John D Cogan 2B an artist

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Sunday, January 23, 2011

Painting Sunsets, part 2

Here is the painting I described in my previous entry on sunsets.  Actually, this is a sunrise over Yellowstone Lake.  As I mentioned in the first post, I had been studying paintings by JMW Turner before I painted this.  It is 20 by 16 inches, acrylic on canvas.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Artistic goals

I ask myself on occasion what my goal is, as an artist.  Do I want to be wealthy (haha), famous, award-winning? Or what?  I always seem to come back to the same answer: I want to produce the best paintings I can and continue to raise the bar so that this year's body of work is better than last year's and next year's will be better still.  To some extent I am able to judge my success based on feedback from my fellow artists, friends, collectors and galleries. But in the long run, I must be my own judge.  I have to be the one who sees room for improvement.  I have to be the one to seek out new skills, new ideas, and new subject matter.  I am the one who has to practice until I get it right.  I have to be the one to take the risk of painting something new or ground-breaking.  And in the end, I have to be the one who likes the result.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

A Day of Rest

I love painting and drawing.  I feel sometimes like I could do it 24/7. But when I have tried to go non-stop for long periods of time, I have found I get tired.  I need a break once in a while.  Not just to eat and sleep, but to do other things; to give my mind a break from thinking about art.

Years ago I started taking off the Sabbath (Sunday in my case) to rest from my work.  And I get more done working six days than seven.  During the French Revolution and the Enlightenment, the proponents of the decimal system tried to switch to a ten-day week.  It did not succeed because people get tired after six days and cannot seem to make it through nine.  Seven seems to be the right number of days in a human week.  Seems like God got it right and the Sabbath IS a gift of rest to us humans.  Take it and enjoy it!
John.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Am I Doing Enough Preliminary Work?

According to Dinotopia artist James Gurney, Howard Pyle used to do a minimum of 50 (FIFTY!!) preliminary sketches before every painting.  Hmmmm.  I think I need to be spending more time with the ol' pencil.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Painting Sunsets

I have spent some time lately grazing over my J.M.W. Turner books, looking at how he painted sunsets.  Actually, how he painted the sun, because in many of them the sun was WELL above the horizon.  I always wanted to paint sunsets, but was once told by an art instructor that "you cannot paint a sunset."  But Turner did.  Church did.  Even Thomas Moran and Bierstadt did.  And some were quite successful.  Recently I have noticed a number of artists successfully tackling that particular subject matter, and some doing a very good job of it.  Some even en plein air.  So I am working on one and will post it here and on my web page when I get it done.
www.johncogan.com

The Christian as artist

One of the more important things an artist does is to reflect the beauty of God's creation. We have the opportunity to remind our viewers of what is "true, honorable, right, pure, lovely, of good reputation, whatever is excellent and worthy of praise..." (see Paul's letter to the Philippians, chapter 4, verse 8.)

Our art can show that beauty to the world and be given another reminder who it is that provides not only the beauty, but our ability to see and appreciate it.

Of course, sometimes it is an artist's duty to use his art to remind others of where we humans fail to live up to God's holiness. Sometimes that art may be deemed "ugly" but sometimes we humans show our ugly side. The purpose in this case is to contrast our sinful side with God's perfect beauty, goodness and holiness.

May God bless your day. John