Alaskan Raven Studio

Art in Alaska. Story of an Alaskan artist.

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Born to be Wild

December 31, 2016 by alaskanraven

They want a grizzly. A bear for the expanse of wall in the new section of the hospital. Color and joy for contemplation and encouragement of their patients.

I choose a 40” x 30” canvas and brush on pigment. Browns and reds and oranges for the bruin. Teals and yellows and greens for his forest. His home. He ambles toward you. Curious.

He is “Born to Be Wild”.

Does the title make you laugh and encourage you at the same time?

He lives in my living room on his ‘wall den’. I like him there. He encourages me. We both wait.

I received word yesterday. They want him and sent a check. I’m thrilled. It is an honor.

But art making is an emotional process. It has to be. I’m going to miss this bear. I prepare him for packing but we are both a little sad. Happy-sad.

I promise to go down to Soldotna, Alaska to visit him in his new home. If you are in that neck of the woods, stop by and say hello.

“Born to be Wild” 40″ x 30″

Filed Under: Painting Journal, Uncategorized

Lesson of the Lost Bear

December 31, 2016 by alaskanraven

A bear comes alive on my canvas.
I like him.

I should stop painting.
Instead I add brushstrokes.
Bad idea. I lose him.
He disappears into a mess of goo.

Fortunately, I took a photo before he slammed the door.
I repeat the same brushstrokes. I repeat the same colors.
I repeat the same everything.

The harder I try. The worse it looks.
Frustrating.

Have you been there?
The harder you try to make something work, the worse it becomes?

Lesson learned.
I have to let my bears emerge on their own.
Watch the change every brushstroke makes.
Forget the bears of pigment past.
Be open to new discoveries.

I play with layers and layers of paint.
A new bear appears.
This one is different. Better. Stronger.

Wild.

Filed Under: Painting Journal, Uncategorized

My Kroma Bears

February 16, 2016 by alaskanraven

Kroma Bear with artist
Kroma Bear with artist

I promised you updates about my New Big Goal several months ago.

The Goal frightens and excites me: paint six large polar bears within a year.

An ambitious goal. Lots of questions. I don’t even know all the questions yet. But the bears must be portable and easy to transport. LARGE and portable.

Progress has been made.

Discovery
I discovered scrim in the Homer Alaska Pratt Museum. They used it as a translucent wall. The open random weave looked like a snow-blown day in the wintery arctic. A perfect ‘landscape’ for my polar bears. I contacted the manufacturer.

I tore down a shelf and made room in my studio to dedicate a whole wall to the scrim. Taped brown paper on the wall and floor to contain drips and splashes. Painting wildly is messy.
The scrim hangs neatly from a rod in the studio and is ready for color.

Scrim with detail of the painting
Scrim

Bears can fly
I was completely absorbed in shaping my bear with pigment when the pole holding the banner suddenly slipped off the holder.
Pole, bear (and almost me) went flying.

It shook me up but no one was hurt. I had not replaced the end cap.

Lesson learned.

Kroma Bear
Kroma Bear
Polar Bear Banner
Kroma Bear 2

Painting in the sky
Standing on a ladder and reaching up with a big brush has it’s rewards.
The fabric is lightweight, springy and the rough texture grabs the paint from my brush. I feel like I’m painting in the sky.

Why are they called Kroma Bears?
I found paint in a most unexpected way. Wandering around Vancouver, my sister and I came across a little store named KROMA. Inside the walls held bins of color. Beautiful tubes of pigment stacked to the ceiling. A ladder on wheels was there to assist me. I could reach whatever color my heart desired.

They paint their sample cards of Kroma colors by hand. I like that kind of passion. They manufacture high quality artist’s acrylic paint in that little shop and sell it for wholesale prices to artists. They have been doing this for over forty years.

I chose several tubes of color and left with my prize, eager to see if I liked the consistency of the paint.

I love the paint and only use Kroma paint for my bears. It has intense color, wonderful consistency and an easy flip top cover so I can grab color quickly and not lose momentum. It has become my favorite paint and I placed a large order. I don’t ever want to run out of Benzi Orange or Cobalt Teal again!

Kroma or chroma means pure pigment or purity of color, from the greek word Khroma.

It was natural that my bears became Kroma Bears.

Thank you Jessica and the whole Kroma gang for making this quality paint.

Light makes dramatic changes
Kroma Bears can be rolled up and carried anywhere. They are easy to hang and display.
When they hang in front of a window they shimmer and change. Back light is different from front light and a combination of front and back light has it’s own appearance. These are not one dimensional bears. They dance to different colors because the translucent fabric is dramatically changed by the quality and direction of the light.

manywinterssm

Alaska House Art Gallery Fairbanks, Alaska
Alaska House Art Gallery
Fairbanks, Alaska

We would accomplish many more things if we did not think of them as impossible.
—Vince Lombardi

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Big Bear Update

October 20, 2015 by alaskanraven

I have a New Big Goal. It excites me. It is daunting and a little frightening. I’m not even sure how it will be accomplished but the thought of it thrills me.

I want to paint BIG polar bears.
My first thought was to paint a large bear on the outside of my house. I may still do that but right now I am focused on creating large 6′ x 4′ panels.

I’ll need to use my big brushes. Claude Monet used to tape his brushes to long tree branches so he could stand back and paint his water lilies. Hmmmm.

I need space. I’ve cleared many things out of my studio. I am ruthless with all the stuff that accumulates.

My goal may take a year to accomplish but it is a good challenge.

I recently completed a 4′ canvas with a large bruin luxuriating in the snow. My bears are growing larger and larger with daring brushstrokes. I’m pushing the color to portray the wildness. I’m eager to see where the pursuit takes me.

I’m still painting bears that are a more traditional size. I may even do some mini ones just to keep things interesting.

My big bears won’t be living on standard canvas. I’ve discovered a new fabric this summer that I am experimenting with right now. I’ll share more about this development later.

"Polar Energy" 24" x 36"
“Polar Energy”
24″ x 36″

Moving forward. He’s coming right at us. I love the interaction of the colors and the feeling of electricity in the air.

"Arctic Extremes" 24" x 18"
“Arctic Extremes”
24″ x 18″

The deep dark cold contrasting with the warm sunlight and warmth from the polar bear’s body is the subject of this painting. He must generate warmth to fight off the arctic temperatures.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Alaska, animal, arctic, bear, paint, painting, paintwildly, polar bears

Refresh, recharge, restart

September 6, 2015 by alaskanraven

Time for change.

Time to get rid of things that are not being used. Move things around. Set things up differently. Turn the studio inside out, upside down and totally reorganize it. Just like hitting the restart button on a computer.

Change invigorates me. Find a better way to store and access my tubes of pigment. Stack things differently. Try out a different palette. Find a new container for brushes. Change creates more room in the studio for my elbows and larger canvases.

Time to paint.
Explore new ways to paint my polar bears.
How to paint wildly to capture these fascinating animals?

Layers and layers of paint. I apply more color until a bear emerges out of the pigment. This bear rests but is ready to take action. I focus on their strength and power while I work. Their immense presence. Shape the form with color and emotions. Motion and movement with more color. I want these bears to breathe!

Bears roam around in my studio.

"Up Close"  10" x 8" oil painting by Raven
“Up Close” 10″ x 8″ oil painting by Raven
"Patience" 12" x 24" oil painting by Raven. This painting can be seen at Stephan's Fine Arts in Anchorage, Alaska
“Patience” 12″ x 24″ oil painting by Raven.
"On the Move" 10" x 8" oil painting by Raven. Brighter colors, shorter brushstrokes. It is all about motion and color and more color.
“On the Move” 10″ x 8″ oil painting Brighter colors, shorter brushstrokes. Motion and color and more color.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Alaska, change, paint, painter, paintings, paintwildly, polar bears

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Raven Ramblings

Shipment arrives

“Sterling, look at that!” “Look at what, Felix?” “That huge box. From Canada.” “Looks like the artist received another shipment of Kroma paint. Watch, she’ll spend the rest of the day arranging it in her studio. All those tubes of paint go in some sort of order.” “Paint? What is that?” “Paint is color. She […]

Edges are important

“Sterling, What is the artist doing now?” “What do you mean, Felix?” “She spends lots of time brushing paint on the sides of her painting. The edges. You know what I mean?” “She makes changes on it when she changes the front of the painting. The sides appear to be important to her.” “But why?” […]

More Adventures

contact me with questions or comments

Alaskan Raven Studio
PO Box 80231
Fairbanks, Alaska 99708
USA
alaskanblackbird@yahoo.com

 

Represented by:
Well Street Art Co.
1302 Well Street
Fairbanks, Alaska
907 452-6169

Stephan Fine Arts
939 West 5th Ave.
Anchorage, Alaska 99501
USA
(907) 274-5009
http://www.stephanfinearts.com/

more about Raven

I ventured to Alaska before there was an oil pipeline and fell in love with the gnarly spruce trees, intense weather and mountains I could touch. Very different from the landscape in St. Louis. I was looking for different. The spruce trees: those scraggy, wizened, lanky conifers danced onto the first page of my sketch […]

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