Child on the beach watercolor step-by-step

child sitting cross-legged on the beach watercolor portrait painting When I was a kid, my family used to go to interesting places like beaches and river banks and forests a lot. I guess it was easier with one or two children than later with three or four (I have three younger brothers). The coast of the Black sea was a mandatory annual pilgrimage. I was sick a lot and the sea air, salty water, and the sun was supposed to help with the constantly stuffy nose, sore throat, and any other ailment. I don't remember if they did, but the summer days spent near the sea were some of the happiest days of my childhood.

This painting reminds me a lot about those days. Lazy picnics with watermelons and cherries, seashells and colorful stones which gave me a wonderful sense of discovery, every single one of them. "Kazinaki" - sweets made out of shelled sunflower seeds and caramelized sugar. Street artists.

The girl in the painting lives in Canada and is graduating from medical school this year. The painting is a graduation present for her parents (what an idea!).  As usual, I started with a sketch to get familiar with the subject, think through the composition, color, and hopefully, detect any possible issues. I recommended zooming in on the girl but the setting in this case is very important to the clients, the special place they went on a vacation to.

little girl on the beach watercolor sketch

Next step is the drawing. I used the grid method.

drawing little girl on the beach

On to the first washes:

watercolor painting in progress little girl on the beach

The left eye didn't quite work out at first, so I wash it off. Making the background deeper and filling in the skin:

child on the beach in progress

Fixed the eye. Even darker background, which turned out to be a bit of an overkill...:

child on the beach painting in progress

Lifted off some of the background, more detail throughout, especially on the figure and foreground:

little girl on the beach watercolor in progress

And the finished painting:

little girl on the beach watercolor painting

Interested in a painting based on your own favorite memories? More information here.

 

Painting classes start in a week!

June 2, to be precise. I can't wait! And not only because it's a welcome break from full-time, nay, overtime mommying. I love sharing what I learned through the years of art-making, even though I feel that I only barely touched the surface of what there is to be learned. My classes are expanding. In addition to both basic and intermediate levels at the Apple Valley Town hall, I am starting Intro to Watercolor at Burning House Art Studio on June 11 and another beginner class in Helendale, where I live (June 19). I'm also developing a couple of courses for middle/high school age kids and contemplating a portrait workshop some time in fall. Obviously, having a baby hasn't slowed me down enough :)

Not that I don't want occasionally to throw in the towel. Finding time for anything is even harder now...But for the sake of everyone involved, I have to paint. The darkest times in my life were marked by NOT painting, and getting back to making art (often, taking a class) usually pulled me out into the daylight.

Anyway, here are some more paintings from my intermediate class (the students would protest that none of theirs is finished, but oh well :)) :

yellow tulips photo

tulips watercolor painting student

tulips watercolor painting by student

yellow tulips watercolor painting by student

yellow tulips watercolor painting

Meet Baby Katia!

baby face watercolor sketch Here she is, my excuse for being so out of everything for almost half a year. She was born on April 3d, weighing 8lb 3.9oz and 20 inches tall.

baby girl

She's a healthy and mostly well-behaved baby (minus last week, when my mother-in-law was visiting. Looks like my kids just automatically become hyper when grandparents are around!) My son had a pretty tough time the first two weeks but seems to be recovering from the shock. He likes to hug and kiss the baby and always runs to the rescue when she's crying :) (he even says, "Al rescate!" - Spanish for "to the rescue!" when he does that).

brother and baby sister

I'm somewhat overwhelmed and trying to keep things low key and slow for now. I would love to have a couple of weeks of just me and the baby. Nevertheless, things are picking up speed...I've had several commission inquiries, some Etsy sales, and I'm getting ready to teach more classes in the summer.

More art from my watercolor painting students

sunflowers adult student painting watercolor As I promised, here are a couple of paintings by my adult watercolor painting students. Same setup with sunflowers on purple backdrop as the class demo I posted earlier. The color is probably quite a bit off in these shots - I didn't have the originals to compare to when I was editing the photos - but it should give you an idea of how talented these women really are. Pam (above) has never painted before but has an exceptional gift for bold and exciting color. The various purples and oranges in this painting were all mixed from a 6-color palette of cool and warm primaries. I am glad she decided to try painting.

Sharon (below) is a kindergarten teacher by day (a trade that must mean some superpowerful combination of patience and courage, not unlike watercolor painting ;)) and and a relentless painting experimenter by night. I think she will keep growing as an artist at very fast pace.

watercolor painting by adult student vase with sunflowers

Sunflowers on Purple

sunflowers on purple loose floral watercolor painting This painting was done from life as a demo for my watercolor class. I loved the contrast of light, thick sunflower stems against the purple draping - hence the unusual cropping of the composition to show only the stems and the bottom few of the flowers. I'll be posting my students' versions of the same setup soon! :)

 

closeup of sunflower painting in watercolor

 

watercolor painting of a vase with sunflowers detail

On Teaching Art Classes In The Middle Of Nowhere

Watercolor Class Demonstration I love teaching art. That is my revelation of the year. I get all excited and happy talking about complimentary colors and granulating pigments (O Cobalt! O mysteriously French Ultramarine!) I get blissfully carried away and don't notice that it's time to go home.

My Intro to Watercolor classes started here in the California high desert (Town of Apple Valley, to be precise) in September. Since then, I've had two 6-week sessions, and four out of five students in the first session carried on to the second (the fifth student couldn't make it because of a surgery). It was great. I'm adding two more classes (intermediate watercolor and plein air) and, hopefully, at least one more location, in January. I'll have to take a break when the baby comes (due date is April 5) but I plan on continuing with the classes in summer.

Geometric bodie still life in watercolor

Teaching art to somebody who is eager to learn is less like teaching and more like sharing something you really love. Most of my students are enthusiastic about painting (at least once they realize that watercolor isn't as horrible and scary as they've always heard) and, although not very young, absorb new knowledge like children. I find myself being excited about their little discoveries and revelations - because I remember discovering them and I myself keep learning new things every day, including from my students...

student painting in watercolor class

I had two concerns when I started the class. One, is that California High Desert is not exactly the center of civilization. Art, if it exists, hides from the daylight, heat, cold, and wind. Nothing happens here - with one exception, the Eclipse gallery. I was worried that my classes would just not generate enough interest and nobody would sign up. The second concern appeared when I realized that the majority of my students are somewhere around twice my age and might not take too well to being taught by someone who looks like she is, at best, fresh out of college. I think I saw some of that on the very first day of the class - but it didn't linger. At the end of the first session, I asked my students to fill out a course review and the papers I got back from them turned out to be a major confidence booster :). They loved the class and the instructor and were looking forward to the future classes.

woman painting in watercolor class

abstract watercolor painting by a student

Intro to Watercolor will restart on Friday, January 6, and the other two classes will begin on the day after. If you are interested in taking a class, click the "CLASSES" tab on the left. I will be adding information on the Intermediate and Plein Air classes soon.

At the Bottom of the Falls (Niagara ones)

original watercolor painting Niagara falls landscape Moody, quite unlike most of my happy and colorful watercolor paintings, but I like it. We went to Niagara Falls back when we could go places, in September 2008. It was rainy and stormy and foggy and misty most of our stay - which, coming from California, we did not mind too much :)

The painting was born out of a couple of exercises and concepts from Powerful Watercolor Landscapes (which turned out to be a very well structured, clear, useful, and overall worthy addition to my library).