Gulf Coast Flora

September 18, 2009

Artists for Conservation, Art in Embassies Program

Filed under: News & Comments — Susan Downing-White @ 12:39 pm

Two interesting invitations lately:  one is to join the group, Artists for Conservation, an international group, based in Canada. From  their website (link in Places I Like at the right) “The organization’s mission is to support wildlife and habitat conservation, biodiversity, sustainability and environmental education through art that celebrates our natural heritage.”

maps we carry-sm

Maps We Carry, 2009, oil on canvas & wood, 15″x 15″ (at Cole Pratt Gallery)

The other invitation is from assistant curator Claire D’Alba of the Art in Embassies Program to particpate in that program by lending a couple of paintings for the residence of the ambassador to Romania (link at right.) It seems the new ambassador is from Alabama, and one of my delta scenes that represents his home state might also make him feel a little more at home.  It’s an honor, though tying up two paintings for two and a half years is difficult.  But I’ve commited to do it–and I will certainly be in good company with all the other artists the program has shown in the past.

September 11, 2009

Painting class

Filed under: News & Comments — Susan Downing-White @ 4:21 pm

Something about turning fifty has triggered all kinds of changes in my life! One is that I’ve felt a strong urge to teach. I’ve been asked about offering workshops, and want to do that at some time in the future. In the meantime, I approached the University of South Alabama’s Continuing Education department, and have been working with Sue Allison in that office to develop a course aimed at beginners. (It starts September 24, runs for six weeks and I learned yesterday that there is room for only one more student.) I plan to teach still life using the underpainting and glazing technique I learned many years ago from Jack Dempsey, the late, great professor of painting at the University of Alabama at Huntsville. jack001 copy 2Later I may offer landscape painting, but right now I want to test my theory that anybody on the street can walk in and learn the craft of painting. Kind of like learning a song on the piano–you can do it if someone is right there telling you how–and you’re willing to practice.

Each session is only two hours long and so I’ve been testing ways to get the basic ideas across efficiently. One of these ways will probably include some slides of the various stages the painting goes through from start to finish. To do that, I’ve been exploring Power Point and Adobe’s Captivate programs and thinking about how to supplement what I am saying and doing, but not repeat myself.

While I paint in a very traditional way, I love discovering ways technology can assist the art-making process! In my own work, I’ve added a monitor and laptop to my studio setup in the past year and appreciate how I can zoom in on details, darken or lighten areas, and color correct immediately. Of course, photography is not nature, so I make drawings and color notes as well. But the minute changes in a cloud formation are impossible to capture any other way–so it’s a wonderful tool.

September 3, 2009

Green 10 exhibition at Spring Hill College

Filed under: News & Comments — Susan Downing-White @ 3:24 pm

new painting Places East of Here, no. 14, oil on canvas, 60″ x 60″

I’ve had some recent requests for large paintings lately–large for me, anyway.  After a long period of making smaller paintings, I’m reminded of the stamina needed to get through a piece that takes weeks, rather than days, to complete.  This is currently hanging at the Eichold Gallery at Spring Hill College in Mobile, as part of the Green 10 exhibit.  As the name implies, it’s an environmentally themed show featuring work by: Raine Bedsole, Alan Gerson, Fred Lawyer, Karoline Schleh, Greg Shelnutt, Dave Truesdale, Casey Downing, Jr., Rachel Wright, & Tony Wright.  The show runs through September 25th.

From the statement I gave to Mobile Press Register’s arts editor, Thomas Harrison:  “Two of the paintings in this show (Places East of Here, no. 14 & History, Revisited) history, revare inspired by areas along the causeway that I’ve been photographing for the past twenty-five years.  I’ve noticed changes occurring from sediment flowing into the bay and also damage from recent storms.  But my paintings are more about the beauty I find there, so maybe the environmental message suggested by the show’s title slips into the viewer’s consciousness under the radar, so to speak.

The third painting has a large area of very green banana trees and a crumbling New Orleans street in the foreground. Poor, lovely city; when I moved there in 2000, Bill Finch warned me to take my Stauter boat.  Unfortunatlate music on dante st-smely, he was right. I chose this painting, Late Music on Dante Street, for the show because of the obvious color note, and, despite recent efforts to protect it, the city seems doomed.

As for the show’s title, well, that word “green” has really been twisted into the latest nom de correctness, hasn’t  it?  But in this case, it’s a good choice.”

right:     Late Music on Dante Street, oil on canvas & wood, 15″ x 15″

June 11, 2009

American Artist, June 2009 issue

Filed under: News & Comments — Susan Downing-White @ 3:46 pm

wish_no3-sm Wish no. 3, oil on panel 12″ x 16″

So the article about my paintings is finally out!  The article is titled,  Injecting Sophisticated Drama: Painting Skies & Coasts with Delicate Brushstrokes. It’s author, John R. Kemp, is the author of numerous books and magazine articles on the arts and a deputy director of the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities.
There’s a link to the magazine website in the web places I like column on the right of this page.

June 19, 2008

New Orleans Museum of Art

Filed under: News & Comments — Susan Downing-White @ 11:48 am

A Tribute to Cole Pratt: His Gallery’s First Fifteen Years, 1993-2008, New Orleans Museum of Art, June 30-Sept 21, 2008 (see Links at right for a link to NOMA’s website and director John Bullard’s article.)

In April, my friend, mentor and long-time dealer, Cole Pratt, died of a heart attack. It was a terrible shock; he was only fifty-four. The gallery will continue under Cole’s name with Erika Schroeter Ollinger as its owner and I will continue to show my paintings there. There are lessons to learn about cherishing friendships, taking time to enjoy life and exercise more often, not to mention making hay while the sun shines. I know this, but for now it’s a dull knowledge that will take time to absorb.

One of my paintings, “If You Are Lost Turn Right Here” will be included in the exhibit at NOMA. It isn’t a typical painting for me–it has a big sky, but under it is a small kudzu-covered cinder block building with a copy of “The Last Supper” painted on its side. It’s 60″ x 60″ which is a large painting to anyone who knows my work. The title is from a notice painted on the building. I worked from a photograph I made driving on 1-65 south of Mobile. The building has a new use and a fresh paint job now; it’s appropriate for this show for the symbolism and also because Cole particularly liked it.

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