

Refreshingly delicious fragrance

of freshly cut green blades springing back

after an autumnal shower

flow freely upon the softly caressing eastern breeze

wafting from bay to shore

drenched with less intense intermittent rays

between fast floating fluffy whites

illuminating tropical greens pinks purples reds oranges

and curling fronds swish as they wave

turning towards swaying saplings

with tantalising glimpses of ancient gargantuan branches

frantically rustling in their dance further inland

Pink and green

In my mind during the week leading up to this week’s mixed media painting, I thought dark green flowing into yellow. When it came to mixing the colours yesterday, I loved the green so much, I felt pink was needed.

I started the painting in portrait to encourage the colours to flow and mingle.

Last week’s stamped rings were achieved by applying watercolour to the rim of a drinking glass with a brush. This week I dipped the edge of a deeper rimmed glass into paint in a saucer, resulting in more strongly defined circles.

My husband commented the colours looked subdued. I explained they were step one.

With the picture turned around to landscape, I added green, pink, red, and black bubbles. This draws out the creative process and extends my enjoyment.

As it was a warm sunny Autumn day, I took a break yesterday so that we could spend a couple of hours in the spa.

Coming back to the painting this morning, there was very little to add.

Flight of fancy

My first watercolour and ink abstract; flight of fancy.

I painted the watercolour first then overlaid purple ink. I also had a go at watercolour stamped rings using the rim of a drinking glass.

I may go back to add some more bubbles.

More bubbles and yellow pencil outline

Evolution

Cheerios

This week’s watercolour started off in a similar vein as previous ones. A collection of five shapes overlapping.

I wanted to experiment with olive green, purple, and a caramel yellow. The yellow turned out more buttercup than browned sugar. I don’t mind the contrasting result.

Then I started adding Cheerio like hoops. My husband thinks I was subliminally channeling the cheerfulness surrounding the first Australian concert at the Melbourne Cricket Ground last night, resulting in a homage to Taylor Swift.

Finding my way

ovoids kissing

I can get overwealmed with posting on social media and holding myself to account to do so.

Lately, I have tried sharing a snippet of a watercolour on Instagram with the whole picture being available here on WordPress. I imagine this is what the audience of each platform wants.

This enhanced and cropped image is from yesterday’s picture. I immediately thought, ovoids kissing!

Abstract quest

A wet day in South East Queensland, prefer for a whimsical verse and watercolour.

One of seven, my purpose is clear
Learn from each other, trust them my dear
Hunt, discover clues, stop for a beer
Fog may descend, path no longer clear
Senses enough to look, smell, touch, hear
If we get stuck, can visit a seer
Time to get moving, pack up the gear

Is life about the journey rather than the destination?

Abstract ovoid bridge

I think it depends on how one measures the journey, in time or in distance. Also, there are many milestones and enjoyable deviations along life’s path.

26 years ago we moved from Birmingham, UK to Sydney, Australia, 17,034 km. The journey took three flights and a couple of nights’ stopover in Singapore. It is a distant memory.

When travelling, I prefer to get to where I am going as quickly as possible so that I can maximise the time at the destination.

In comparison to the UK, distances in Australia are gargantuan. The UK is about 965 km north to south. Our move from Sydney to Brisbane in 2018 was 1,000 km, a ten hours drive.

We continue to enjoy our shared highway of 30 years together in the UK and Australia. The ups and downs have brought us closer and reinforced our commitment to each other. We appreciate spending valuable time with our dear friends. The moments shared with them are like dazzling jewels along our road.

This week’s abstract watercolour fits in with the journeying theme. It was inspired by my husband suggesting overlapping ovoids might be interesting.

It took a number of weeks for the idea to sprout into a possibility. On plan it is a bridge made up of piles of alternating purple and green rock hoops topped with an orange capstone. I tried out the concept in Freeform on the iPhone and sketched it with coloured pencils before attempting to paint it free hand.

Enhanced abstract abalone shell

Enhanced abstract abalone interior

One of the artists I follow on Instagram posted a video of the painting of three green, purple, olive solid overlapping circles in portrait. Over this a stem and dense large leaves were added. Using a pen, lines and dots were added to alternate leaves. Then something else was added, I cannot remember what, probably flowers. I would have stopped at the three circles. I liked the simplicity of the forms, the colours, and the spatial calm.

Yesterday, I added green, yellow, and purple pencil bubbles to the abalone shell inspired watercolour from last week.

The original abstract abalone shell reflects my aim for an ‘ideal’ restrained and constrained abstract watercolour. The result evoked a meh response from me. Internally, I wrestled with the original is okay, I may make it worse if I do anything to it. Down the track, I would have earmarked it as a failure, turned the sheet over and painted on the back.

I now love the pimped up version and for the Internet, the addition of a Google Snapseed pop filter. It is sort of my first mixed media picture.

Creativity

An excerpt

Being creative energises and stimulates my mind. Planning, researching, and working up a concept for a watercolour is fun. The execution is an intense balance of speed, improvisation, allowing the paint and paper media to work their magic, and not overworking the image.

The painting process is often over too quickly and my inner critic is harsh.

The whole

Inspired by a stone trefoil with coloured glass, this abstract picture is carrying on the ovoid shapes theme with the colours intermingling rather than having hard edges.

I used left over paint from the previous watercolour with some extra colours.

As a teenager, I signed my work with Rx and the year of production. As I am tapping into the creativity of my inner child, I have revived this tradition.

Close encounter

Today’s watercolour

Yesterday at lunch time, I was completing my post machine use cleaning routine after preparing the last coffees of the day. Standing at the sink, my mind was goodness knows where whilst drying the group head with a pink cleaning sponge.

Hubby appeared at the screen door to my left. Something lightly shot across the top of my thong clad left foot. In a split second, I dropped the group head into the sink, shrieked as I leapt backwards, the sponge falling to the floor, at the sight of a four foot long eastern brown disappearing underneath the washing machine, at the same time my husband came in closing the screen door behind him.

I explained there was an asp like creature in the house. Our white fluffy dog, Stan lay on the floor watching our conniptions. Was it a look of complete disinterest he was giving us?

Hubby grabbed the floor pad handle and exclaimed upon seeing the viper in the window reveal. He attempted to open the screen door with the pole as the slithering reptile dropped into the sink. We guessed we all wanted the same thing; a speedy exit from this dramatic situation. My husband opened the screen door, joined me in the living room from where we could view the area as the snake jumped out of the sink onto the floor and out across the patio to the nearest garden border.

This is the first time in almost twenty six years of living here we have encountered a serpent. I was advised it was the second deadliest snake on Earth and one of the most venomous in Australia.

After reading up on our intruder, I was marginally relieved to learn they are generally timid only becoming aggressive when threatened.