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Lori Elliott-Bartle Studio

paintings, mixed media, handmade journals
  • artworks
  • About
    • bio
    • exhibits
    • resume
    • contact
    • video demo
  • Workshops
  • 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. 

Thanks to everyone who popped in yesterday and Friday during the @hotshopsartcenter open house. I’ll have the studio open this afternoon until 4 in case you’d like to come by to help round out your weekend. Cheers!
 
#oilandcoldwaxpaintin
This is the best mail I've received in some time! 

I'm very grateful that my work (portions of two large paintings shown above) is part of the U.S. Department of State's @artinembassies program, helping connect cultures through art. My paintings are
"Emerging" will be among the artworks shown as part of the "New Masters" exhibit at @paceartsia opening May 23. I'm so looking forward to seeing the show, popping into open studios and experiencing the whole place. 

#oilpainting
Come on into Studio 210 during the @hotshopsartcenter open house. I'll have the doors open 5-7pm Friday, May 9; 11-4 Saturday, May 10 and noon to 4 Sunday, May 11. Conversations can be broad, and I'm always happy to chat about new work, travel and gr
Thanks to @visionsframingomaha there is newly framed artwork hanging in the studio. There’s a new trio of prairie-inspired paintings (one shown here as first image), a couple of funky abstracts i made during my @khncenter residency a couple of
Anne and I photographed this sunset as it painted the sky after a storm moved through

Anne and I photographed this sunset as it painted the sky after a storm moved through

Shared spaces

July 19, 2019

One of the great things about participating in an artist residency is meeting other artists. Learning how they approach their subjects, what questions drive them, how they manipulate their materials to tell their stories help me examine my own methods, materials and media.

During my two weeks at the Cedar Point Biological Station, I spent time with three other artists who are doing really interesting work.
Jennifer Bockerman and I shared studio space for several days. She worked on large mixed media pieces on paper as I painted. After leaving Cedar Point, she spent a week in New York City with the Art21 Summer Institute for educators and then went back to Cedar Point for another week. She teaches art to middle-school students in Lincoln, Neb., and helps lead international trips through EFTours.
Sophia Ruppert created a table-top sculpture using parts of yucca plants and also cast plaster figures during her time at Cedar Point. We spent a foggy morning gathering fringed sage, also called prairie sagewort, (artemisia frigida) to tie into fragrant bundles. She’s completing her MFA at University of Nebraska-Lincoln next year and expects her thesis show to examine gender roles and family narratives.
Anne Yoncha worked on a large pencil drawing of prairie plants highlighted with ink she made from red cedar needles, and we spent several evenings watching sunsets and storms move across the open landscape. After recently completing her MFA at the University of Montana, she’s off to spend a year in Finland on a Fulbright grant.

I’m looking forward to following all these young women as they further their careers!

In art, artist residency, continuing education, teaching Tags art, artist residency, omahaartistontheroad, omahaartist, learningfromartists, lebstudio
research materials and gear to explore the terrain with more assured steps

research materials and gear to explore the terrain with more assured steps

Books and boots

July 11, 2019

After hiking with a group of students and artists at Cedar Point Biological Station last Tuesday, I realized my sneakers weren’t quite sturdy enough to support my aging ankles when climbing on rocky trails. After a few more days of sketching, painting and hiking a bit, I decided to spend Saturday exploring Ogallala. I visited the farmers market and enjoyed a cold brew from Slow Lane Coffee. I visited the local library and found a book I thought perfect for reading during the evenings at the station, The Art of Noticing by Rob Walker. When the librarian on duty told me I could only use it at the library, a waiting patron offered to let me check it out on her account. I was grateful for this display of hospitality and returned the book several days later after reading a wealth of prompts to contemplate.

Gotta love this turquoise bike parked at the entrance to Ogallala’s public library.

Gotta love this turquoise bike parked at the entrance to Ogallala’s public library.

In addition to scouting local libraries, I seek out local independent bookstores and found a gem of a shop, Hokes Bookstore, which had a good selection of titles focused on the region. I didn’t clean out the section with my purchases, but made good additions to my personal collection of Nebraska literature and guides. To get familiar with a place, I want to know more of the stories and learn about what makes it distinctive. Discovering what grows and who lives here, and how those have changed over time are topics worth exploring.

When I strolled into Bomgaars, I was pleased to see that boots were discounted, so after trying on a few pairs, settled on the arch and ankle support offered by the Ariats pictured above. I’ve worn them nearly every day since I bought them and feel much more sure-footed on the rocky trails around the station.

A few days later, I received a package. A friend had thought of me while reading a book and insisted on sending it to me while I was away from home. Thanks, Ann G., for What Comes Next and How to Like It by Abigail Thomas. With its descriptions of friendship, aging, betrayal and forgiveness, it is a guide for appreciating the present moment, finding absurdity and humor every day, and celebrating love.

So while I may be striding with more confidence today, I’m also stopping often to watch, listen and learn.


In art, artist residency, continuing education Tags art, artatcedarpoint, artist residency, omahaartistontheroad, whatartistsdo, reading, writing, painting, sketching, Inspiredbysandhills, inspiredbyprairie, lebstudio
a prickly poppy just outside the station’s dining hall

a prickly poppy just outside the station’s dining hall

Change of pace; change of place

July 6, 2019

Settling into a new place for a short time reminds me to slow down and pay attention, and that’s one of the reasons I’m interested in participating in artist residencies. I spent last week and will continue through the next week as a guest at Cedar Point Biological Station, a former Girl Scout camp that the University of Nebraska-Lincoln purchased in the mid-1970s and has used as a biological station since then. For a few years, artists have been added to the mix of classes, research projects and naturalist training workshops that meet here every summer.

While I’ve started many paintings on paper and have spent part of each day working in the lab-space-turned-studio, I’ve also spent a fair bit of time just watching the grasses and flowers, the American pelicans on the lake, the cardinals and finches and turkeys visiting the feeders, the lizards and butterflies and dragonflies that flit across the trails. The skies are vast and ever-changing. Last night lightning flashed across the lake while above me I could see stars and the Milky Way against blue-black sky.

Rob Walker begins his book The Art of Noticing with this passage: “Pay attention,” Susan Sontag once advised a young audience; she was speaking of the creative process, but also of living. “It’s all about paying attention. It’s all about taking in as much of what’s out there as you can, and not letting the excuses and the dreariness of some of the obligations you’ll soon be incurring narrow your lives. Attention is vitality. It connects you with others, It makes you eager. Stay eager.”

Slipping away for a short time from my everyday routine helps me recalibrate and then return with more attention and eagerness. It’s one reason such a trip is so restorative. The paintings I make during my stay may not turn out to be anything more than exercises and experiments, but for me they’re only a small part of why I’m here. Having the time and space to really slow down, sometimes just stopping to watch the play of light on grasses and flowers, or to appreciate the lizard or butterfly accompanying me on the trail, or to look up at the variation of cloud shapes, shades of blue, the light of millions of stars are much better reasons. And they’ll remind me to do the same thing back home.


labstudio.jpg
In art, artist residency, continuing education Tags art, artist residency, art process, omahaartistontheroad, lebstudio, cedarpointbiologicalstation, artatcedarpoint, cpbs2019
The welcoming entry of Farwell House sports a sign cut in the shape of Schuyler County. 

The welcoming entry of Farwell House sports a sign cut in the shape of Schuyler County. 

Last days at Farwell House

June 30, 2018

The days have gone by quickly here at Farwell House, and in spending the last day here I'm intensely grateful for the gift of time and space the Plank Road Artist Residency has provided me.

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In art, artist residency, continuing education, painting Tags farwell house, plank road artist residency, artist residency, omahaartistontheroad, omahaartist, lebstudioomaha, painting, travel, inspiration, midwest artist studios project, art, art process, nebraskaartist, art business
LEB_layers.jpeg

Process and layers

June 26, 2018

Creating an example that I could use when explaining my painting process was one of my goals for using my time effectively during the Plank Road Artist Residency

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In art business, artist residency, continuing education, art, teaching, painting Tags art process, art, artist residency, omahaartist, omahaartistontheroad, plank road artist residency, farwell house, teaching tools, midwest artist studios project
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