Friday, 2 May 2014

A look back at April... and what's to come...



Let's see, April... I prepared and gave a bunch of seminars for my "art and intervention" class... it was sooo much work, but really fulfilling work. At the moment we are doing seminars about all the other creative interventions (besides art therapy), I had to prepare dramatherapy and psychodrama and I'm busy finishing up my play therapy seminar. It is so interesting. I wish I had gone to a play therapist or sandbox therapist when I was a kid! I'd even love to go to sandbox therapy now.. but I don't think it's for 'adults'... although I still feel like a kid I guess 24 puts me in the 'adult' category... hmmm... what a weird thing that is. 

This is a summary of April in pictures:

Creating a studio space outside my Mom's house...

Done in 2 minutes... so much more to express.. neeeeed bigger canvasses!

I still need to think of a title for this one...

#Detail... Beautiful cracks...

#Detail...
Got my degree!!
Me and my best friend = *Epic happiness for surviving this tough degree
and kicking its ass - both of us with distinction!!
It was her birthday and (of course) I put a whole heck of
a lot of sparklez in her birthday card which she rubbed all over my face, and hers...
and threw them obviously all over our boyfriend's and on my Dad... it was awesome...  
I think everyone should always where sparklez all over their faces always...
that is how nature intended it to be... I would love to have sparklez all over my face daily...
 It's just so magical... 
I accidentally broke my labtop screen - whilst I had seminars to prepare for -
and my boyfriend came to the rescue hooking up the big computer screen
 to my labtop... this has absolutely nothing to do with my art but the whole set up
 was just so funny and awesome and I just had to share it...
Going from 190 cm x 190 cm to this little bitch canvas was a tough challenge...
but I had the extra canvasses and I just had to use them...
I'm definitely not buying canvasses this small again though... 
San-Marí van Wyk, Remembering, 2014. Acrylic on canvas, 40.64 x 50.8 cm.
I do like the end result though... what do you think?
#Detail.. More beautiful cracks
#Detail.. Paint is awesome...
So I planned on using these brushes and stuff... but I ended up just using plastic spoons..
I found that spoons (the backs of spoons) make excellent brushes...
I just like this photo...

So what's next? Well I entered 7 of my big 190 cm x 190 cm works into the "Future Generation Art Prize" international competition... but we only hear from them in June... I am super excited about it and very hopeful, I hope and believe my artworks will find their place somewhere in this world, and an international competition is maybe just what I need... So hold thumbs... 

I'm still working on my concept revolving around blindfolds as a metaphor for us never being able to see what's going to happen in the future, where we will be exactly, who will be in our lives... good and bad... we have to make our choices and it's like walking a path blindfolded.. hopefully you have something/someOne guiding you... but it is still blindly trusting and we don't know if we are going to fall or bump our heads or hit a wall, we can only hope there is a door somewhere in that wall that we can find and that will lead us to an awesome place... anyway, point is, life is like walking a path blindfolded. 

But I recently got obsessed with the song "Never Grow Up" by Taylor Swift, one of my all-time favorite songs... it really hits close to my heart.. when I was a kid I use to remind myself to enjoy every moment of playing and having care-free fun.. because I knew I was going to grow up too fast.. and I never wanted to... I never wanted to grow up. So now at 24 and feeling how I am maturing and becoming more and more grown up I hold on tightly to 12 year old (and younger) San-Marí inside my heart.. and the memories of the house I grew up in... my purple room with the blue waves painted in the center and the green stripes above and below... screwing hooks into my ceiling so I can drape linen around my bed and make a secret hide out... my grandparent's home... my grandfather working in his garden... and doing his crossword puzzles... walking outside under the big tree with my grandma... my mom coming to fetch me after work by them and us talking and laughing in the car ride home and seeing the beautiful sunset... riding bicycle endlessly... playing spy with my two best friends... believing the world was just full of sparklez and rainbows... I want to capture that... I frankly can't wait to start painting around this concept... 
    





Sunday, 6 April 2014

Intratextual Expression: Part 1 & 2


So, I entered the "For the love of art" competition this past week
... did not make the cut - which only makes me more determined and motivated to work harder and harder and prove myself and my art to all the curators, galleries and art collectors of the world.
So if you are reading this - San-Marí van Wyk - remember the name. 
You are going to begin seeing, and hearing about my work, everywhere you look. 

But anyway, here are some pics from the work I entered into the competition - and the creative journey that brought them to life. I'm off to go paint now - the Absa competition that I missed said blood, sweat and tears, that is what goes into being a successful artist. So lets go, go, go - lots to do, lots to paint, lots to create...

Pouring glue whilst downing some illegal coffee..

#Allnighters - love them, makes me very nostalgic of
studying Fine Arts, especially 4th year..

Always good the morning after an allnighter

San-Marí van Wyk, Intratextual Expression: Part 1, 2014.
Acrylic on canvas, 42 x 59.5 cm.

Work in progress...

Work in progress...


San-Marí van Wyk, Intratextual Expression: Part 2, 2014.
Tissue paper and cold glue on canvas, 42 x 59.5 cm.

Both together

#Details of Intratextual Expression: Part 2

#Details of Intratextual Expression: Part 2

Yes! Let's do this thing!


Monday, 24 March 2014

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Sunday, 23 March 2014

A taste of what's to come...


I got so distracted these last two months by my other work, but now I am so insanely focused and determined, it's like a major high! I found a cool quote from Bruce Lee saying "The successful warrior is the average man, with laser-like focus" - and that is my most favorite motivational quote at the moment. So, I am almost done with this one new piece and I am starting a new smaller one for the "for the love of art" competition coming up veeery soon. I had to redo my studio again cause the people we rent from wanted their closet that my painting was leaning against and then they gave us another smaller closet and a big chest... and there was so much stuff in the bigger closet so I had to spend a whole day clearing up the room and making studio space again! These are some pics of the progress and the experience :)

I must say I really miss my 4th Year Fine Arts, no matter how insanely tough it was... I miss the guidance from my mentor Frikkie Eksteen, an amazing painter. It is tough being on your own and having to build a stronger and stronger sense of self discipline and focus - you have to in order to make it in the art world. 

Oh how I love expression

A taste of what is to come

Getting ready

Before...

...After  ;P

Almost done!

My studio space :)


Monday, 3 March 2014

My awesome tiny studio :P haha


Aaaah! It has been a month! How can this be? *gasp! So this time has passed so super quickly and I think it is highly due to the fact that every Wednesday I drive down to my mom's (an hour away) so that Thursday mornings I can drive another hour to Potch where I am taking one subject - because that is the only place in South Africa offering the subject.. which is called "Art and Intervention" and deals a lot with art therapy and the whole concept of how art can bring healing to people. This, of course, is something I am highly interested in - my final year fine arts practical and research paper dealt widely on the subject. ..and then I drive back to Pretoria (two hours from Potch) where I currently live. So that is a lot of driving smack in the middle of the week and somehow the time from one Thursday afternoon to a Wednesday goes just about like the speed of light. But anyway, I wanted to post some pictures proving that if an artist needs to paint they WILL find a way to convert the teeniest tiniest of spaces into a studio as seen below. Yes I miss my big studio space at the University where I could work as big as I liked on canvasses that encompassed my whole stretched out body... but I am totally making due with what is possible and available to me at this point in time. I actually converted the small deck area by our front door into studio space. (We live in a tiny cottage in a backyard - being students and all...). It is such a challenge working smaller, because when I do my expressionistic part of my paintings it takes like two minutes to finish.. then I'm like... I need twenty more canvasses I'm not done expressing dammit... In my recent works I've decided to mix my two favorite styles and add figures to my crazy expressions... We'll just have to wait and see how it turns out... ;) 

Needless to say I cannot wait to one day have my very own house and have a whole entire big room be my studio space! One day...





Plus, so my whole dream of nurturing a love of art in children is slowly but surely starting to take form.. it is starting with one art and craft workshop but I will turn this into full blown art classes.. focusing on cultivating the unique creative spirit of each individual child. This is very important to me. I think the greatest of artists will be made if they get the opportunity and motivation to explore their own inner creativity and imaginations, with complete creative freedom. Freedom to discover their own unique creative identities. What amazing new art movements may come into existence when young artists are free to dream and explore the magic inside of them? Anything is possible.This makes me very excited!


Tuesday, 4 February 2014

Chapter 1 - Creation


My first work of my final year Fine Arts body of work. The lecturers thought it was WAY to busy, haha, that's me for you - all over the place in my head. If you go to the link www.stateoftheart.co.za/art-by-san-mar%C3%AD-van-wyk/151 you can view it on the State of the Art Online Gallery where it is for sale.

 In my body of work I was inspired by Art Therapy, and the healing potential of art. The rules are that there are absolutely NO rules, which is friggen awesome I think. You can freely express yourself however you wish, letting go of all your inhibitions. You just go. You are completely and utterly free. That is how I like to create. Absolute freedom of expression.

 I looked to the CoBrA art movement, and artists like Karel Appel for inspiration. They stood for the same freedom of expression as I believe in. Appel believed that "impulse, energy, speed and action" were the most important for the painting process, because it was through those elements, he believed, that genuine, honest expressive outcomes would arise. I believe that as well. 

My body of work for 2013 is a series of artworks divided into three Chapters and each consisting of three phases: Creation, Translation, and Reinterpretation. This one was my first Creation and during the Creation stage I would make a painting as free and spontaneous as possible, focusing on expressing myself and having no preconceived image or end product in mind.

This painting was the first of the year and the first before a heck of a lot of growth and development in my painting skills and process. I'll post more works soon. And I'm very excited because I am home now and I bought a bunch of canvasses today and I am going to start painting tomorrow, so I will be posting some process and progress photos and some new artworks very soon! Super excited!

San-Marí vam Wyk, Chapter 1 - Creation, 2013. Acrylic on Canvas, 190 x 190 cm.

Details:
 












Monday, 27 January 2014

So Much More than Just a Snowy Lanscape


So looking at this painting straight up it just looks like a snowy landscape (looked at from above), you can't really make up any extreme detail. The awesome thing about big paintings is that their is always a lot of space for extreme details, details that sometimes the eye will miss if it's looked at quickly without zooming in and really LOOKING at it. Once you really LOOK at it - it's like magic. 

This piece is the third in my white painting series. It consists of a layer of newsprint and tracing paper covered with layers of green, blue and yellowish whites and also white acrylic paint mixed with varnish - gloss and matt. It has lots of tiny little cracks in certain places which bring out a certain amount of character in this painterly landscape. It is my last painting of 2012 and my third year of BA Fine Arts.

San-Marí van Wyk, So Much More than Just a Snowy Landscape, 2012.
Mixed Media on Canvas, 190 x 190 cm.

Details: