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Stepping into the Acrylic world

AcrylicForestRain

Been a little quiet in posting lately, but that doesn’t mean I haven’t been crazy busy. The last post was during the Winter Holidays, and that was also the one-year mark of trying to figure out what on earth was going on in my body that caused me to lose vision. After many tests, and changing several doctors, we finally have a diagnosis.

Ankylosing Spondylitis.

Or “Bamboo Spine”

Not exactly the best news, but it has given us a direction on medications to try out. When numbers jumped up around the holidays, I made the difficult choice to keep my immune-compromised son home from kindergarten until he was vaccinated. Trying to increase my work hours, covid, a 5 year old, and finding out my spine was trying to become a solid was a lot to handle. But it was also a time to be at home and learn something new, make something beautiful for my son to see.

I was gifted some canvas, and acrylic paints for Christmas! I was very excited, and yet nervous to start. I knew I would love them, but I also knew that it would be very, very expensive compared to watercolour painting. Kind of like how many artists keep piles of ‘good paper’ around because they don’t want to ‘waste it’ on learning. PIIIISH-SHAW! Get into all your supplies, and don’t hold back for a moment! Our learning journey is as messy as our lives, but that’s what makes it wonderful.

I still haven’t had a chance to take a real art class, one day I hope to. It would be great to learn about brushes, angles, and strokes from another human. I’m one of those, “I need to ask questions to learn things” kinda gal. Instead, I turned to what everyone does, the youtubes.
The first thing I learned (through trial by fire) was that watercolour supplies DO NOT always work with acrylics. The first few canvas creations were a dripping horrible Dr. Suess mess, but I did learn a lot! After that, I found a few artists that used household items to paint, and that really helped me.

Now I feel more confident trying whatever works to get my art onto canvas. I started painting a ‘wet coast’ series. Living in Vancouver is beautiful! It rains a lot, but it’s why our forests are so vibrant and lush. In these paintings, I wanted to try and capture a beautiful moment.

I’m really loving acrylics, and I can’t wait to learn more!

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Acer circinatum

Going out on a limb here.. No, no.. Branching out.. No wait, “Don’t Stop Be leafing” ..yeah, that one.

(TREE PUNS)

Much like myself, the Vine Maple is from Western North America and is usually found within 300 km of the Pacific Ocean. Good choice.

Another awesome local species, Acer circinatum features bright green and chartreuse branches, white flowers with deep-red sepals, and brightly coloured red and green, winged fruit. It has symmetrical, almost round, palmate leaves that turn from green to golden yellow in the fall. Typically, each leaf has 7 to 9 lobes.. lots of interesting lines, shapes and colours to consider when setting out to capture an artistic likeness of this specimen.

One of the most recognizable characteristics of the Vine maple tree is its penchant to twist, bend and droop. Branches regularly grow horizontally, often changing direction and sometimes bending right over, coming into contact with the ground. This can cause the top of the tree to grow a new root system, creating natural archways. This characteristic makes it the only maple capable of layering, adding a uniquely West Coast flair to out wooded areas.

A few stunningly complex tangles come to mind locally in; Stanley Park, especially along the trails near Beaver Pond; Tynehead Regional Park in Surrey; Campbell Valley and along the Fort-to-Fort Trail in Langley; Mundy Park in Coquitlam; Deer Lake Park in Burnaby; and Buntzen Lake in Anmore, to name a few. All have beautiful examples of established (probably second- or third-growth by now) Vine maple specimens, 30-40+ years old and highly visible from the many walking paths and trails.

I didn’t really have anything specific in mind at first. I had just returned from a walk and had taken a few pictures of some rain soaked Vine maple branches along the way. It was early February and there were few living leaves to be found in the woods. With no foliage to obstruct my view, theses branches stood out against the browned and mostly dormant forest, like over-sized stalks of fresh asparagus.

Their colour stayed with me the entirety of my walk back and I tried my beginners best to replicate it in watercolor when I got home. I started with the branches and decided to add the fruit and flowers next. I really think I need to work on my color mixing, but overall I’m happy with it. I’m still a bit reluctant to add text. I think it needs it, but I’ll probably come back to it one day with a bit more purpose.

– Aaron

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Vespula alascensis

Northern Common Yellowjacket.

I’m tackling a new organism here with my good old Windsor & Newton watercolours. I love any excuse to use yellow and black together.

Did you know queens are the only members of the colony able of surviving the winter. In April or May, the queen begins each season by selecting a suitable location to constructs a small nest. It then raises sterile daughter offspring. These sterile workers then take over the duties of enlarging and maintaining the nest, foraging for food and caring for the offspring while the queen functions only to produce more eggs.

– Aaron

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Populus trichocarpa

The Black Cottonwood – Salicales Salicaceae Populus trichocarpa if you wanna get picky.

So here’s a sketch I did of some black cottonwood branches in early Spring of this year. It’s a subject I come back to time and again. Leaves are few and far between in early February, so I thought I’d tackle some of the otherwise hidden textures present on the gnarly leftovers from last season. Cottonwood has such character and always has something to offer when I’m itching to sketch and stuck for ideas.

Love em or hate em, I think here in the Lower Mainland of BC, almost everyone has a relationship with the cottonwood. This local tree evokes all kinds of emotion in people, for different reasons, at different times if the year. Every season seems to offer a number of reasons to hate and enjoy this local monster.

Like when it’s allergy season. I count myself as one of the lucky ones who get to enjoy the sweet fragrance of their sticky buds on long walks this time of year.. while others need to remember their daily, 24 hour, fast-acting, non-drowsy antihistamine or suffer the litany of symptoms we all know so well from the seasonal pharma-jingles on the radio, television and such.

Or later in the year when its fluff season. Making it appear to snow in June, the fluffy seeds accumulate into large drifts, becoming knee deep for weeks on end where I live. Every year, big gobs of fuzz inevitably sneak their way into the house and collect in the most hard to reach places. But outside, like in Burnaby’s numerous wetland and repirian habitats, the air can erupt in a beautiful storm of unseasonably flurry-like conditions with the softest of breezes.. and you don’t have to worry, most people are allergic to the pollen not the fluff, so dive in!

Or is it when the winds pickup in early fall. The air starts to cool and the large egg-shaped leaves, almost as wide as they are long and beautifully coloured, litter the paths and sidewalks. That time of year when you get to throw on a light jacket and maybe a scarf for the first time since last year. The breeze starts to blow and you notice how loud the dried leave are rustling high up.. and then you look back down and discover your car’s windshield has been destroyed by a fallen branch as thick as your leg. You know, that branch you park under everyday on the street outside, failing to notice its precarious growth and precise targeting.

Maybe it’s the critters? The Black Cottonwood is the ‘live fast, and die young’ poster child of our local deciduous tree species and do not live very long. However, they grow very quickly and they grow huge. It is one of the few trees big enough to hold bald eagle nests. When branches break off, large open cavities are created high up in the canopy.. perfect nesting sites for any number of owl and woodpecker species, raccoon, squirrel, etc. A sure favourite of numerous species including invertebrates, plants, and eventually fungi and bacteria.

And at ground level and below, the cottonwood’s aggressive and uncontrollable growth can sometimes be costly to home owners. Branches shed regularly and cause damage to roofs and gutters. Roots can destroy sidewalks, driveways, plumbing and drainage. And they are pretty indestructible. In fact the shoots and roots contain so much rooting hormone, even a small piece of fallen branch can root and become a clone. They survive most major weather damage and even a clear-cut at ground level won’t kill this survivor.

Indeed there are plenty of grounds for disappointment and anger in the case against the the Black Cottonwood. But it does play an important role in our local environment, as well as in our homes. In fact, if you happen to be using Scotties toilet paper here in BC, it probably came from cottonwood pulp grown in Chilliwack and made in New Westminister. So there’s that. Maybe not such a pain in the ass after all.

Watercolor paintings were done on De Serres Aquarelle 300 gsm coldpress watercolour paper by Fabriano. I can’t remember the exact colours I used in my ‘soup’ of paint, but they are most definitely Windsor & Newton Professional watercolour and possibly some raw sienna by PWC Premium Extra Fine watercolour. I tried a stylized approach to painting the branch above. I like how it turned out.

For the pencil sketches, I used the same mechanical pencil I use for most of my drawing in the field. I found it in the car under the passenger seat, so who knows where it came from. It’s loaded with .07mm HB lead. I’m drawing in one of my Moleskine 13 x 21cm plain paper Cahier Journal. I absolutely love the paper’s smooth finish.

Couple Extras:

I think that hormone thing is pretty interesting. I have heard there is enough hormone present, that an extract of the shoots can be used as a rooting hormone for all types of cuttings. Shoots are gathered, chopped and soaked in cold water for a day to create the solution.

I also know, from the horrible stains they can leave on your patio and concrete, that a yellow dye can be obtained from the leaf buds. I have made walnut ink before.. I’ll have to try this next year sometime.

It’s also cool to note that on older trees, the bark becomes fissured, gnarly, thick, and very hard.. hard enough to cause sparks when being cut by a chainsaw.

– Aaron