-By Vanessa Lemen

I thought I’d start off my first Muddy Colors post with a bit of an introduction.  By sharing some insight about my painting process, my hope is that you will get to know a bit about me as well. 

I’ve decided to focus on my personal work process in this post – the Spontaneous and Responsive Process I use to create an image.  I feel like I should note that I come from an academic background, and I do believe that practicing is remembering and that what we have stored up by practicing will come out in our work. 

My process has morphed over the years, and I’ve always sort of felt that it can be tough to truly describe a painting process in words or even to describe the results or finished product of it.  The description *is* the painting, and maybe words won’t ever truly be able to describe the actual experience quite as well as the finished painting does, or actually experiencing the process would.  But I felt compelled to write a bit about it to explain a short video that I posted recently in which I show a painting of mine morphing from abstract marks to the finish.  As most experiences posting on social media happen, I learned a bit from it, and will take what I learned to help to form what I share and how I share it in the future. 

This painting is called Veno, is 24×30″, oil on canvas.  Here is the video:

Veno, 24×30″, oil on canvas

The brief snippet of an Alan Watts lecture in the audio was chosen because I felt it fit perfectly with what I believe to be happening during the making of a painting. I am a strong believer in what happens in our lives being connected to what we produce in the form of art, so lectures on life and philosophy are just further extensions of what we can glean and inject into our art experience.

For example, I have been sketching in books, painting over text lately, and over time the words began to come forward as if they wanted me to hear what they had to say. At first, I was using them as an aesthetic element or texture to peek through the art I’d paint onto them, but as the pages developed, it was as if the words were begging me to pay attention, forming vertical sentences down the page out of the paragraphs underneath.

They were nothing even remotely similar to the paragraphs’ original subject matter, but came from them and were formed into gems I couldn’t help but pay attention to. Of course, it was me who was doing this – it was my subconscious making me aware of my perception, and this became a huge motivation to keep delving further.

 In the process of discovering those personal connections I was making, I noticed that others who saw or read the pages also felt a connection of their own. So, these little paintings have turned out to be speaking universally as well as on an intimate or personal level.

acrylic and graphite on book pages, 6×9″
acrylic painting sketch on book pages, 6×9″

For me, the act of painting is a dialog. It’s a form of communication that unfolds on the surface in the form of visuals, and it’s an accumulation of everything – in that moment. The dialog starts to flow when I can allow myself to delve in and, in a way, stop thinking so that the visuals, the movement, and the reciprocity of the painting experience can subconsciously combine with life experience.

In other outlets such as model workshops, instructing in a studio, or in my personal sketchbook, I draw and paint from observation, memory, and imagination on a constant basis, and am aware of my temperament based on those experiences. Being aware of this allows me to feel confident and in tune with what I want, while at the same time, be able to react spontaneously to what may happen next when I am painting in this responsive type of manner.

 This sort of painting process is an ongoing interchange that includes experimenting, discovering, debating, and decision-making. Just as a conversation flows, a string of responses can form from the marks that are made on the surface. I may turn the canvas on my easel several times – vertical, horizontal, then upside-down, laid flat, then back to vertical, all the while making marks, splattering and dripping paint – each time finding something new and different, while negative and positive shapes become figures or environments, and begin to emerge and take form.

 The duration of the painting’s creation is a coming together of all things – past, present, future, experience, observation, memory, imagination, knowledge, and the unknown. I work with drawings in the same way as well. They all reveal to me my own perception, what I know, what I don’t know, and what I’d like to find out.

Hyla, 12×16″, ink wash on yupo paper
Hylonome, 24×36″, oil on canvas

There might be several iterations that many of my paintings go through before there is a strong visual that seems to sing with me. And that one I hold on to and continue a longer dialog with. Here is another progression of a painting that started from marks and evolved into a figure:
Ishi, 40×27”, oil on board

Progression of Ishi
Ishi, 40×27″, oil on board

I feel a painting is finished when all the elements relate, and everything feels connected. Most times, I have several paintings going at once, in different stages, and they are set all around in my studio. Each painting is a connection to other paintings, and though they may be on separate surfaces, they form a whole as threads or pieces of fabric are part of the whole in a personal handmade quilt. Their common thread is the filter through which they were created.

My belief is this: The more open we are to the dialog we can have with our art, the greater the visual vocabulary we build by practicing and remembering, and the more connected we see all aspects of what we do and experience – that life is art and art is life, the closer we’ll come to finding the truth and making the connection we’re truly meant to be making.

my home studio