Sculpting With a Brush

November 26, 2011

Welcome to our new Quiller Gallery website. This is a dream come true for Marta and me. For the last few years we have received requests to have a secure on-line ordering site for our art supplies. Now you can order safely without picking up the phone. I have always wanted to add and remove paintings on the site myself. At this point I can manage the website from anywhere in the world as long as I have a wi-fi connection. For instance I can do a painting one day in the south of France and that evening write up the experience and place the painting on our site.

Today I will begin my monthly blog article. Please enjoy this writing and join me in witnessing the articles and the website develop. 

 

Sculpting With a Brush

 

These days I see myself almost as much a sculptor as a painter. Although I am working two dimensionally and in the various water media, I am removing as much paint as I put on. I put color on, then lift the color off that is around the positive form - or I paint a solid opaque negative shape around the form, and then work back and forth. In this way I am thinking and seeing the negative shape and much more aware of the abstracted composition.  In so doing I am also most aware of different ways to apply paint to create a feast of various visual qualities. I can create hard shapes, soft shapes, transparent glazed tones or juicy opaques. I am concerned with surface texture. 

Recently I have been working with aquabord, an Ampersand product. It is a textured kaoline clay that is laminated on a hardboard support. Using acrylic paint (Stephen Quiller Acrylic by Jack Richeson Co.) on this panel gives me a host of different possibilities for applying the paint. I can work transparent, translucent and opaque. I can glaze or work impasto. I can remove the paint when damp with a stiff, damp, clean brush. When dry I can lift with rubbing alcohol. And finally when the paint is dry I can carefully scrape the painted surface with pocket knife, razor blade or some such tool and take it back to a solid white. Then I can paint a transparent tone in this area or leave it as desired.  So I am constantly pushing and pulling the paint, adding and removing the paint- SCULPTING!

 

The Making of a Mural

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Journal Entries by Stephen Quiller chronicling the making of a mural for CRT's Ruth Humphreys Brown Theatre:

 Last winter while at the Bachelor crest skiing most late afternoons, I became very interested in doing a 360 degree view painting. This would be one moment in time and viewed from one spot.  I did five charcoal drawings moving from one segment of the landscape to the next until the last drawing came around to the start. The idea was to do one long painting that would encompass the work. However I did not take the idea further at that point.

•  Late last summer (2010) I was shown the skeleton structure of the inside of the new Creede Repertory Theatre that was due to open in July of 2011. Earlier I had been asked by the theatre board to do a mural on the exterior south wall. After thinking about it I turned it down or at least delayed the decision mainly because the south light would be too harsh on the paint. But when I entered the building I was struck by the incredible blank wall in the lobby and knew that was where the mural should be. The wall is protected from too much direct light and is the perfect space and dream space to do a work. I felt like Gully Jimpsem in “The Horse's Mouth,” discovering a wall on which to do his painting.  Not only was this a great space but I became immediately aware that this is why I had been doing drawings at Bachelor Mountain the previous winter.

•  My next question was - how was I going to claim two months or more to do this project uninterrupted and still be financially sound?  While in my hotel room late one night in Myrtle Beach, SC, while teaching a workshop, it came to me.  Why not select a few dedicated patrons who are closely connected with my work but also with Creede and the CRT and ask each one to contribute $2500, then honor them with a plaque by the mural?  I did not want a lot of income but enough to pay for the panels, paints and supplies, mounting on the wall and the final framing, plus enough to get me through two months. In a short while Marta and I composed a list of thirty some names to consider. At this time I have asked three patrons and each one has said yes. It looks like the funds will not be a problem.

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•  So I set to work on the project. At a fortuitous time I found myself in New York to help jury the AWS 2011 exhibition. I say it was perfect timing as things come when you ask or when you need them if you are open. While there a few friends and I went to the American Hispanic Museum to view the Sorolla paintings and mural. The mural is 144 ft. and surrounds the room. It had recently been cleaned and the room renovated for perfect viewing. The mural is incredible and really got me charged up. What I did notice is how he shifted the shape of the mural when it was over a door and then how he brought it down on the right side. It seemed to be a great idea for my mural as the landscape rhythm moves from the valley floor to the Bachelor crest and back! So that got me thinking. I had been in the CRT building and measured the wall space. The height that I had to work with was 7 1/2 feet and the length was 32 feet. This was the perfect space for this idea. I began sketching out shapes for the space and decided to use Ampersand’s aquabord panels for the support. I found the largest they make the panels is 4’ X 8’ so the composition needed to fit within this boundary.IMG 0038 After many compositional sketches considering the wall space and the panel relationships and numerous calls and emails to the Ampersand company, I decided on this shape. The center panel would be 4’ X 11’. This would be actually two panels placed together and connected on a back frame held together with wood glue and counter sunk finish nails that would be covered up. Connected to each side of the center panel are two 3’ X 5’ panels that are flush with the middle panel at the top but go 1’ further down on the bottom side. Then connected to the outer sides of these panels are two 3’ X 7’ panels. All of these will eventually be connected with a 1” X 4” frame underneath. The segments of these frames need to be in place before I begin, so Dwayne Lewis, my friend who is now constructing our garage, will do this as soon as the panels arrive.

•   The panels arrive and Dwayne and his daughter Alysia constructed the frames on which the panels were mounted. They were glued and nailed with a finish nail gun and the frames and the panels fit perfectly. Dwayne did one other thing that was masterful. He placed “biscuits” to connect each panel to the next and lined them up perfectly.  When I began painting I could lock the following panel to the one I was working on and then have a perfect transition.

•   I set up my studio in the space above the gallery. There is plenty of room and good light and I can still use my studio out at the house for other works and projects. The added benefit of working in town is that this is a public project. As opposed to working in isolation in my main studio so that I do not have interruptions, I welcome people from the community to view this work in progress. I want people talking about the mural and checking it out.

•   IMG 0043So I have begun this project. At this time I have two and one half panels of the six fairly far along. So far it is a dream. The surface of the clay board is like magic. The paint melts like butter on the panel and it lifts easily while still damp. The temperature is cool in the space, even with two heaters going full blast and on a cloudy day it does not warm up. But most days the sun burns through and warms the space. I think there is an advantage to keeping it cool. If the paint and panels are at a low temperature the water does not evaporate as quickly, giving me more time to work.

•   The first panel is a horizontal 3 1/2’ X 7' shape representing the meadow of Bachelor. Moving to the left  the “upriver valley” is represented while to the right the tree patterns have a syncopated beat that move to the vertical panel. The sun is setting and burns edges of the ridge in yellow-orange to red-orange. All else is in shadow.

•   The second panel (7’ X 3’) connects to the first but is heavily wooded with aspen and spruce. This also is in shadow and is the path that I use to enter the woods when cross-country skiing. Some tracks are faintly represented. Hints of sunset light touch a few branches and aspen trunks - hints of warm against predominant cool. The fun of the cool is the warm and cool - cool. I am playing with a true neutral gray mixed with phthalo blue and pyrrole orange and then use strong ultramarine (warm blues) against phthalo (cool blues) throughout the snow patterns. The paint application is very juicy and Impressionistic. I must say that so far the mural seems to be painting itself. I am just there to obey and fill in the blanks. Every step seems to lead me and tell me where to go and how to go about it. Each evening after painting I go to ski at Bachelor and usually do some sketching and photographing to prepare for the next session. I am usually two to three days ahead.

                                                                                                                              •   IMG 0081The third panel is 4’ X 3’ and is part of the next panel that is 4’ X 8’. Thus it is truly a 4’ X 11’ shape that is the center of the composition. It transitions from the previous panel of aspen and spruce patterns in shadow to the ridge of alpenglow moving to the La Garitas. I have been working on this panel for the last two days and so far it goes well. Tomorrow I hope to complete and begin the transition to the largest shape. I spent the evening skiing and from 5:15 PM to 5:45.  I sketched the mountains and witnessed the alpenglow. I am ready!

•   This all took place by mid-January and the panels did finally arrive, were constructed masterfully (with biscuits linking the panels together) and I began working in the space above the gallery. I found that the Aquabord was the ideal surface for the project. And I decided soon that this had to be my expression, that I could not worry about how viewers judged the finished work but I needed to use my strengths and work with my mark. It is a watermedia approach using washes, lifting, layering applications as well as juicy opaque work. I spend considerable time up on the mountain doing studies and taking photos and each late evening do a ski. At the end of the workout I turn to each of the four corners of the landscape to bless, give thanks and to honor it. And I must say that I have been led through the project to this moment. As I come to the next problem or need a transition to the next panel, nature reveals the answer. The light hits a certain way or the paint flows in a particular fashion that I react to and it takes an unexpected turn but one that is necessary.

•   SDC12608It is now March 6 and I am finishing panel #5 and working the transition to the last panel. Yesterday I was up on the mountain in the afternoon and did two drawings of the mountain formations above the valley floor. It was blustery while I sat on the rear opening of the tail of my vehicle and it was cold enough that my litho #2 crayon was stiff and would just give me a weak, waxy mark. For this panel as well as the last two I am doing a more finished small color study. All of this preparation is so helpful in letting me go when putting that paint on the large panel.

 

                                                                                 IMG 0074•   A couple of weeks ago Mo, Renee, Sarah and Damien Cheshire from England came to the mural studio and did a video interviewing me, talking about the work, my relationship to the theatre and my evolution as a painter living in this beautiful village. They are putting it on the website as well as youtube.

•   Each evening religiously I go to the mountain and ski. Although I have spent every winter for the last twenty years doing this, it seems that this year is even more meaningful. The trees and the mountain forms have become old friends and they continue to greet me and reveal a deeper place, a more meaningful place. Although I see March 18 as a finish line when my workshops begin again I do not want this to end. It goes well.


Today, the finished 360 degree panoramic mural of historic Bachelor Loop is housed permanently in CRT’s Ruth Humphreys Brown Theatre. The Creede Repertory Theatre unveiled the artwork at the Second Stage Theatre's opening in July 2011.

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A Word From Stephen Quiller

Dear Artist Friend:

I am writing this letter from Pole Creek, a tributary at the headwaters of the Rio Grande River. I am painting and camping here for six days. It has been a beautiful experience with complete solitude and without interruption. Each summer I like to slip away to the high country to paint and meditate. This year I hired an outfitter and his pack horses to carry my gear to this special spot. Every day I hike to a site and paint and every evening I reflect on the past year and also visualize my plans for the future. It seems our pace each year is very lively and it is important to take time to pause. If there is one thing I have learned over these years it is that I cannot get time back. Each painting experience, studio or plein air, is unique. And the love, joy and energy that is put into this work will be there forever. The time I spend painting at a place and communing with nature will be with me for life!

Sometimes I am slow to stay current with our modern age.  We have had many requests to make our Web site a secure site for order supplies. So we are doing just that in our new Online Store.  We will continue to be a one-stop shop for the best water media supplies. In addition, I will be creating a monthly newsletter I give some of my thoughts and philosophy. Of course, on the site we will list my upcoming workshops (Workshops). This year I will be in Indianapolis, IN; St. Louis, MO; Vancouver, BC; Prince Edward Island, Canada; and at 4UR Ranch here in Creede. We will again host the two summer workshops at our gallery in Creede. In addition to my work exhibited at the Quiller Gallery, I will have a one-man show at the Mission Gallery in Taos, NM to honor the gallery’s 50th anniversary. This is scheduled for late September 2012.

And of course, our website will continue to show my newest and most current work (SQ Fine Art). Each year I continue to explore the various water media, various surfaces and use a variety of paint applications to go deeper into my expression. Please visit our web page (The Gallery) representing our gallery artists: clay sculptor Gail Frasier; bronze sculptor Jocelyn Russell; woodworker Sam Saunders; and potter Cloyde Snook. Each of these fine artists’ works can be viewed by contacting us and requesting images.

This past winter I spent three months painting a 30-foot mural for the lobby of the new Creede Repertory Theatre’s “Ruthie” Black Box. I used the Quiller acrylic paint and worked on Amperstand’s aquaboard. What an incredible experience I had last winter doing this project.

Stay tuned on our website—you will be able to read the full story. In our Online Store you will find only products that I have tried and tested and give my highest recommendation. Most of the items have something to do with water media and color. I have written six books and produced 14 DVDs and spent more than 40 years painting emphasizing these two areas. Please explore the contents and then give these products a try. I am positive you will enjoy the results. Everything in our Online Store will be a significant discount off retail. Check out our pre-arranged 12-color and 25-color watercolor palettes and the large poster-size Quiller Wheel made for studio and classroom use.

We have many loyal collectors, patrons, artist shoppers and workshop attendees and we truly appreciate all your patronage. Who knows what will unfold in this coming year. My thought is to simply grab that time and see what will transpire. Wishing you a beautiful unfolding process.

Go well,

AWS Award Winner

2015-The-Artists-Magazine