To enter to win Megan's painting, "Red & Green" go to Daily Paintworks and click on the link at the top of the page announcing their interview.
From Megan's DPW Gallery page:
I love pictures. I think all of us on Daily Paintworks do. I am especially fond of the figure and still lives. I lived in Italy and I still look to the italian painters for inspiration. I took lessons from a professional illustrator several years ago and began to paint in the "all a prima" method. I like its synthesis and immediacy. (click to view bio)
Tell us a bit about how you first started painting.
I remember drawing a lot before kindergarten. My dad worked at a plant and the xeroxes (photocopies) were one-sided. My brothers and I drew on the blank side. I remember thinking drawing was a natural part of the day.
Did you have any stops and starts in your painting career?
I have had some pretty big stops and starts in my life. My parents didn’t think art was a serious subject, so they emphasized math courses and other academic topics. I majored in English Literature in college and took art classes as a kind of forbidden fruit. I worked in the publishing industry for three years after college. I took a graphics course at the New School and was discouraged from pursuing design. This bothered me, but I applied to Studio Art Centers International in Florence Italy. I got accepted, to my surprise, and stayed in Italy for the next fifteen years.
Red & Green (click to see original image) Enter to win by clicking on the link at the top of the home page announcing Megan's interview. |
What mediums and genres have you experimented with? Which ones have "stuck" and which ones have fallen away?
I began studying drawing first, thinking I needed to draw before learning to paint. This might have been a mistake. When I finally got the courage to pick up oil paints, I had never seriously tried anything like acrylic or watercolor.
Which ones are you looking forward to exploring?
I might someday play with watercolor, now that the idea of color and value doesn’t frighten me to death.
Still Life in Green and Orange (click to see original image) |
Who or what inspires you most?
What inspires me the most is pictures, paintings and drawings that others have done and images of nature. I can’t say music inspires me directly, but it is always present.
What does procrastination look like for you?
Procrastination takes the form of obligations -- obligations to make money, obligations to other people. When I can’t paint for stretches I get anxious and cranky. I’m no longer panic stricken when I can’t paint. I know the cure is simply to get back to painting. Once I do--I can usually overcome the despair.
Two Shells (click to see original image) |
What techniques work to ensure that you make time for your art?
The techniques I use to make time for my art are simply single-minded insistence and prayer. I find that talking to other painters is essential. People who aren’t in the arts often make me feel like wanting to be a painter is the equivalent of walking the plank.
How do you generally arrive at ideas for your paintings?
I get ideas for my paintings from the objects in my studio. I arrange them most of the time, but there are times when I look at a shelf and I like the chance arrangement. When I lived in Italy, it seemed that every corner, every view was a painting.
Still Life After Cotan (click to see original image) |
How do you keep art "fresh?" What techniques have helped you avoid burnout and keep your work vibrant and engaging?
Sometimes it’s hard, but when I really feel down, I read “Words to Paint By” by the late painter Irwin Greenberg. I tacked his list of 100 rules to my studio wall. I also find that a small painting, done without expectations, also helps me unlock my mind.
What do you feel you are learning about right now as an artist?
Right now, I am learning that I want to get back to simple paintings. I love seeing the work of artists I don’t know, new and old. This inspires me and also makes me evaluate what it is I like and don’t want in my own painting.
Trompe L'oeil Still Life (click to see original image) |
What makes you happiest about your art?
What makes me happiest about my painting is that, sometimes when I sell a painting, I realize that people fall in love with it. Not always of course, but often enough to make it an important reason to be a painter.
Thanks, Megan!
© 2014 Sophie Catalina Marine
© 2014 Sophie Catalina Marine
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