Acrylic Interlude

Between hosting Ukrainians, and meeting with community members to ensure supports are in place, I take the odd pause to hide away in my art room. My son graciously converted our downstairs guest room into an art studio for me and gave me all his paints and canvases. It marked a new chapter in my art exploration.

At 65, I have no illusions about talent, and no desire to make a show of my work. I just crave the outlet. I squirt a few colours on a palette – whatever I am feeling – throw it on the canvas and play. The thing about acrylic, is that I can use the same canvas many times.

I hate to waste paint, so any leftover blobs get added to a new, smaller canvas, and smushed around. (Technical terms, I know, lol). These two are examples of what might happen sticking to one colour palette and having no intentional direction to begin with.

Don’t worry, I won’t be trying to sign you up for art lessons anytime soon.

Unknown's avatar

Posted by

Permission to write, paint, and imagine are the gifts I gave myself when chronic illness hit - a fair exchange: being for doing. Relevance is an attitude. Humour essential.

38 thoughts on “Acrylic Interlude

  1. Love them both, VJ but I am especially impressed by the reflected birches in the water. I took an abstract art class online from St. Ives in Cornwall and the teacher worked from a limited palette. I like the effect…

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Oh my this is every child At 65, I have no illusions about talent, and no desire to make a show of my work. I just crave the outlet. I squirt a few colours on a palette – whatever I am feeling – throw it on the canvas and play. The thing about acrylic, is that I can use the same canvas many times.

    Isn’t it wonderful to play! I have been painitng my best work because I’m proud ofit all.

    Liked by 1 person

      1. Hi Mireya. I now follow you and get your posts in the Reader Feed, so you don’t need to send them to me via comments. I wanted to comment on your recent post – Happy Birthday – but noticed you do not have your comments activated. I’m not techie enough to tell you how to do this, but there must be a place that says “enable comments”

        Liked by 1 person

  3. This is wonderful V.J. Don’t sell yourself short, you do have talent. I’m a little like you. I love to weave but haven’t any aspirations to become a textile artist. it is for the creative outlet and the joy of working with fibre.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lol. Thanks Lou. Really, there is no feeling like being surrounded by your own creativity. Good or not. Maybe I’m reliving my kindergarten years.

      Like

Leave a reply to Victoria Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.