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Lori Elliott-Bartle Studio

paintings, mixed media, handmade journals
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  • Blog: Works in progress

Works in progress, where I share what I'm working on and what I'm thinking about, and also show my Instagram feed. 

What a gorgeous morning for “bike to work day”. It’s so lovely out that i pedaled extra miles through the @omaha_riverfront park on my way to the studio. Thanks @reneeledesma_art and @lala.exhibitions for the Gift Crow sculpture.
This morning, a two-man crew from U.S. Art Co. built boxes to hold two of my paintings headed to Bangladesh as part of the @artinembassies program. Safe travels! 

#artinembassies #omahatodhaka #lebstudio
What to do when traffic is very light in your studio during the @hotshopsartcenter open house? Start new work of course!

#lebstudio #hotshopsopenhouse
Pulling stuff out that I honestly forgot about like this: Pinions, a 20x20” oil painting on canvas. Added to the discount display in my studio. Pop in during the @hotshopsartcenter open house this weekend. I’ll be here Friday until 7ish a
Just as a way to start something at Cedar Point, I began painting puffy clouds. These will not survive as they currently exist.

Just as a way to start something at Cedar Point, I began painting puffy clouds. These will not survive as they currently exist.

the flops, aka shitty first drafts

July 31, 2019

In her book Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life, Anne Lamott refers often to the “shitty first draft” as she encourages writers to get something, anything on paper as a way to begin. It rarely is anything worth keeping.

The lesson applies to painting, too, and when I’m working on paper, the shitty first drafts get tossed onto a shelf or cut up to use as gift tags or to collage into other pieces. Paintings on panels get multiple layers, so there is a long process of adding and taking away until I’m pleased with what’s appearing on the surface. I started those cloud paintings during my recent artist residency at Cedar Point Biological Station as a way to get started with something. I also played around pressing leaves into paint, using dried stalks as tools for making marks and sprinkling sand into wet paint. None of these experiments yielded anything worth sharing, but were part of my exploring the place in my work. The puffy clouds will either get cut into pieces or covered with additional layers until they are unrecognizable as these particular works.

I did make two paintings explicitly based on the shapes and colors of the landscape at Cedar Point and share images below. While they’ll both get signed and probably framed, I’m really only happy with one of them. The second painting has an ease about it while the first one feels overworked. It’s also true that what I see as overworked may actually appeal to a particular viewer because it’s a bit more literal and does have some whimsy about it.

one of two paintings on paper based explicitly on the Cedar Point landscape.

one of two paintings on paper based explicitly on the Cedar Point landscape.

Another painting on paper based on Cedar Point. I prefer this painting for the flow of the composition, the variety of textures and the sense of ease it conveys.

Another painting on paper based on Cedar Point. I prefer this painting for the flow of the composition, the variety of textures and the sense of ease it conveys.

In art, painting, artist residency Tags art process, art, artatcedarpoint, art business, painting, landscape painting, contemporarylandscape, lebstudio, lorielliottbartle
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