Heroes of the art - Vincent Van Gogh

"For when we were in the flesh, the sinful passions which were aroused by the law were at work in our members to bear fruit to death. But now we have been delivered from the law, having died to what we were held by, so that we should serve in the newness of the Spirit and not in the oldness of the letter.” (Romans 7:5-6)

I think a lot of things would have made sense to me as a child if the world had been upfront about the fact that Van Gogh started out as a fervent, deeply convicted and zealous minister of Jesus Christ. All the anguish and the attempts to express vivid emotions in his paintings, substance over form would have made all the more sense to me.

Instead they made an exhibition on the school walls of students master studies of his painting of that warped, distorted perspective bedroom and chair. Yeah that one you know. I was horrified and upset whenever I walked past that exhibition, never understanding why the kids had not been allowed to improve on a painting that so desperately needed improvement on. The colors were drab to me, the perspective of the chair and bed, it was too jarring to my eyes to see these things which did not adhere to the same perspective.

And then the sunflower painting, it made me dislikes an otherwise pleasant flower. No one told me that Van Gogh languished under the poor artist syndrome, though financially supported by his brother, he didn't have the finances to buy expensive paints, light fast paints. So the cheaper ones it was, and a lot of those had fugitive pigments which faded over the years, leaving posterity with paintings that lack thirty to fifty percent of their intended color spectrums.

I fleetingly saw his painting of the cafe, and though it left little impression on me I did see the sower. I found his self portrait s peculiar, so many colors, but again, I didn't see them all, this was before the internet became a thing.

Then I met a friend who was into art and she told me about her favorite painting in the world, Starry nights by Vincent Van Gogh. I adored her and when she liked it, suddenly I liked it, genuinely. It was strange to suddenly see beauty in Van Gogh's artwork and here is the irony. I had watched BBC' Sherlock for a while, back when only the first season had come out I think. And in one episode there is the art forgery theft, and it was Starry nights that was the object of the heist. And I had been, hmm, unimpressed by the painting.

But when my friend loved it and I adored her, and sought to be approved and pleasant to her in every way, I loved it.

Then came the years of hardship that coincided with God calling me to Himself. I did not know he was calling me, but seeing that I ended up in a Christian monastery the same year, I can see now that He was calling me.

"I charge you, O daughters of Jerusalem, Do not stir up nor awaken love Until it pleases." (Songs of Solomon 8:4)

I think the time was ready for love to be awaken, because God sent small poems my ways. Rumi and Hafiz especially. And oddly enough Vincent Van Gogh. He said —If I am worth anything later, I am worth something now. For wheat is wheat, even if people think it is a grass in the beginning. I encountered this on tumblr, with an accompanying min-icomic showing the back of a man walking in a field that grows in a matter of a few frames.

The words were a tremendous comfort to me. I had just experienced great loss in my life, and it made personal ambition seem worthless. In face of death and grief, the accomplishments of life do seem, like sand on the seashore shifting as the waves flows over it.

I felt like sand, and my work, talents, degree, friends, emotions, finances, even my very being felt like a sand castle. I felt things were futile in the face of the wave of death coming and disintegrate my ambitions. So I needed a new foundation on which to stand, a theory about death, change and how it relates to accomplisments that will be forgotten after you leave this world. I know they tell you that memorials preserve you story, but they don't. Memorial's are there for the living to tell whatever narrative fits into their point of view, and most of the truth, the juicy bits and the inconvenient chronologies get discarded in that process.

But I read Van Gogh's words I felt comforted, and later I met God, and recieved salvation in Jesus Christ. Then I forgot about Van Gogh.

But the Holy spirit has put his name on my path several times. First I heard a very touching sermon about conviction in relation to the church in the world and not the world in the church. The pastor had put a picture of the sower by Vincent Van Gogh. I can recognize his brush work anywhere. And I pondered about why she had chosen his painting. There is no shortage of religious art, after all it has been the most popular genre to paint in Western Civilization for centuries.

Then I learned the fact that he had been a missionary, so zealous and touched by the impoverished, rough miners that he had been sent to minister the word to, that he tore his own clothing to provide bandages for them. He was so disgraceful to the established religious order of his day, in his zeal to give everything to help the souls whose hardship humbled him that they discharged him from ministry.

I knew then that this was a guy who was in love and walked in love and nothing gets religion and religiosity more upset than Christians who want to obey Lord Jesus to the best of their capacity:

“If you love Me, keep My commandments." (John 14:15)

"He who has My commandments and keeps them, it is he who loves Me. And he who loves Me will be loved by My Father, and I will love him and manifest Myself to him.” (John 14:21)

"Jesus answered and said to him, “If anyone loves Me, he will keep My word; and My Father will love him, and We will come to him and make Our home with him. He who does not love Me does not keep My words; and the word which you hear is not Mine but the Father’s who sent Me.” (John 14:23-24)

It is not that love is easy, it's just that love is all.

"For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved.” (John 3:16-17)

"But as many as received Him, to them He gave the [right to become children of God, to those who believe in His name: who were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God." (John 1:12-13)

God is love. And love is what is driving His act of mercy, and in turn He gives us a heart of flesh so that we can love Him. Don't be hard on non-believers for hating God, or despising and mocking Him. Don't ponder why the name Jesus is a curse word when the world has had plenty of mass murders whose name it could use but chooses not to. Don't be surprised that Buddha, Ashdod, Odin, Amatseratsu are held in higher esteem though they never claimed to love their believers so much that they would give their own life in ransom for them. In our carnal mind we are enemies of God, and by Adamic heritage we are servants of Satan, so why would we despise his cohorts? They do not threaten us, make us feel morally lacking, or condemned in light of their holiness. They are marred, like us, and we can be like them, we can be gods, it is attainable. But innately we do know that our rightousnes is like filthy rags in the face of our creator, Jesus Christ. We know that when faced with Him, our sinful nature, pride, conceit, greed, wrath, envy, lies become exposed by the light of His brightness.

So someone like Van Gogh walking in the love that set him free in Christ Jesus and conceived him into the newness of the Spirit, must have disturbed some hypocrites to the core. Flagellation, self-heal, pious living, beautiful theology, self imposed poverty, all is nothing and just a religious show if there is no love.

"Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I have become sounding brass or a clanging cymbal. And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body [a]to be burned, but have not love, it profits me nothing.

Love suffers long and is kind; love does not envy; love does not parade itself, is not puffed up; 5does not behave rudely, does not seek its own, is not provoked, thinks no evil; does not rejoice in iniquity, but rejoices in the truth; bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.

Love never fails. But whether there are prophecies, they will fail; whether there are tongues, they will cease; whether there is knowledge, it will vanish away. For we know in part and we prophesy in part. 10But when that which is perfect has come, then that which is in part will be done away.

When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man, I put away childish things. For now we see in a mirror, dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part, but then I shall know just as I also am known.

And now abide faith, hope, love, these three; but the greatest of these is love." (1 Corinthians 13)

And love is a person. Maybe you have met Him? His name is Jesus Christ. Our Messiah. The Lamb of God who was slain for the sins if the world. Our loving creator. Just and full of mercy. He describes Himself like this to Moses, who after seeing the severity of His anger at the children of Israel's sighing and complaining, needed to understand the character of His God. And He likes to reveal to us who He is when we seek him earnestly.

"And the Lord passed before him and proclaimed, “The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abounding in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, by no means clearing the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children and the children’s children to the third and the fourth generation.”” (Exodus 34:6-7)

As for Van Gogh and his faith crises? I think we need to show mercy as He shows us mercy, because all of us in one way or the other struggle as we work out our salvation. I think it is not for nothing that Paul warned us to do it with fear and trembling.

Heroes of the art - Homegirl meditates

Heroes of the art

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Homegirl meditates

I was speaking to the Lord, lamenting my laziness in regards to painting and drawing. I have lost so many years that could have been used for serious improvement. He showed me that it was not laziness per say, but more a problem solving issue that had taken up a lot of my time. He also showed me that He directed me all those years carefully and ordered my steps out of certain art skills woods. One of these woods was the "it's perfectly ok, edgy and feminist to draw women naked from the waist up"-woods.

What can I say? As a child I read a lot of French and Belgian comics and after a while you get numb to the nudes, semi-nudes and the frequent sex scenes. So when I had bought the Deleter manga set, screen tones and all, I set out to draw my fantasy comic with the female main character introduced as naked waist up. But something made me pause. I remember vividly how I had convinced myself that the way I was going to draw things was non-sexual. Nothing to see here, move on. But a voice inside of me still asked, —Why topless women though? Soon after that I was incredible lucky to stumble over an article discussing the topic de-sexualizing the naked female body in relation to webcomics. The author put forth the argument that only a few comics did it well, with their depictions of hanging, wringed, gravity influenced sagging boobs. He pointed out that most artists who insisted on drawing womens breasts exposed, male and female artists, always drew young, perky women, with bouncing balloon boobs straight out of the popular porn mags. These artists shied away from drawing the big range of female upper body nudity such as the sagging, post breastfeeding, aged boobs.

I was floored because I had been on the internet for some years at that point. Knew a thing or two about racism 101 and feminism 101. I knew about micro-agressions and ingrained, normalized and unspoken attitudes. The undercurrent of opinions that stream through a society which determine that even though we all abhor the eugenics of say, Nazi Germany, most of us fully support abortion on the basis of a screening showing signs of Aspergers. So in the end society’s undercurrent of attitudes towards abortion which favor the freedom of the to be parents to take the life of another human being over the unborn child’s right to live, and towards the disabled superseds the public morale opinions which says that eugenics is monstrous.

I did not know that having been raised with some severely distorted attitudes toward the female body made me perpetuate the exact same Madonna or Whore attitudes in my art. Simply I thought the whore was the liberation of womanhood. I never grasped that liberty is the personal freedom and choice to cover up and undress without shame and guilt, however with consideration for the customs of the land and the people around you.

Problem solving can take many shapes, for me it was like this. As I child I was acutely aware that I was a stranger in a strange land. So I faced some unique challenges before I genuinely felt comfortable with picking up a pen to draw. My dad was an artist and drew animals for children at parties. Over time that amassed to many crocodiles and parrots. His oil paintings hung in a few places our house, some a bit hidden away. His father's paintings of the sea and elaborate sketches of cities where all over our house, and my grandmother's apartment. They were on par with the marine paintings I saw in the national art museums and so I was a bit spoilt visually because I thought acquiring such a level of skills in depicting reality, the sea, war ships and skies was to be expected of all painters. After all, grandpa's paintings were not showcased or sold from what I know. He had a humble job manual labor job, painted privately and gave the paintings to his children and grandchildren.

In after school daycare, I, like every other girl, followed the beehive. You know the beehive. It’s the same hive mindset wherever you go when it comes to groups of girls. Follow the queen. The most popular girl does one thing and every girl around her mimics her. To validate their own position against the queen and to solidify their own position in the group. At my daycare the most popular girl drew chains, those easy "s" like ones that children across cultures seem to draw every generation. So I copied her. She also colored some line drawings, I tried to copy that but failed. I also watched at guy draw a crowd to himself because of the drawings of people that he did. He would become my best friends for a period of time some years down the road. He drew effortlessly and I coverted his popularity. At home my mom took me to the library and let me pick up comics that visually appealed to me. Lucky Luke, Thorgal, Garfield, Splint and Co., Yoko Tsuno, Yakari, Peter Madsen's Valhalla, Tintin, Marsupilami, Johan and Peewit, AKIRA, Carl Barks Donald duck collection, Don Rosa Donald Duck collection and many others.

All this, and nothing compelled me to draw, I could not solve this conundrum: in all these comics African and black people looked ugly or were non-existent. Simple as that.

I watched cartoons, a tons of them, it was the 90s and there were a lot of good shows on TV and I enjoyed them. But for all the watching I did not feel compelled to draw, because I could not solve this conundrum: in all those cartoon shows, African and black people were either non-existent or naked, banana skirt wearing cannibals with balloon red lips. They looked ugly. Simple as that.

In the museums, castles, churches and art galleries my parents and the education system took me to, I saw paintings, but by then I had gotten used to caricatures of African and black people. Even when I saw a moderate, upright depiction of a moor in the background of a painting my eyes were blind to see them and draw the connection that here was a depiction that did resemble me.

And in the way of a child I was puzzled by what I saw anyways. The muted colors of classical paintings faded in appeal compared to the over-saturated, popping colors of modern comics and cartoon shows. To make matters worse, the glossiness of oil paints made it hard for me see the whole painting at once. That and indoors lightening made me have to shift position here and there in order to catch sight of every figure in the painting. No one told me to stand at a distance to take in the wole painting, so as a child of small stature I was puzzled at standing a few meters away from a humongous painting and not able to see the whole of it.

And since no one taught me how to view a painting, how to immerse myself, what to look for, or why I should care for certain motifs, I came to my own conclusion of the matter of paintings very quick.

I liked forms and shapes and representative art. Nature and landscapes were easier on my eyes because I could judge for myself by looking out of the window, if the painting matched reality. Everything involving people felt irrelevant to me. It was never people who looked like me who stared back from the canvases. I found the nakedness and voluptuousness of the men and women to be tolerable, because it looked like what I observed at the beach and at swimming pools.

I liked the strong colors of Michelangelo. In fact fresco paints were easier for me because of their bold colors and lack of glossiness.

I did not like the different modern art movement that made a break with romantic or realistic art. I did not like abstract art, surreal art, post-modern art, cubism, or other movement that favored non-realistic and simplified landscape paintings.

In short, I deeply despised the old and refused to take any liking for the new.

In Matthew 13:52 Jesus says:

“He said to them, “Therefore every teacher of the law who has become a disciple in the kingdom of heaven is like the owner of a house who brings out of his storeroom new treasures as well as old.”

Here the point is, we need the new and the old to be true disciples in the kingdom of heaven. We need to both the Old testament and the New testament. We need to know of the Old covenant and the promises already made by our steadfast and eternal God, to understand what He is offering us in the New covenant. Renewed covenant it is for the Jewish people, New covenant for the rest of us gentiles who are branches from wild olive trees who in Jesus Christ get grafted into God's cultivated Olive tree that is the Israel of God.

If we do not have both old and new, what is the foundation on which we stand and walk on?

I was problem solving in the first decade of my life and it was taking time.

The thing is drawing and painting is an emotional response coming out from within me after I have taken in visually things, ideas and concepts from the outside. In the first decade my emotional response was “rejection of a normal and pleasant depiction of African and black people, people who look like me, is to be expected”, and “white people, white people everywhere”. The point was constantly being put in my face, “not your heritage, not your land, not your culture”. So I got by that sentence inside of me, “not my heritage, not my land, not my culture”, I have no part in this. It was like being a person without a shadow. Just like Ralph Ellison’s Invisible man I existed and breathed and interacted with the word around me, but somehow I left no fingerprints, left no records, left no impressions.

I think were African descended, black people in the Americas tend to emphasize the whole "we. were. slaves" when you ask them to take pride in the progress of their nations, continental Africans keep strangely quiet about the whole "we. were. colonial. subjects".

But it is true we were colonial subject, subordinate to Europe, and a continent and peoples to be extracted from. Labor to be extracted from, military body count to be extracted from, resources to be extracted from. Deeply tied up to European politics and the European mother empires. Like the rest of the world, for hundreds of years we were yearning for London, Paris, Amsterdam and other hearts of empires.

So I was problem solving on the visual front throughout my childhood. But God had blessed me, because I was a gifted writer. I had a unique hunger to put words together, and was prompted to write my own texts in response to the texts I read. So I got my creative hunger satisfied and plenty of applause from the adults around me.

Then one day I saw Pokemon on the TV. It was as if lightening struck me. I still remember the scene that urged me to pick up a pencil and capture what I saw. I was sick with hunger for the lush, over-saturated colors of the show. I was in love with the foreign names. It was clearly a show set in a world that was based on Asian people and Asian cultures. I didn't feel stifled by whiteness in stylized format, the way I normal did when I saw Batman forever. It was in a fantasy world and I preferred that genre, because with fantasy I could imagine I existed as a nuanced human being. If winged, fire breathing, overgrown lizards existed and had dramatic over the top stories, why not me? An African tomboy hooked on adventure.

And something about the big expressive eyes, the shiny, shiny effects and over the top emotional displays of the characters resonated within me. Me an expressive, sensitive and sentimental child raised in a culture of reserved people. So I picked up a pencil and desperately tried to draw. I was in love and love made me crave to recreate what I had seen. I put in the repetitive work of copying in real time as the 30 min. episodes wound up each week. Later on I would try to continue to draw from my memory.

Then at my library they had a small booklet from a soon to be translated Japanese comic called Dragonball. I don't know why but something about the spiky haired boy's very confused expression caught my attention. The girl also. She looked...cool, like a teenager. Not like a the hyper-sexualized women or the realistic but still half naked women I was used to from the Franco-Belgian comics I usually read. In those you couldn’t tell a teenage girl from a woman because whether they were sixteen or forty, they were drawn with big busts, wasps waists and hips that few Nordic women have. I made the librarian order the comic for me and I was hooked.

It is not just the whole Japanese thing about the booklet that caught my eyes. Every summer they ran Studio Ghibli's "My neighbor Totoro" and I always caught fifteen minutes here and there from it every year. Whenever we visited German I could watch RTL and see Ranma½ and Wedding peach. And sometimes our TV could catch that Swedish channel where you could watch Sailor moon.

All these piqued my interest, but no more than say Disney, Looney's tunes or Tom and Jerry.

So Pokemon and Dragonball is what got me started with drawing. And when I had started drawing I started to notice the paintings I did like, namely the book covers of the fantasy novels I read.

Dragonlance: Larry Elmore

Forgotten realms: ??

The English covers of Tamora Pierce's books.

Harry potter: Per Jørgensen

The Dark angel trilogy: Tord Nygren

Then I befriended that guy who was to become my best friend for a period of time down the road, and he played Magic Cards. The images on the cards were cool, so we drew those.

But Japanese comics in general gave me the better option for a visual language. Me, a stranger in a strange land, stuck in the idyll of the far, far, far countryside. I desperately needed a visual language to create a reality where somebody like me existed and left a mark. So I decided I wanted to draw manga and started learning that visual language through my second decade of life. But now a new problem appeared.

I did not understand it fully but at a basic cognitive level I could perceive the relative dissonance. Japanese comics where steeped in Japanese culture, language, society and more. Even the very shape of the text balloons fitted a language that can be read in several directions easily. Not like the roman alphabet. Yes you can read words vertical, but whole sentence in that directions, nah that is not what the roman letters were made for.

But the school uniforms, the bentos, the senseis, the onis, the panties. I did not know the linguistic theory of a word and it's anchor. That a symbol has an anchor, and that you cannot just transfer a symbol out of it's context without risk losing the anchor that gave it meaning. One example in linguistics is the woman with an issue of blood who touched the hem of Jesus robes. Now I always thought, He probably wore a normal tunic, maybe a long one because it's the Middle east. But it is certainly strange for a woman to bow down so deep in the middle of a crowd, anonymously and touch the hem of His garment without everybody noticing. Until somebody told me it's a talith that He wore. A kind of scarf that rabbis and religious preachers would wear over their shoulders, on top of their normal clothes. And suddenly it made sense to me that hem is the symbol pointing to a reality, and talith is the anchor of the symbol which explains to me what the hem of His garment in this context refers to. It refers to a certain point and practice in Jewish culture of the biblical time and it is still an anchor because rabbis today still wear it.

But all the symbols I was getting from the Japanese visual style were of no meaning when I transferred them to my own cultural upbringing. Bentos were lunch boxes, but my lunch box was some rye bread with topping, and not something visual appealing, just down to earth humble and filling. School uniforms, well they sort of exist here in the few private schools that exist. But even at those schools people don't wear uniforms most of the time. Sensei and other titles of respect, well here is a society of assumed familiarity and a flat power hierarchy. Calling someone by title or their last name is generally considered rude and sounds overly familiar in a loop-sided logic kind of way. Maybe you will call sports stars by their last names, but these are the only ones where it is an endearment. For your teacher, the politician, the police officer, your in-laws it is first name basis that more accepted, your surname is more intimate in a sense.

Onis are the whole demonic lore connected to Buddhism and traditional Japanese folklore and Shintoism. We do have demons here but they are according to Nordic folklore and mythology and they are not called demons apart from a Christian worldview sense, as pointing out the paganism of their existense. In Nordic tradition the equivalence to onis are forest people, underground people and so on. People like we are people but a different kind of people, not lower, not higer but different, like a different ethnic group.

The panties were the lost peculiar thing. European art is steeped in perverse and lewd art, but this fan service, looking up skirts here, exposing panties there in a fun and finger-wagging way was peculiar for me. And I did not know it was tied to how sexuality and lewdness is expressed in Japan. I did not know that a society that prides itself with rigidity and emotional supression, that hasn't had substantial women's liberation breakthroughs, which like every other culture has a voracious appetite for sex, has a very different way to express perversion than say the sexual liberated North where I have grown up.

I was problem solving in the second decade of my life and it was taking time.

Then came tumblr. And my world exploded like nothing before. I saw blogs devoted to show the presence of native strangers in Europe, Maroccans, Egyptians, Moors, Koreans, Turks, and so many more in European paintings, manuscripts, murals and more. As I now went around in museums, galleries and castles I finally spotted the brown and black faces that my eyes had been blind to prior to tumblr. I was floored at Rembrandt’s paintings of Africans (moors), I was floored that Reuben’s rivers of paradise had Africans in it. In fact I was floored that there existed normal pleasant beautiful paintings of people like me from 600 years ago and longer, and now I finally noticed them here and there in castles, in museums and in galleries.

I had to pause, because suddenly the old did look useful to me, the old had a visual language I could learn from and take with me as I embarked on the new.

It was good that tumblr happened to me. Because I was reaching the same problem with Japanese comics and art as I had previously experienced in European art: limited useful portrayals of African and black people like me, which I could use to build a visual language.

But all was good because now European paintings held high regard for me. But unlearning decades of ingrained attitudes don't happen overnight. Building a visual language without contemporary masters to look at is difficult. But instagram happended to me and exposed me to some truly amazing contemporary master with nuanced portrayals of African and black people. Not all of them were Kehinde Wiley, but I needed the diverse showcase of how people like me could be drawn and painted in a variety of styles and skill levels, so every different approach helped.

And now in my third decade God has set me free. He has given me ample visuals so I know that there is an abundance of paintings with beautiful, pleasant, funny and peculiar depictions of African and black people that I can lean on or just enjoy. And having set me free from that problem solving has set me free to draw wider in my choice of motifs. I now feel freer in what I like to study artistically and what I enjoy looking at as an audience. I can draw people in general, and I can draw nature, animals, mountains, everything. But of course I have a favorite subject, you can tell just by looking at what I produce. But I am free to veer of that favorite subject, to fall in love with other subjects without feeling chained to one motif only, because I have to create into being what is not properly represented.

No I can enjoy the old that exists, rest in it and bring it out with the new.

I stopped despising the old masters. In fact I now have much greater respect for them knowing that they were truly masters of their craft. Able to depict all subjects true to their vision of beauty, true to their skills, true to their artistic ambition. I want to be like them. If I draw a Dutch man, I want to draw him to the utmost perfection and joy of my skills. If I draw an Egyptian woman I want to draw her with the careful observation and perception of the world that I have honed and practiced over the years. If I draw a donkey, a gull, the sky, a hillside, and so on and so forth... Everything motif, I want to draw with exellency of skill showing myself to be a true craftsman, diligent and eager to show myself approved to God.

Paul says in 2 Timothy 2: 15-16

"Be diligent to present yourself approved to God, a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth. But shun profane and idle babblings, for they will increase to more ungodliness."

And as it is true about the word of God it is also true about the things of God. By faith I died with Christ Jesus on the cross, was buried with Him in baptism and rose with Him from the grave of water submersion. Now my life is hidden with Jesus Christ, in God. So also with my skills should I show myself diligent and faithful to God. After all God our father asks of us in proverbs give Him our eyes (our perception and intelligence) and our hearts (our whole being to the inmost part) and to commit our ways to Him and our works to Him.

And really to do so is only gain. I have gained much. Now let me bring out of my storeroom new treasures as well as old.

Workman’s tools – Playful strokes

Brushes


This may not go in a way that you expect, but let us get things out in the open: brushes are the 2nd most important part of your water color tool-set and how you use them is key to a satisfying experience and great painting.

You cannot control the paper, you can either use a paper that is absorbent and has been treated with the right amount of seizing to allow water and pigment to flow and behave optimal like 100% cotton paper of various quality, or you can choose wood pulp paper, cellulose paper and experience a train wreck in slow motion. Some papers like Bristol paper will be able to handle several washes of watercolor and keep the pigment bright, but they will not allow that smooth, seamless gradient blend of pigments that cotton or rag paper will allow. 25% percent cotton paper, 50% cotton paper and other percentage mixes will give you varied results, but nothing compares to 100% cotton.

Some papers like Stillman and burns, will even have seizing that will allow it to take on watercolor, but watch the paper disintegrate on the 2nd or 3rd layer or even on the 1st layer if you have a habit of overworking and rubbing your brush all over the place like me.

workman's tools - the art of the trade - brushes1IMG_20201025_011149.jpg

Brushes are surprisingly easy to control, you determine how much water you dip the tip in, fully submerged, halfway dip or just the dipping the tip to water down the pigment load in the brush or moisturizing a drying brush.

And with an ever faithful companion by your side, the kitchen towel or whatever absorbent cloth you use to wipe your kitchen counter top with, you are all set to control the water and pigment ratio that goes down on your paper. Of course to be completely sure of the pigment water ratio you should always have a scrap of paper on hand, preferably of the same kind as what you are painting on so you can test and get the correct representation of colors with a quick stroke before you move on to your canvas.

I painted with synthetic brushes for most of my life, Da vinci the student line, some rounds and a flat. I did not mind the low water retention. Synthetic brushes just do not hold much water, and when you put the brush down on paper all the water, and I mean all is dumped down, because of the slick fibers I imagine. So when the water on the not so absorbent brush meet a surface that is more absorbent, which is any kind of paper, the brush will just dump it all.

So with a load of a brush you have maybe 15sec. before the brush is more or less out of water and pigment. Which did not matter for me because I usually never painted large subject matters, everything I drew and painted fit snugly in a A5 size paper. One time I drew a beautiful sketch an A3 Arches hotpress pad, having had success with a previous painting on a bigger scale, a full sheet which is about 56cmx76cm I think. But the last painting had 4-5 smaller figures on it, each never exceeding more than the height of an A4, which is about 29cm. And everywhere on that painting where I had to cover larger even washes produced disastrous results.

I could not figure out what was the key factor or the dark horse so to speak, because I had had great result on other smaller areas of the painting or in areas where I only painted partial around the lines. But then I started on the A3 Arches, it was one big face, and my first was awful, a disaster, so much paint and pigment flooded the paper and I was painting dry on wet, so I should have had more control. I threw it in the bin because you cannot lighten the values of your watercolor once the paper is dry.

Then I went back to painting on max A4 with great results and began to ponder on my dilemma. I read up on brushes, watched some videos of different brush performances and settled on natural hair and synthetic mixes for me.

And ever since I bought my Silver brush black velvet brushes, I have never looked back, life has been a breeze and I even dab less on a kitchen towel and test less on a scrap of paper, better brushes equal less need to over-control and more predictability.

I now use my synthetics to the rough workhorse tasks of mixing pigments and transferring pigment from the pans to a larger palette. I rarely dip by main brushes into the pans, unless I’m in the flow and just have to mix something while the paper is still damp and receptive to more brushing and pigments.

Natural hairs have better water retention and water dispersion, you just get those smooth predictable and even dispersion of water and pigment onto your paper. But nothing can rival the tip and firmness of synthetics, and I work in a lot of details so I need that, so a mix it is for me, I did buy a round Davinci Kolinsky sable nr. 6 and found it bothersome for its lack of a firm tip, and reached out for my Silver brush round nr. 4 more often even if it ran out of water faster.

I expanded out in some Da vinci flats mid size and larger, to be able to do better washes without clear brushstrokes – rounds because of their tip cannot do that, and was pleased with them but flats have that inorganic straightness to them that made it annoying for me to paint ex. A cheekbone area and so on.

I had to be constantly on the lookout for hard edges that I had to soften, and you get the same with round brushes, buut when you smooth them out with a round you don’t end up creating more hard edges or accidental straight lines like you may with a flat.

Then I found out that Leonardo Da vinci was into masonry and was possibly a grand master and the Holy spirit convicted my heart to purge that evil from my home and sanctify myself. I mean it made sense to me because we have all looked at that drawing of a man that he has put in a witch star.

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So without my great flats I looked for some loose big wash brushes, and one day the Holy spirit prompted me to go into a painting shop that I pass on my way from work, and they had the Daler rowney goat synthetic mix, and my life has been a breeze since then.

The thing with good brushes is that when you don’t have to struggle for control, you can enjoy and expand much better because you can trust that as the commanding officer that those who are under you are following your command.

As a last word I have considered getting a 100% natural mop or quill brush to get even more beautiful gradient washes, but someone on Wetcanvas told a story about a huge fat mite coming out of his brush and I hate vermin like nothing else. And someone else told a story of how mites can eat a hole in natural brushes, and I thought to myself – my life is to short for this, why should I voluntarily pay a fortune for some vermin to harass me and torment me. May the Lord have mercy on me and give me the restrain from walking into that kind of foolishness and may Jesus Christ deliver me from this temptation, because otherwise I will fall in a moment of weakness.

Workman’s tools – Palette talks

And you do well to listen

So why do I not talk about brushes when I say that in order of importance for a watercolor artist brushes come right after paper? Practicality. Budget. Accessibility. And to be honest, craftsman's skills: without at least a rudimentary level of drawing or painting you will definitely experience the difference in how good vs. less suitable brushes affect your watercolor work, but you won’t be able to pinpoint the dark horse.

Also I like the photo of all my palettes and it is a thing you will find yourself obsess over constantly, so why not get it out of the way. Palettes matter. Not in a big an awesome way of say, swooshy brushstrokes and unique color gradients on your paintings, but in a low key way as concrete pavement vs. dirt road vs. deer path.

If you buy a watercolor pan set, usually the box itself will give you some small mixing area, so that can be your palette, but depending on how small or large you like to work and the space you have available you will want to have alternatives. A porcelain flower well palette with 5-8 wells is a good option for more watery mixtures, most are 0.5cm-1cm deep, which gives you enough space for middle size watery mixes. A porcelain plate will also work just fine for mixing, here I am using 2 of my supper plates and a square serving plate I bought just to be a palette.

The problem in using plates you regularly use for meals is that, it can be unsafe because of the toxicity of some pigments if you don’t clean them thoroughly after use, and also that you may use them for months because of the longevity and rewetability of dry watercolors, making it an annoyance when you lack some essential plates for dinner.

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Then someone on a forum mentioned that they used an egg tray for deeper wells and I thought brilliant. I ordered a porcelain egg tray -yes they exist and are in fashion, removed the metal holding strap and have been very pleased about it. I use it for very big washes, but the downside is that I often make to big mixes, so I don’t use them up and are then stuck on using them even long after I forget why or what I mixed them for.

Then there are my 3 watercolor boxes. My Cotman has 3 mixing areas, useful for travel purposes but I never liked how small the mixing areas were. It forced me to blend my mixes a lot, or be careful not to taint a unique color mix like purple or fragile colors like yellow. I did use it recently however, when I ran out of testing spaces while I was experimenting with mixing greens.

The other dirty small box is my portable painter, this one has been so dear to me since my little brother gifted it to me 2 years ago. Foldable, with a lot of mixing areas, and also has to small water containers that can be fit over the palette when it is folded together. Since I draw small and mainly painted faces when I got this it fit me perfectly, but ever since I got more space I’ve felt the urge to breather and work bigger. For that the small wells on one side were inaccessible, especially for my larger brushes. I still lament that the creator of this has not designed a larger studio version of this palette, with space for full pans, because I absolutely love the sturdiness of this design, it screams quality.

Then there is my Holbein palette, it is bigger so I removed all my Holbein colors and migrated the pigments I use there. I like it because it has space to house me, but I am moving shop the second my empty White nights watercolor box arrives. I saw one artist use the Winsor and Newton studio set box, which is the same as the White night one and I loved it and drooled over it and finally found it as an empty and affordable box from a large art supplier. What I do not like is that you can detach part of the foldable mixing areas, it feels flimsy for me and annoying, but who know maybe I will end up liking it. I do not like it with the Holbein set, since I can detach it, in my head it means that it is not sturdy and secure.

I do believe that you will have to try for yourself till time, finances and luck lands you a palette that works with your flow. Maybe several. I have no metal, enamel palettes, because I as a person dislike enamel boxes of any kinds greatly. In fact I used to have a few for spices, for tea, piggy banks and as containers for other things in the past. In my mind they are prone to rust, bulge and bruise easily, and just look bad with age, but maybe that’s just a learned prejudice. I do not like the thought of them period, I do not like the touch of them, too cold, and I do not like the sound they make when you open them, it is like metal hinges.

I do know that some people swear by them, so find out what fits you.

Lastly, which palette do I use most? Depends. Skin tones I mix on the go and a little pigment mix can go a long way, so I usually mix that in the palette boxes, closest to my pigments. Everything else depends on how large of an area and how many washes I predict I will need. If a few, then the palette box, if a large area, then something with wells that will allow me to mix more watery mixes so I wont run out of a certain nuance for a layer.


Workman’s tools – The name of the game

Pigments

So I use 3 brands in their professional lines. Sennelier, Daniel Smith and Winsor and Newton. Here are the pigments, all are lightfast and transparent apart from lemon yellow which seems to be semitransparent/semi-opaque pigment by nature and in pretty much all brands, bright red which is also semi- trans/opaque and peyne’s grey semi- trans/opaque:

1. Lemon yellow. PY3. (S)

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2. Sennelier yellow light. PY153. (S)

3. Indian yellow. PY154, PY153. (S)

4. Sennelier red. PR254. (S)

5. Cobalt blue. PB28. (S)

6. Phthalocyanine blue. PB15:3. (S)

7. Tiger’s eye genuine. (DS)

8. Chinese orange. PY150, PR209, PBr23. (S)

9. Quinacridone deep gold. PO 48, PY150. (DS)

10. Rose dore madder lake. PR255. (S)

11. Ultramarine deep. PB29. (S)

12. Bright red. n.r. (S)

13. Phthalo green deep. PB15:3, PG7. (S)

14. Green apatite genuine. (DS)

15. Olive green. PY 42, PG7. (W&N)

16. Olive green. PBr23, PG36, PY150. (S)

17. Brown green. PY129. (S)

18. Blue violet. PV15. (S)

19. Peyne’s grey. PV19, PB15:1, PBk7. (S)

20. Viridian. PG18. (W&N)

My logic for my choices? Chance more or less and what my eyes like. I am an along-the-way person, an as-things-go by nature, so I mix and paint as I go, sometimes waiting for the paper or painting to call out a color to me, before I mix it and put it down. I rarely have a color scheme in mind before I start, and so what I need are colors that satisfy me when I look at them, and that blends well. By lucky chance I believe I got those here.

I had already painted with the small W&N Cotman set, so I knew what colors I used pure like Ultramarine and the brown-like yellow (Sienna? I forget) and which colors I preferred to mix like rusty reds, all greens, all browns and all skintones.

This is how it went. A friend had gifted me a Holbein watercolor set and I tried it and hated its sticky pans and forgot all about it. Then one day as someone mentioned the downside of student grade watercolors lower pigment load, and some brands being hard to re-wet it clicked in me that I needed change. I had painted the mother holding a child painting on arches paper, and I had struggled to layer the skin tones, and later I painted another mother holding her child and this time I had some minor struggles to with layering the skin tones and I wanted change.

I read up on the strength of the different brands, and loved the reproach of Sennelier watercolors by different reviewers: that they were weak in their first wash but layered up powerfully and that they were known for “singing“ on the paper and having a luminosity that stood out.

In my local Art store they sell Sennelier, White nights, Daniel smith, Winsor and newton, Qor, and Schmincke watercolors, and display swatches of them all, but only the swatch of Sennelier had caught my eyes. So I brought a test pack online from another local shop for the same prize of the small Cotman set. The set had Ultramarine deep, Chinese orange, Bright red, Peyne’s grey and Lemon yellow.

I immediately fell in love with the colors, even their softness did not bother me, so the Holbeins did help me transit smoother from student grade to professional grade. I poured them into some half pans, let them dry and started using them. Lemon yellow was and is still useless by itself to me, I don’t like its sickish greenish shade, but it is a powerhouse for mixing luminous though semi-opaque greens. Ultramarine deep and Chinese orange gives me all the browns I need, though not the reddish browns. The Bright red frustrated me in skin tones. Because I could see after maybe 2 layers with my eyes, that even in mixes that the light of the paper was more “blocked or covered over” wherever the Bright red was used.

Peyne’s grey is interesting, sometimes when I want to do an ink wash I use it because it is such a dull black. If I need grey’s I mix them myself though.

So after a while I needed a better transparent mixing red. I heard Steve Mitchell from the Mind of watercolor mention Quinacridone red as a good mixing red, so I went out and got one put I did not like it though watered down it made a decent pink. Then I thought I should go cooler, so I bought a Carmine, which I absolutely hated, it resembled the classic magenta and was wholly useless to me. None of the reds would mix decent browns, also after having success with Chinese orange and Ultramarine deep, it felt bothersome to mix browns by using red also. Normally you mix a brown by equal blue and red, and then add yellow to the mix to pull the purplish mix in a greenish direction which will make it brown. But Lemon yellow is to cool and with too much green to be a good yellow for browns. The two reds only gave me dull purples when mixed with Ultramarine (which is a warm blue because of the red in it that makes it lean toward purplish, instead of the opposite, toward green).

Then I had a green streak, I tested my Holbeins, fell in love with their Olive green, and thought that Sennelier’s Olive green would be even better. It was not. It was and is still pretty dull and unremarkable to my eyes. Then I decided to ditch my Lemon yellow because I saw how it covered some thick black inklines from my fineliners and was worried that it would do the same to my pencil lines. So without a yellow, I had no way to mix proper greens, so I also went out and brought Brown green which I immediately regretted. Brown green is easy to mix, it is that in-between color you get when mixing green and you have not put enough blue in the mix so the green looks delicate and then you a droplet of red as if by accident. Then I tried Olive green from a different brand, and settled on Winsor and Newton’s, but it was pretty forgettable. Then I gave up on buying convenience greens and looked for a warm yellow so I could get over Lemon yellow.

Sometimes when the Lord is rejecting a particular goal of ours we have to stop being Samuel and look to our next assignment in Jesus Christ which the Lord is excited to reveal to us.

“Then Samuel went to Ramah, but Saul went up to his home in Gibeah of Saul. And to the day of his death, Samuel never again visited Saul. Samuel mourned for Saul, and the LORD regretted that He had made Saul king over Israel.” (1 Sam. 15:34-35)

“Now the LORD said to Samuel, “How long are you going to mourn for Saul, since I have rejected him as king over Israel? Fill your horn with oil and go. I am sending you to Jesse of Bethlehem, for I have selected from his sons a king for Myself.”(1 Sam 16:1)

I settled on Indian yellow, because it was the closest to Gamboge I could get (it is possibly Gamboge, I’m not so strong in going by pigment numbers, but they are there for your consideration). And for a while I had peace. Until I realized that I could not mix any good cooler, spring and summer greens. Not that I reach for greens often, but it is a dangerous color to lack on a palette. Then I caved and bought a middle yellow that could work as a cool yellow, Sennelier yellow light, which did decently all around.

Then I bought Daniel smith’s Quinacridone gold, because it was either that or Sennelier Raw sienna, and I liked the thought of the Daniel smith color, because I heard that the old formula for their Quinacridone gold was in a league for itself (it’s not the formula that changed I know, it is the pigment itself that the automobile industry discontinued, and so the small corner that is the art world became one pigment poorer).

I like it by itself, but I think there is something greenish in the pigment because it behaves unexpectedly when I try to mix it as an “orange” in a mix, so I mainly use it by itself. In general I do not use it to be honest.

I heard some good reviews on Cobalt blue as a good alternative to Ultramarine, just as deep and more granulating. I now understand that when people say that, it may be a brand specific comment, because Sennelier Cobalt blue is visibly lighter that Ultramarine deep, and cannot be used as a stand in by itself. However it mixes more or less the same when used with Chinese orange, and it works better in skyscapes, because it does not lean so...purplish. It does granulate, but with Sennelier I feel the granulation is more a misbehaving facet than an intended attribution.

One day then I realized that my palette was missing a turquoise, and so my interest for the phthalos’ started. I settled on Phthalo blue and green deep, and I’m satisfied with both. The blue is remarkable on its own, excellent in mixes, and great to tweak some colors. The deep green actually looks a lot like the blue, is a bit unremarkable in itself, but quite interesting in mixes.

Finally after trying to mix and mix and mix some descent blood reds with Quinacridone red and Carmine I gave up, went back to using Bright red in mixes. It made some great reds, tweaked some browns and still cried on the inside every time I could see with my eyes patches of blocked colors in a painting. I might as well have used acrylics or oils on some areas.

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So I gave up, read up on reds, and settled on 2 reds, a cooler red Rose dore madder which got great reviews across brands, I think it is also called Quinacridone rose by some brands and Sennelier red as a middle red. Whoooowww what a difference, these two nuances where right up my alley, the Sennelier red is just red enough and orange-y enough that it only needs a little bit of brown to make it blood red, and with some Blue violet in the mix it gets a great sheen!!! And Rose dore madder lake is a dream. With Chinese orange and Rose dore madder lake I can get an excellent peach tone for skin tones, and with a tiny bit blue in the mix, I can tweak it to cover most midtones for Euroasian peoples.

I also gave up on mixing my own purple, bought Blue violet which is a kind of purple leaning Mauve, and it is so weak that I always end up deepening it with the reds and some blue. I am in love with having a functional red-purple-blue range. It is such a relief that I can expand in regards to color choices without having to struggle with the mixing.

1 week ago I added what I hope to be my final colors to my palette: 2 Daniel smith Primateks. I got a hunger for granulation, and was even or am even still exploring the possibilities of mixed media, watercolor and hard pastels on watercolor paper. Until I have found my voice in mixed media, these 2 seemed like a natural addition. The Tiger’s eye genuine is a very non-intrusive shade of middle brown because of its weak tinting strength, even a yellow can swallow it up, so for me it is a neutral addition of granulation in any skin tone mix. The green apatite is just the most lovely shade of green I have seen, so deep so saturated so dynamic in its range. It reminds me that there are times I stop in nature to look at lush green pastures.

The Viridian has never been used, in fact swatching it is the first time I see it in action. I bought it mainly to be able to try out some mixes, so let me see where it brings me. My only comment on it is as with the olive green from Winsor and newton, they build up 2 layer, maybe 3 if I’m lucky, but it is as if the color gets saturated/full in its particular nuance, typically the nuance of its color chart, but refuses do go darker in value. It is a strange thing, and even if I let it dry and put more on top it will not deepen the value but just dry even. I find it strange after having worked with Sennelier for so long. Even Daniel smith layers and deepens the value quite a lot with the same color.

Finally Finally Finally I have a Winsor and Newton Gold ink, because it was either that or gold leaf, and I am not patient enough for gold leaf, it also sounds messy to apply. And then I have a Horadam Gouache Zinc white. Why not Chinese white you ask, I have no clue, I cannot even determine if this one was a bad judgment or not. I have zero recollection of using it, I think I filled it in a pan once, let it dry, never used it and quietly moved it from my palette. I know that some people use white for correction, or for making their watercolors more pastel and opaque like Gouache, another water medium.

That’s it for pigments. I am a mixer, I make things on the go and need them on the fly. I don’t have time for 20+ convenience colors, because no clean shade nuance of a color exist in nature no matter how it may appear to the naked eye. Most colors consist of several colors which together create an optical illusion of coherence, like rocks and stones, and some just have flickers or other colors in them. Also less is more with art tools in my experience. I have had little space to live on for many years and moved constantly every other year, so even now I want to travel light and not be cluttered by tools I don’t use. It is in my opinion a waste of money and space, but that is just me. Jesus alone really is enough and if I have stuff I give thanks that I have them and if I don’t have stuff I give thanks that I do not have them. By the grace of God he has seen me trough some rough times that have taught me that circumstances change, people come and leave, health may fail, seasons wax and wane, but Jesus Christ is a solid rock, yesterday, now and forevermore.

“I know how to be abased, and I know how to abound. Everywhere and in all things I have learned both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need. I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.” (Phil. 4:12-13)

Workman’s tools – the art of the trade


Intro


The Holy spirit prompted me, so this article is a real walk of faith. The reason for that is that I had otherwise estimated that this kind of exposition would be more fruitful in a worldly sense, a few years and some specific milestones down my artistic journey.

What milestones you ask? Well I am this year 2020 seeing an exponential growth in my faith and walk in Jesus Christ, and this growth touches all areas of me. My art and creative skills, my spiritual understanding and a greater dependence and surrender to God’s ways and His understanding by the Holy spirit. The amount of output I created this year, notwithstanding the periods of rest lasting days, weeks or months, equals the sum of my creative output the previous 3-4 years put together.

My expansion into different art mediums, and motives and subject matters in my art work within the last 3 years is a testament to the grace of God for giving speed, strength and increase.

“For exaltation comes neither from the east
Nor from the west nor from the south.
But God is the Judge:
He puts down one,

And exalts another.” (Ps. 75:6-7)

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So real short timeline, I started drawing in 1999. That was the year I consciously, on my own picked up a pencil with the determination to depict something visual from my reality. My dad was an artist, a painter and by the time I entered the family mainly a party artist, drawing crocodiles and parrots for the children’s entertainment. Looking back now, I do recognize that his strokes with the pen, smooth perfect curves drawn from the shoulders, and not the wrist, bore witness to his love and mastery of this craft. But for some reason that particular stream was blocked for my dad, and I never saw him pick up any of his painting tools, though the house had his paintings hanging hidden here and there.

My parents always encouraged me artistically. From very early on they bought me artist grade charcoal, sketchbooks, a beginners oil painting set, a Chinese calligraphy set, artist chalks, artist pencils, and brushes. I did paint with sharpie marker sets in those barbie painting books for kids. And it touches my heart to remember how my dad proudly would praise me again and again in front of others and the other adults join him, as they noticed how I painted within the outlines of the drawings.

But in 1999 it happened, the ignition and spark that brought life to a flame that has been burning ever since. Though writing is my first creative love, my ambivalent relationship with the spoken word, in my first language, my second language and my long forgotten mother tongue hampers my desire to express myself in writing. For what heritage do I have in these languages, and what about what is lost?

Abram’s bitter reproach to God comes to my mind “But Abram said, “Lord God, what will You give me, seeing I go childless, and the heir of my house is Eliezer of Damascus?” Then Abram said, “Look, You have given me no offspring; indeed one born in my house is my heir!”

And behold, the word of the Lord came to him, saying, “This one shall not be your heir, but one who will come from your own body shall be your heir.””(Gen. 15:2-4)

I have no part in these languages, and the achievements I accumulate will not go to my offspring – of my body, my soul and spirit, but one borne in the house that I have been reared in.

Drawing and painting, however their cultural fingerprints and cultural roots, are universal in a way I believe is only comparable with dancing and instrumental music. People from long lost cultures and disintegrated nations are part of the roots that nurture my creative intellect, a land whose emperors shut out the rest of the world for several centuries conceived my artisan soul, and the spiritual inheritors of the Greco-Roman world compose the soil in which my seed took hold and grew into the weathered and battered sapling I have within me today. Each component significant and easily found in all of my work, but yet Jesus the son of God is the fountain of water that brings life to otherwise dead artifacts and cultural relics with no breath in them.

“Who then is Paul, and who is Apollos, but ministers through whom you believed, as the Lord gave to each one? I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the increase. So then neither he who plants is anything, nor he who waters, but God who gives the increase. Now he who plants and he who waters are one, and each one will receive his own reward according to his own labor.” (1 Cor. 3:5-8)

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So I drew, and drew with a pencil. I drew Pokemon at first, then Dragonball, all fanart, all imitation, eyeballing what I liked. Then I drew some of the illustrations from Enid Blyton’s the 5 children and it, then I drew some of the illustrations from C. S. Lewis’ Narnia books, then I drew Magic the Gathering, then I drew Final fantasy fanart, then Naruto. All the while I was encouraged to be a writer because I wrote so well and had a strong presence in the written word of my first language, unlike my muted and embarrassed physical self.

Then I drew Dragonlance cover illustrations, then I had a long love relationship with the watercolor artist Alan Lee who drew some tremendously beautiful scenes from J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. Then I drew Harry Potter fanart and started to find my visual voice. Still I was working in pencil, I had zero interest in colors per se. I painted if I was forced to in art classes at school, or to show appreciation of the tools my parents would gift me.

Then I really started to hang out on Deviantart.com, prowl Drawn.com (or was it ca?) and the now shut down Elf wood, and in those days of early high school, my inner visual universe exploded because of the fodder of contemporary, live visual art from all over the world available at my fingertips. Notable artist I remember are Stephanie Pui Mun law’s incredible vivid and gentle watercolor universe, aridante/Anneth Lagamo’s profound pencil sketches, superb rendering of expressive human figures, and bold watercolors, and goldseven/Jenny Dolfen’s pleasant watercolor works, extremely neat and sufficient in dealing with the subject matters of her choice.

Then I started digital art, got an intuous 2 when the intuous line was the powerhouse of Wacom, and sort of sidetracked for a while.

Then I tried ballpoint pen and later ink and screen tones because I thought I would draw Japanese comics.

Then I dabbled in watercolor here and there, first my dad’s no name flat cake set, then a small Winsor and Newton Cotman which I gave away in 2011, because I went back to pencil for good figuring that digital art was the way forward.

My eye and hand coordination never got up to an acceptable level when drawing with a tablet compared with my level in traditional pencil and paper. I made some impressive works, but 6hrs+ digital art did not translate to any skill retention, so I lost interest. I was looking upward and in those days I was ambitious to create a legacy.

I am all about the profit. Which is why I stay with God, I want what is best, I want who is best and like Peter I have come to believe that only in Jesus Christ is eternal life, the forgiveness of sin and a relationship with the God who made the heavens and the earth.

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By know we both know that that real short timeline I was planning to write has proven to be untrue in light of the subsequent text, I hope you still enjoy the ride.

In 2015-16 something happened, I painted a bunch of appreciation cards for friends and family and watercolor proved itself to be the most convenient medium to color them all. I had a Canson Montval postcard sized block and the Canson mixed media imagine drawing pad. Both took awfully to watercolor but to my untrained eye, the color popped freshly, the paper did not buckle too much and my pencil lines stood out on the paper, so a most satisfying experience.

Then in 2016 I splurged money on an Arches hot press A3 pad, and saw some significant improvement of water control enter my skill-set. Paper does matter most with watercolors. Paper, then brushes, then colors. The logic being, it is a water medium, so sploshing water around, destroying paper and wasting pigment with run amuck puddles is a roadblock for the new water colorist. Like the Bible says wisdom is the key and understanding the force to turn the key in the lock:

“Wisdom is the principal thing;

Therefore get wisdom.

And in all your getting, get understanding.” (Prov. 4:7)

Then up next I want to move on to brushes. My problems with layering the right pigmented glazes or even dispersing a good even pigment load from the brush, pretty much went away the moment I had some solid brushes (my controlled layering style lends itself well to semi soft semi stiff natural hair and synthetic brush mixes).

Snippet

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This is up for sale but in the meantime I look forward to enjoy it on my wall

Funny story, I drew with a brush and my heart sank at what I had made, but I pushed on, then I drew the wrinkles and I wanted to cry at how cartoonish they looked. Then I added the colors and my joy returned and I thought I don’t know how I mitigate…

Funny story, I drew with a brush and my heart sank at what I had made, but I pushed on, then I drew the wrinkles and I wanted to cry at how cartoonish they looked. Then I added the colors and my joy returned and I thought I don’t know how I mitigated this but woow this face looks lovely, rich, full of depth how could I ever not have liked this.

The love of God compels me.

I finished my spur of creative outbursts a few days ago. I began on 4-5 new paintings and it felt like I was sprouting all over the place, on some days I could even work and progress a bit on each creation. That’s unusual for me.

Then suddenly the spring closed up. Just like that. Not a drying out, but a firm turning off the tap. I thought, well good thing the Holy spirit is in control. In seasons prior to this I used to worry when the spring of creative expression shut of. No desire to draw. No desire to write. No desire to create in all my usual ways.

Maybe He would open up new flows if creativity like baking or cooking powerfully flavored meals.

Maybe not.

But this time I know the drill, each turning off is to let the soil of my soul rest for the winter, fallow the soil to let minerals, bacteria, wild growth and other good stuff flourish, until the soil is fat and saturated enough to yield good nutrition to the next fruit.

Old desires are being worked out of me right now, things within that are obstructing His purpose in me. Irregularities are refined out of me so that certain aspect of me can gleam and come into use.

Then I added a second layer anther day to add depth and granulation and I switched between weeping and rejoicing, one moment I thought how did I ruin what was otherwise perfect the other, this is a new height of ingenuity the Lord truly has gifted m…

Then I added a second layer anther day to add depth and granulation and I switched between weeping and rejoicing, one moment I thought how did I ruin what was otherwise perfect the other, this is a new height of ingenuity the Lord truly has gifted me with a sense to create depth and believability.

And so I woke up last week with an urgent desire for texture in my artwork. So hello hard pastels. I like to have plenty of pigment to work out backgrounds and I dislike running down my art materials in no time which I fear the more obvious choice for texture colored pencils would do.

Then came a hunger for granulation in watercolor, haha. I laugh because I chose Sennelier among other reasons, for it’s brand’s smoothness, which is a quality I like when building up the translucency of skin tones.

So now I added two primateks from Daniel smith to my choice palette. A brownish tiger eye with very weak tinting strength, which will blend seamlessly with all colors of skin and green apatite which is just beautiful. A deep, deep warm green with some extremely eye catching separation. I don't have a strong like for greens because it is so ubiquitous in nature and so easy to get off key, but this one is a winner for my eyes. Rich in color, such a variety in the width of its spectrum of hue, and so saturated.

And then I discovered a new love for wrinkles. It just satisfies that itch I have for meticulous detail work in favor of a larger overarching continuity in a painting. I am more single detail focused than building the bigger picture. What is nice is that I now have so many choices to add wrinkles in watercolor. I can lay down the lines illustrative with a single point in my brush and paint around them, or build up shapes in light and depth with colors and then add some lines/creaks later with a brush I have flattened and separated the hairs to make uneven lines. I can do both techniques in the same painting.

Then I believe the Holy spirit touched me one day and said, is something not missing? And I looked and yes, the warm hue of true skin tones was missing and I was eager to fix it. Cue emotional slow slide down hill and soaring high as on eagle wings.…

Then I believe the Holy spirit touched me one day and said, is something not missing? And I looked and yes, the warm hue of true skin tones was missing and I was eager to fix it. Cue emotional slow slide down hill and soaring high as on eagle wings. As usual when I finished this session I looked over the past pictures and thought, how could I ever have been satisfied with that imperfection, how I made it here only God knows, but truly what a tremendous blessing he has given me (yes I am my own biggest admirer craftsman wise, because I have seen from where God has taken me).

And it takes so little time to do it because I love wrinkles. I thank the father in Jesus Christ for this new venture. Now I can finally use up my small scraps of papers, and the 100 plastic pockets I bought years ago, just to be able to sell small pocket sized art pieces.

Our God is a God of small beginnings.

"For the love of Christ compels us, because we judge thus: that if One died for all, then all died;"

-2 Corinthians 5:14

The Process Of Conception

I have to pause the teaching I’m listening to in order to write out my thoughts clearly. Listening in order to learn and writing in order to express clear, succinct and easy to follow thought patterns utilize the same center of my brain. Or it feels that way – the same way that reading and absorbing into my brain not the words on the page but the ideas and concepts they invoke, employ the same muscle of concentration as when I draw and to a lesser extent when I paint.

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A while ago the Holy Spirit drew my attention to certain scriptures and I jotted them down only to later feel the urge to visualize them. Before this He drew me to similar scriptures full of the fallacy, stupidity and plain out exasperating exposures of human character in order to teach me that God has no illusion about who He is dealing with. He loves his creation and He has a great patience for the Adamic race, and He wants us to have no illusion about how sin continues to mar our inner countenance, and our ways in the physical world. Only in the cross of Jesus Christ can we be redeemed from of the hand of the enemy (Psalm 107:2).

The sad thing is that Indifference and Complacency, two evils of the human character, make most people unable to pinpoint this “off” feeling they have about the world and life in general. And if those two won't do it, then Despair and Powerlessness will immobilize the rest.

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So as I looked at the list of scriptures I was wondering, how will I ever go about drawing a single one of them, because my short term memory is awful, and to later on pore over them studiously over longer periods of time to make preliminary footwork feels contrary to my usual creative process. Usually I draw and sketch, just to practice random faces, and then sometimes a vague idea becomes clear in my mind. I pursue it roundabout until either I suddenly make the finished piece in a sketch session or I am able to transfer the sum of what I did not know was to be a bunch of preliminary work to a proper canvas and make an official piece.

With the current project I have been careful in my sketch sessions, because when I feel that certain sense of “completion“ or “release“, I will miss my moment of opportunity and be unable to transfer it to another canvas, because my mind will make it clear that we just finished the deed on whatever subpar paper and with whatever tools we had at hand. Time to move on and let be what will be. So when I started to feel the soft edges of that feeling I knew – It is time to take out some watercolor paper, we have labored enough at this stage.

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The funny thing is that I am dependent on those sketch sessions. The idea is communicated clearly in my mind, sometimes it is very very clear, like the mother carrying her child on a blue background. One of the first paintings I made after telling God that if He would heal me, I would commit my drawings and art to glorify Him. Others like Sarah sitting with a green bowl being asked by Abraham, I felt the urge to draw a woman looking up. How did I know this was from God and not just me? You can tell, some things are of the Spirit and you have the Holy Spirit to help you discern between what is soulish (I think. I want. I feel) and what is spiritual and of God.

And strangely enough, in a sketch session, while drawing a face I was not satisfied with at all – something about the nose not being hooked or long enough, the neck, then the upper body and then the lower body spilled out of my pencil. I of all people was most surprised, because I felt that this sketch out of all of them was the one that least deserved this kind of completion. But by now I recognize the spring of creativity, when you hit a vein and it flows, either you enjoy it and work with it or you miss it. Luckily I did work on some Canson bristol paper, 180g I think, and it takes several layers of watercolors just fine.

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The inconvenience of divine inspiration is not lost on me however, because taking things into my own hands, I had already started sketching Sarah laughing outside of Abraham’s tent at God’s promise that she a barren woman long past her childbearing years would be blessed with carrying the child of promise. I was struggling with that concept, having no inner vision of what it should look like, that’s the thing about continuing with works of the flesh in what began by faith, it is a struggle and usually a vain one.

Here is what the struggle looked like. I imagined an old woman outside a tent. But wait, I don’t know how to draw tents. Should I be anachronistic in regards to the clothing and ethnicity as I had been in the others scripture related pieces? However that was never a conscious choice, it was just how things had flowed. I drew the scene from different angles, and really, all looked right to me. No sketch was superior, none was inferior. However all were off. Good, but off. Because I wanted to draw and had the spring inside welling out to draw I thought it made sense to continue with this scene after the previous Sarah drawing. I felt it would be convenient now that I had a character design to sort of lean onto.

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But God is merciful, and he answers prayers. So getting tired of endless sketch sessions, where I had no sense of direction, only an anchor of scripture, I started to pray and invite the Holy Spirit to lead me also in drawing. Because I am human and I too want the endless wandering to reach its designated end. It is nice to have a finished piece. And since that is something outside of my natural inclination and tendecy to be satisfied with capturing bare glimpses, I do in fact need prayer to reach that point. Otherwise I’ll go though months if not years of unfinished sketches depicting glimpses of hazy, exhilerating or joyous feelings. All good for growth of skill but absolutely rubbish for presenting to an audience.

But the image He gave me, ooohhhh how I was at loss for words at the emotion I felt surge through me. The urge to draw the scene out was there but when I looked at the first rough draft I thought, surely this is too boring. Also I don’t know how to draw mountains, let alone paint stones, and this funny angle will be outside of my skill range to capture. It is funny like that, because though I said these things, I greatly anticipated the joy it would bring me to work on this project.

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The thing is, God will equip you for the good works He calls you to do. And He expects you to turn to Him at all points of the process. At no point are you supposed to go solo, be independent and do you. You can, and if you do he will let you, He respects your will of choice, to such a degree that He will let you face the consequences of your own bad choices if you forget to call on Him.

So for this one I set out knowing full well that I would need prayer because the scene was so foreign to me – conceptually a bit plain, and in regards to certain presentation of the objects, outside of my skill range.

What I do want you to notice is that all the drawings, even if the angle and point of view change a bit as I make small side trips to study the scene from different angles – all of them closely relate back to a firm core vision. Each individual sketch is days and weeks apart, each of them never strays far from the first quickly scribbled sketch on whatever paper I could find to quickly capture what the Holy spirit carefully communicated to me. That’s the difference between hearing from God and offer yourself up to serve, and trying to work things out according to what your own will wants to expres.

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The vision from God is clear and will bear fruit as long as you stay in Christ, walk by faith and allow the Holy spirit to guide you. Does that mean that there is no freedom in that? Not at all, it means that you are free to lay all that is within you on the altar, commit your ways into His hands and see things come to life that you never knew could come out of you, as the Almighty and all powerful full of love for you skillfully works in you and through you wonders and marvels that everybody know could never come from you alone. You, bah, if it was you alone you would have done it years ago, but with Jesus Christ, wheeeew what a difference. Because He who made you formed your personality, blessed you with dispositions and skills and placed you in this day and age for such a time as this, to carry out good works that pleases Him and will bring Him glory.

And if you continue in him, Jesus, you will bear much fruit. As tree planted by the water you will bear fruit in season and out of season. How rad is that, when you know that in your own strength you have maybe one shot in you. Maybe if you’re lucky you will have two, or more. But notice that trees do not bear one piece of fruit only. In fact when Jesus alludes to himself as the vine and the Father as the vine dresser, He makes it clear that you will bear cluster of fruits through the work of the Holy spirit who is in you.

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But in yourself, good luck stretching that little limited sap you have, and then shrivel up as your time is up. Even if that is the only thing you have ever known, it can still frustrate you because what little of what you do produce in yourself can easily be overlooked or passed over by others. Not to say that the works you will carry out in God will bring you to the limelight, perhaps, perhaps not. Does it matter though? Fruit trees do not eat their own fruit, it is the people of the land, the hungry children, the wearied traveler and the farm help, they see something that is nourishing for their souls and they will walk a long way in order to take the mature fruit for food for themselves and their families.

What fruit you bear in God He intends for others to enjoy. What you work out in your own strength within your own limited source of self, is an I-centered work, carnal in nature, which is only there to feed your ego as boast. It is tasteless, soulsess, off-taste and with little true nourishing value to others, even if it is out of your life blood and sweat you pour out, that is not what mankind were created to flourish on. And by now you of all people should know how insatiable that self and its byproducts are. Perhaps that is why so many self help books talks about hollow victories, fruitless accomplishments and rather want you to focus on enjoying the journey to get somewhere rather than its completion.

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The carnal mind, the degenerated self can in its separation from God, recognize the symptoms of the malaise that corrupts all men and the whole of Creation: dissatisfaction, more wants more, unrest, lack of peace, always striving ever resting, pollution, abuse and much more. But rarely can it recognize the disease: sin.

At rare instances you do meet individuals who see the evil around them, however they do not attribute it to the inborn moral corruption, our heritage of the fall, our inner Adam. After all, attributing something to yourselves makes you responsible, and nothing is more loathsome to people than moral responsibility for their own being and divine accountability before God. That is what tradition, government, organized religion, family and cultural norms are there for after all, places to relegate blame and shame. And if those institutions defenition of morality and accountability are changeable so what was evil in one generation is excused in next or vice versa, then so be it. Moral condemnation of those who came before us and an elevated sense of our current society’s moral superiority is a contemporary Olympic discipline that 21st century man excels at.

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What I discovered, and liked most about these sketch sessions was the usefulness of thumbnails. Two pictures up from the picture with the thumbnails, I drew the final angle of Moses. I liked the head, the beard, and something inside myself told me to be careful about drawing more poses of him, because the “completion“ feeling was starting to come over me. As for the background however I was still at loss. I knew it had to be a mountain, that he looked down at the children of Israel being merry, given into revelry, and he was supporting himself with his right hand onto the side of the mountain.

Usually I don’t draw thumbnails, I am largely a portrait artist, I draw heads, busts and sometimes I venture into full bodies, but never in a proper composition. I just draw them wherever on the paper where I have most space for them. In 2015/16 I did embark on 10+ thank you watercolor cards for my friends, to express my love and appreciation for them and our friendships. With those I had to think about composition, because I wanted the drawings of the figures to semi resemble my friends, and to pose in a way that embodied them.

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It was enjoyable, and today I do recognize that it trained my skill for composition, however apart from the drawings you can see in the process section of this website, I normally stay clear of thinking to much about the full layout of my drawings.

What was interesting for these thumbnails was that I actually hit a wall when I tried to figure out how to place Moses in the angle and posture from the sketch I had picked as the final one, and blend it with the right angle for the mountain. That is how unnatural it feels for me to compose with a background in mind. I think of them, main motive or focal figures, and background as something separate and not as something intertwined.

Another thing I struggled with was, his legs. Composition requires you to make a stylistic choice. You cannot keep everything, you have to make an interesting cut at a workable angle, in order to express the vision properly. And sometime a few days before I started the second set of thumbnails, God again gave me a picture of the mountain, of how steep the cliff felt as Moses overlooked the children of Israel. I blocked the mountains out with my pencil, to better understand this angle, and to figure out where I could make a compromise between the elements: the cliff, the bird perspective, the feeling of the viewer looking down from these immense heights, the details of the figure of Moses.

Oh and the size of the paper of course. I buy Arches watercolor paper by the sheet, tear it in 6 nice cubic pieces, and know by experience now how much background I have to let go, if I want a figure to be a certain size and with a certain amount of details.

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I finally settled on the composition favoring the figure, which is my area of strength. To be honest I cannot imagine a piece of mine where nature or other elements take up more place than the human figures. It might change one day, but my last landscape piece was one year ago in watercolor, and it was a disaster, probably because I worked from imagination, and not from reference. My personal strength is however the fact that I can work loosely from imagination, pulling on years of practicing the human figure in relation to its surroundings.

Reference is something I mainly use for studies of light, anatomy, posture, bone structure and more. In that case I prefer to stay as close to the reference as possible.

But here is the final composition, I imagine it to be a twilight scene, something I’ve never done, and I will have to look up reference to figure out how to paint rock structure. I added the stone tablets, because I felt it was a detail needed and was included in one of the first sketches and later alluded to by way of his left arm’s position. And then after drawing everything, I soaked the paper in water to seal the graphite of the pencil. Will it prevent all smudging? Probably not, but what I can do I should do and leave the rest to God.

It is going to be an interesting ride, and I’m glad I obeyed that small, gentle pull which compelled me to put out a blog post about my process. Even though I had to pause a teaching I was deeply into in order to write out my thoughts. Love cannot be denied, He always makes a way.