Wednesday, October 30, 2013

What a great Kick-off!

The  Gallery Underground celebrated the kick-off of its popular weekend-long event The 3rd Annual Arlington Artists Alliance Studio Tour by a rousing Gallery reception and studio crawl through their Cyan, Red, and Blue Studios in Crystal City,   

Lucky attendees got to visit the working studios of all of the Studio Underground members and take a last look at Mary D. Ott's show, "Grass Etchings and Paintings show.

Blond Power at the Gallery photo- Wen LePore


photo- Nancy Murphree Davis
Blue Studio in action

B. Jernigan mid motion in the red studio photo- Jessica Kallista



Our "friend of the arts" James George, gave us his reflections in an article for the .Examiner.

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Changing weather produces changes in art - featured artist Elisabeth Hudgins

"Fall Six" by Elisabeth Hudgins

Each fall, my art making does change! I go back to my "first love" medium....watercolor. My schedule does not change much, but what I am inspired by does....
When fall sets in and the nights are cooler, the leaves start changing color and they become my inspiration. As they fall to the ground, I really start looking at them closely. I gather them up and set about making my "Leaf Impressions", actually making watercolor monoprints on paper with the leaves. . My Leaf Impression Paintings are all about the leaves...In this process, I am actually applying paint on the leaf, and laying the leaf on the paper. Sometimes, I will use a watercolor technique and work "wet into wet", and other times I will use a collage technique. The hardest part is for waiting for the painting to dry, so I can pull up the leaves off the paper and see what happened! But I love that elemnt of surprise. Then I will go back and overpaint, enhancing what I want to emphasize in the painting. To see a slide show of my process, please visit: http://www.elisabethhudgins.com/artlifeblog.html 
Several of my Leaf Impression paintings are in the Gallery Underground during the month of October... One, "Sycamore" features the largest sycamore leaf I have ever seen... a good 12"
"Sycamore" by Elisabeth Hudgins

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Q & A with Mary D. Ott - October's Featured artist


Mary D. Ott, October's featured artist took a few moments to answer some questions for us before her opening Friday night-


Q- When did you first call yourself an artist?

A- I first started to take art lessons—at the Torpedo Factoryin 1991. I started to consider myself an artist in 1995 when I sold my first painting at the Art League student show.

Q- What are people most surprised to find out about your work? 

    A-Most people have no idea about what is involved in printmaking. They are surprised        when I explain the processes to them.

Q- Do you have a favorite color palette? 

A-My favorite colors are blues and greens, as well as reds and orangesyou can see that in the works in my show.

Q- Do you have a favorite piece in the upcoming Grass Etching and Paintings show? 

A-My favorite piece is "Wide Grass." It turned out just the way I was hoping it would.



Q- Is there anything you would like us to know? 

A-The idea for the "wide grass" etching plate came from the way I create my grass paintings. 


This special Gallery Underground exhibit features two related bodies of work:

Ott created the “grass paintings” by dipping embroidery thread in acrylic paint and running the thread down the canvas. The thread acted as a fine brush, producing lines that look like blades of grass.


The “grass etchings” were all printed from the same “wide grass” etching plate but on different types of paper, with different colors of ink, twice on the same piece of paper, through two layers of paper, and so forth. Some of the etchings appear realistic, while others are abstract in nature.  

Come meet Mary and many of the Gallery's resident artists this Friday October 4th from 5 to 8!