Posts Tagged ‘Art’

Australian Aboriginal Art

Australian Aboriginal Art Painting

Australian Aboriginal Art Painting on display in Melbourne, Aus

Australian Aboriginal art has always been a huge inspiration in my abstract artwork. I love indigenous art from cultures all over the world, but Aboriginal art always held a certain attraction for me – the colors, the patterns, and the symbolism are all so imbued with meaning. Aboriginal art in its purest form is not separate from daily life – it is part of it, intricately interwoven with their belief system.

A few days ago I had the joy of viewing a collection of Australian Aboriginal art paintings on permanent display at the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne, Australia. Seeing these works in person is a moving experience because the artworks function on a level that goes far beyond the visual.

Aboriginal Painting

Aboriginal Painting in the National Gallery of Victoria

Many Aboriginal art paintings represent the “Dreamtime” or “Dreaming”, which are terms used to describe various Aboriginal creation stories – what we would call myths. These creation stories explain the origins of the tribes, the formations of certain geological features, as well as outline their spiritual and philosophical beliefs. The Dreamtime explains the balance and relationship of all these aspects.

Aboriginal Art in Gallery

Collection of Aboriginal Art Paintings

Traditional Aboriginal paintings often resemble a map of sorts. Traditional symbols are used to represent water, waterholes, clouds, stars, fire, smoke, rain, cliffs and sandhills. There are also symbols that represent people, especially people sitting, alone or in groups, and often in front of a fire or camp site.

Look at the painting above, on the far right. The half-circles probably represent people and the concentric circles most likely represent a meeting place, such as a fire, camp site, stone or well.

close up of Aboriginal Art Dot Painting

close up of Aboriginal Art Dot Painting

Australian Aboriginal art is most commonly noted for their dots, as you can see in the close-up above. The dots can represent things like stars or sparks, although they are also used to obscure the meaning of the Dreamtime paintings. The secrets of the Dreamtime are only meant for the initiated, so traditionally they have been closely guarded. With the rising popularity of Aboriginal art to global collectors, many Aboriginal artists have painted the dots to cover up the symbolism underneath.

The dots are painted by dipping a paintbrush into a pot of acrylic paint and then dotting the paint on the canvas, usually with the paintbrush being held at a 90 degree angle to the canvas. Canvases are usually laid flat on the ground, so the artist works in a sitting position and moves around the painting.

Aboriginal Dot Painting by Tommy Watson

Awilyulu by Tommy Watson

The paintings above and below are contemporary Australian Aboriginal art paintings by Tommy Watson, born in 1935. The painting above, Awilyulu, was painted in 2003. This paintings depicts his country, with sandhills at the top and water snakes towards the center. The painting below, Anamarapiti, was painted in 2002 and depicts the land where he grew up. The circles represent rockholes.

Aboriginal Art by Tommy Watson

Anamarapiti by Tommy Watson

Australian Aboriginal art continues to hold a deep fascination for me. I am immensely pleased to finally be in Australia, where I can learn more about these artworks and the artists who create them.

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New Twitter Backgrounds Featuring Thaneeya’s Art

Hey folks! Due to the overwhelming popularity of my first set of free Twitter backgrounds, I have just released a new set of totally free Twitter backgrounds featuring my art! 10 new designs are available for you to choose from. You can see a sample below.

These Twitter backgrounds are really detailed, so you must view them larger to see the full effect!

Click here to check out my latest free Twitter backgrounds. ENJOY!!

Free Twitter Backgrounds featuring the art of Thaneeya McArdle

Free Twitter Backgrounds featuring the art of Thaneeya McArdle

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How to Sell Art: 3 Creative Ways to Make Money From Your Art

Learn how to sell art in creative ways in this informative blog post!

My art and art business were recently featured in a blog post on Meylah, a Seattle-based site that helps creative people figure out how to sell their creations online. Thanks to the Internet, it is now much easier for artists and creative types to make a living doing what they love – and Meylah explains how to do it.

How to Sell Art: 3 Creative Ways to Sell Your Art

An informative article on Meylah.com that explains various techniques for marketing and selling your art, featuring moi!

For this article I was more than happy to answer questions and provide insight into various techniques that I’ve used to help get my art “out there”. If you are a painter or maker of things, then I highly recommend this site as a useful resource to help get your business off the ground and get you where you want to be!

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Day of the Dead thoughts

Learn how to draw a skull!

Lately I’ve had Day of the Dead on the brain, mainly because I’ve been working on Day of the Dead articles and tutorials for Art is Fun.  The other night, after I’d been preparing tutorials for Day of the Dead art projects, I laid in bed thinking about skulls and those empty places where the eyes were.  And thinking that my eyeballs are now resting in those two holes in my skull, as they’d been all my life – something I always take for granted and accept as fact and never question or even consider. 

So I laid there thinking about the solidity of skulls and the soft fluidity of eyeballs, contrasting the living with the dead.  And thinking that there is a profound difference between having a functioning brain and eyeballs beneath this skull, versus having a dry, bare, exposed and empty skull – and knowing that one day, that is exactly what my body will become.  My eyeballs, these lovely organs that allow me to see the visual world around me, will no longer exist.  It’s all very basic on one level; we all know that we will die.  Duh, right?  But to really contemplate death, especially one’s own death, is an entirely different experience than to just passively be aware of it (or to ignore it completely).

So thinking of Day of the Dead incited all these ruminations circling around mortality, ephemerality, the cycles of existence… we’re here one minute and gone the next, but where do we (our spirits, our minds) go?  No one really knows.  We have theories and opinions, hopes and visions, but no solid evidence of anything.

I guess that makes some people scared, so they either try to ignore the inevitability that they will die someday, or they cling to their beliefs, which are really just stories they tell themselves to try to make sense of it all.  Personally, I find beauty and wonder in the mystery of not-knowing.  I don’t want to try to fit the future into a preconceived storyline.  I just want to ride the wave and see what happens.  And this brings me a sense of inner peace.

Pondering the inevitability of death also brings everything back to basics… such contemplation leads to discerning what really matters in life, if we’re all gonna die someday anyway?  The way we conduct our lives often seems to depend on our own individual answers to this question. To me, it suddenly makes my priorities more clear: I want to be a good person and have a positive impact on others. 

So anyway, back to what started this whole train of thought…

I just finished a page explaining Day of the Dead (for those who may not know) and showing my Day of the Dead Art.  Now I’m writing tutorials on how to draw skulls, hence the funky animation at the top of this post.  In the coming weeks I plan to expand on these tutorials to include instructions for making colorful Dia de los Muertos calaveras, like this one.  It’ll be fun!

Dia de los Muertos calaveras

 

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Self-Portraits

Self-Portrait of Thaneeya, featuring one of her drawings

Fiddling with Photoshop the other day, I put together this photo of me that was taken this past Christmas, with my drawing Unraveling the Telescopic Mind Incident.  I made two versions, and I’m not sure which one I prefer.  Any opinions?  I like them both! 

Self-Portrait of Thaneeya with her drawing

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