fidus amor

Art must be an expression of love or it is nothing.
— Marc Chagall​​

style

Designing and curating a spring collection created a new work method. It was refreshing to have a process that felt decisive and disciplined. Utilizing the new Adobe Creative Cloud was a big part of this when I upgraded in February because my Photoshop version would not do what I wanted. I am fluent in Photoshop but have room to grow in learning Illustrator. A specific need for a program to function a certain way is an ideal motivator. The frustration of trying to create patterns using math was not it, and the ease of Pattern Preview was a game changer. 

Most paintings I've done in the past few years have been on a smaller scale because they tend to sell faster. This was my year to move away from creating work from a mindset of How much money will this make? Is it worth my time? When a painting begins that way for me personally, it shows. When I started my studio as a business almost eight years ago, I needed to learn how to make money and soften my interwoven emotions with creating art. The 2023 goal was to create a method to produce quality and meaningful artwork with potential to increase revenue spans + reach through licensing opportunities. 

My sketchbook from a trip to DC was a training exercise for how I wanted to maximize the Visual Journaling retreat in France in 2022. I found some delicious Strathmore watercolor sketchbooks that made me want to keep a consistent style and color palette. I would begin a sketch on-site, like the one of my kids sitting at a table in the Pavilion Cafe in the National Gallery of Art's Sculpture Garden, and take a panoramic photo to fill details in later to maximize the paper’s landscape format. I developed a frequently used color palette with HIMI and MIYA jelly gouache with fluorescent paints. 


inspiration

The biggest inspiration for a limited palette and line quality was researching the work of background animators from Looney Tunes (Warner Brothers) cartoons from the 1950s, like Maurice Noble, Ernie Nordli, Chuck Jones, and Irv Wyner. I found an animation background archive site and went down the rabbit hole. I promise that is not a pun about Bugs Bunny.


art history remix through reference imagery

The Afternoon Meal (La Merienda), oil on canvas, by Luis Meléndez (Spanish, Naples 1716–1780 Madrid), ca. 1772

Hearing and Sight (Pair), Chelsea Porcelain Manufactory (British, 1745–1784, Red Anchor Period, ca. 1753–58), Modeled by Joseph Willems (Flemish, 1716–1766), ca. 1755, Soft-paste porcelain with enamel decoration and gilding

The reference imagery was remixed into a digital collage of the two porcelain figures placed into a setting from The Afternoon Meal, by Luis Meléndez (from the same period). The simplified patterns on the porcelain and flowers were  ideal elements to develop into a surface pattern. The stage was set, and I dialed into painting on the easel. Returning to painting on a larger scale felt so good, with curiosity and inspiration at the helm. This process and method of working united previous techniques and styles that operated like satellites for me. It combined my love for antique malls, decorative arts, painting on a larger scale, line work, and a high-voltage color palette.

During this time, I was not sharing any of this on Instagram, but would with anyone I spoke to in person. Although I felt certain with where I was going with this, it felt like an intrusion to divide my attention by “capturing content”. Maybe it is a resistance to always feeling under surveillance or how authentic this felt, I did not want to record while pretending I wasn’t. Oh, hi, I didn’t see you there! For the first time, I wanted to see a process through fruition and let it develop before sharing what I thought about it in bites. That choice to treat it in this way was something I needed because artists experience a range of sensations during the creative process. Some days, problems arise, and you have to walk away and some flow and feel triumphant. 

production

fidus amor

I titled the painting Fidus Amor, Latin for true love, because I mindfully embraced radical self-acceptance. It is challenging to be an artist because it is an extension of yourself in a physical form subject to criticism. A positive mindset would suggest that an artist’s work is an extension of oneself that can reach other people and be celebrated. Fidus Amor results from a year dedicated to shadow work, slaying the dragons of self-doubt, and feeling firmly planted in this new direction. It is a process like a garden that needs tending, pruning, and consideration for the seasons. 


surface pattern

The first image below is from a lookbook with mock-ups to visualize. More details are to come for how you can purchase products.

Everything Old Is New Again

The main objective for the mentorship with Kristen Ley was to develop and complete a Spring collection. The portfolio review was to sort existing work into collections and suggest new ways to organize my files. A series that began in 2013 of Chinoiserie chic elements like Staffordshire dogs and porcelain dolls was the first collection to stand out. The approach would be to vectorize the original paintings and enhance design elements that could be developed into complementary patterns. 

Original Painting (L) - 2023 Refresh to adapt for surface pattern (R)

Original Painting (L) - 2023 Refresh to adapt for surface pattern (R)

objet d’art

Antiquing is a way of life for me. I love the Decorative Arts wing in museums. When I plan to visit a large museum, I always search for objet d’art (A fancy French term that means decorative, ornamental works of art and can be figurines, metalwork, engraved gems, tapestries, ceramic plates, textiles). This is a niche wing of art history that lights me up. The scope of decorative arts holds portrait miniatures, detailed finials, decoupage, and ornate cigarette cases–basically the stuff I seek at antique malls. Objects have tremendous power to unlock memories and turn people into collectors. 

The idea to revisit a series of artwork from 2013 ignited something within me, and I began a series of paintings with an extraordinary destiny. At the end of 2022, I searched for juried competitions, and the priority was to develop a series of paintings for the 27th Annual NO DEAD ARTISTS International Juried Exhibition of Contemporary Art at Jonathan Ferrara Gallery in New Orleans, LA. I wrote little notes to my future self in my 2023 planner. How are the paintings coming along? This is your year; you know you can do this! Then the countdown began: You have two months until submission. 

During winter break, I binged season two of White Lotus and loved the opening credits design elements. I did an illustration of the Italian Majolica decorative head about the legend of the Testa di Moro on my iPad while watching S2 again. I searched The Met Collection online for more Staffordshire pottery, which led to Majolica pottery, then European porcelain figurines from the 1700’s. It became a feast. 

And this is how the Fidus Amor series began.

Title: Hearing (one of a pair)

Factory: Chelsea Porcelain Manufactory (British, 1745–1784, Red Anchor Period, ca. 1753–58)
Modeler: Modeled by Joseph Willems (Flemish, 1716–1766)
Date: ca. 1755

Medium: Soft-paste porcelain with enamel decoration and gilding