Blog
- Published on
There are a few things I'm clear on:
1) I want to immerse myself in my process so that I can feel the rhythms of nature,
2) the colours that I work with have me feel amazing,
3) my perspective/viewpoint is unique and I think impactful,
4) I want to have an impact,
5) I want people to be attracted to my 'brand' of art because I create something unique.
A very good question comes up from this. Why paint at all, why not take a photo and leave it to that?
The painting process, mixing paint and putting a mark on the canvas is my unique 'voice' being spoken through the decisions that I make. What I create comes entirely from my intuition and skills. I feel like that is important. It's my imprint on this time in history.
If your painting is about colour, then why not abstraction, playing with just colours? Representational art is something I enjoy, the challenge of it. Creating the feel of the real thing is an important part for me.
I said to my husband this morning, when I showed him a proposed upcoming painting, that it feels like ballet. The movement down the jagged edge of a leaf, the rhythm of the spacing and shaping is magical. I want to experience those rhythms coming from by brush. I want to understand how the colour changes across the leaf. How the different values and hues end up representing the real leaf, as I understand it.
This is the photo that I was sharing with my husband. It's a prototype for a future painting.
That's the key, as I understand it. My understanding. My mark making. My vision.
In this regard making art feels self-centered and self-serving. Which it really is. As Rick Rubin says what's good for the artist is ultimately good for the viewer. He states that art making can never be about the viewer, ever.
In my mind, pleasing a viewer will never be sustainable, because viewers have differing ideas of what they like. It would be like constantly chasing your tail. You think you are making what the audience will like/buy, but you could be totally wrong.
It seems I ask myself, fairly frequently, what's the point of all this? Each time I come to a greater understand and conviction about the contribution that I have to make to my community.
What I've done in the past couple of years is look specifically where my art can make a difference. In 2023, I donated a painting to the rebuilding of Lahaina. I cried when I realized my beautiful painting was going to a great new collector, but also helping those who lost everything in the devastating fire of 2023. This year, I will be producing and donating all the profits of a 36 x 36" painting for Malawi Africa. I'm going to fund a water well. I guess there are (5) communities that are in dire need of water wells. It feels great already to be putting this together for people in need.
In 2023, I also sent out close to 180 mini prints of one of my artworks. I do this each year. It's a special gift that I send to my email recipients. The kind words and appreciation I receive from this little gift is quite amazing. It feels good. Art makes us feel good. I feel good creating it. Collectors feel good receiving it. It's a win, win. If you would like to be included in this free gift, simply join my email list and leave me your full mailing address. You can do that here.
Next time you purchase an original or reproduction of an artists work, just know that you are helping to make their career and dreams possible. Your support is deeply appreciate in ways that are not easily measured. When an artist is support they are able to continue to produce and share their work.
I for one, appreciate all the support that I receive. It is such a gift.
Namaste.
- Published on
Let me give you a tour of the books that I find particularly helpful. Just a note, if you click the title of the books, it is a link to the listing on Amazon. If you decide to purchase using that link I earn a small remuneration. “As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.”
This book explores not only how art gets made but also how often it doesn't get make. The difficulties that artists come up against and how often they stop the art process because of the challenges. This book is written by artists for artists. What is it really like to make art?
This is a go to book for me. An easy read and one that sets me up on my two feet again when I run into the challenges of making my art.
Chase Jarvis is an interesting guy. He was on his way to Grad School, going after a career he came to realize is not what he really wanted. He left Grad School, grabbed his camera and set out to attend every extreme sports event he could afford to get to in order to take the action photos that he was drawn to take. He was largely self taught, and wanted to make a career as a professional photographer. This refreshing book that he has written outlines the journey he took to his career. It's quite inspiring and thought provoking. Check it out.
I hope these suggestions help you in your artmaking. Do you have a book that you are reading that you want to recommend? Let me know. I love learning and I'd love to hear what you are reading. Leave me a comment below.
- Published on
It's January 1st, the perfect time to reflect on the successes from last year. Here's the run down.
1) I painted for (7) shows last year, getting in to 6 of them.
- (4) shows with the Federation of Canadian Artists with 6 pieces being accepted by jury review and the sale of my largest piece through the Federation, so far. "Love @ First Sight" pictures below had two buyers vying to purchase this piece. Very exciting.
- "Luminous" was accepted by jury review into the 55th Annual International Juried Exhibition with the Society of Canadian Artists in Toronto. I flew out for the gala, and what a treat that was.
- My solo show at the Nomad Gallery. Wow! It was elbow room only during the opening reception. How wonderful to see so many come out to be a part of the show.
The Rebel bookclub
2) I took on a month long watercolour painting project. I set out to try plein air painting with this project and soon realized that the cold, windy weather made it so uncomfortable that I would jot down the start of an idea, take a photo and finish the piece back in the studio. It was an amazing project. I produced (33) small pieces and sold all but three of them.
5) Commission were a big part of my year. From Ontario, to Idaho, to local clients It was fun putting these projects together for them.
6) I was asked to speak and present with Opus Langley & Granville Island as well as present at the South Surrey White Rock Art Society. Great to share knowledge with other artists.
Opus Langley
Opus Granville Island
7) One of my paintings, "The Delightful 6" was accepted, by jury review, into The International Artists Magazine. It's a publication out of Scottsdale Arizona that reaches over 100,000 reads around the world. Wow. It was awarded a finalist in the Florals and Gardens category and printed in the Feb/Mar edition. Very cool.
My husband and I
My son and I.
2023 was amazing on so many levels and it was also one of the most challenging. The deeper I get into my art career the more I find myself refining what it is I really want to do with my art. I am embarking on another philanthropic project as well as planning to create a number of gorgeous paintings for shows/exhibitions and special collections. I have some big plans for next year. Stay tuned.
All the best for a wonderful 2024.
- Published on
Art began as a way to document the lives and activities of early people. It was a way to leave a mark for future peoples to understand and learn from. Which evolved into intentionally telling stories with the use of images. The early church ministered to largely illiterate people and the way they communicated their teachings was by way of painting the story through images. Those images were often used to influence the viewer, perhaps frightening them to behave a certain way, to donate gifts to the church etc. The creation of art was then adopted by patrons, wealthy landowners, nobility, and clergy, to present themselves in the best light, to show their place in society, their stature, their wealth. When patronage died out artists were forced to find their own patrons in the form of gallerists or private collectors who would fund the production of their work. This is largely the environment that we still find ourselves in.
Irregardless of who commissioned the artwork whether patron or artist driven, art is a way of saying something that words cannot convey. To invoke emotions, to stir ideas, to create a mood or reflection about something meaningful, to make a political statement that goes otherwise unheard.
With the advancement of cell phone camera technology, why not just take a picture, manipulate it with a filter and use AI to enhance the image and call it a day? Why even bother creating a handmade piece of art?
The answer is in the handmade. Artists make a mark that conveys emotion and intent by the very materials they choose and the way they apply those marks. I mean no discredit to photographers - their form of art is simply a different medium.
As a fine-art oil painter, I have something to say with my art. With my HEart. The handmade, personal process of creating my art, navigating the myriad decisions that need to be made, means I get to put my unique stamp out into the world. Which is a bit self serving and egotistical because I have the belief that what I have to say is important. My work has an impact, a positive, beautiful impact. Never before in my life have I felt so on purpose with my creativity.
I know this must be true for the artists that have gone before me because they created their art in often dire conditions. Why the tenacity? Why continue when the challenges are many?
Art matters. "Art fulfills something in us that we lack" - Richard Serra. France, the most visited country with Italy a close second, are so sought after simply because of their history, art and beauty. The value of their art is immeasurable. Art is unbelievably worth it - Jordan Peterson. Katerina Gregos said "Art is the unnecessary, necessity. Without art the banality of reality would be intolerable."
For me personally, I understand that creating art is my purpose. This is what I am gifted to do and I intend to do it to the best of my ability. I have something to say with my art. With the current state of the battles going on in our world today, I know that our nervous systems are on overload. If I can bring some peace, a moment of beauty to restore a sense of calm, I'm all for that.
As a certified life coach, one of my past clients faced a two hour commute from her home to get to any park or natural spaces and once there, she had to share it with thousands of people. This is a type of poverty that seems intolerable. The disconnection with mother nature.
We need art. We need beauty. We need a connection to mother nature.
If you are feeling disconnected, over stimulated, and need a bit of peace, it is my hope that one of my paintings would help sort that out for you. You can see my art at www.cielellis.com
- Published on
So let me see if I can capture what I'm meaning.
When I was young, there was a lot of trauma in my life. My nervous system had a hard time because there was always a new challenge. The result was that I shut down a lot of my emotions, withdrew, had few friends, and felt quite lonely. The longing to feel 'well' has been a driver for in many years of counselling and my 30 years of journaling.
Through my healing journey I have been seeking a sense of myself where I'm able to feel all the 'feels' without being overwhelmed. My art practice has been the best self help that I have ever done. When I'm at the canvas it's all me. My desire to create the idea meets my skills, and my pigments, while my intuition/muse meets me and together we explore how to bring the vision to life. During the painting process I have to trust myself. I have to listen closely to what the painting wants next from me, and I have to listen to the fatigue in my mind and body if I sit for too long. It is such a dance.
I'm so immersed in the painting that I often find myself crying as I complete my painting. It is such a wonderful feeling. Then I sit back and revel in what I've created. I often wonder "I made that?" It's a fascinating process for me.
This is the love, connection, acceptance and relaxation that I crave. It's where I feel well.
The other remarkable aspect is that what I create is a point of connection for my collectors/viewers. My challenge is to convey the love I felt making the painting in such a way that viewers can connect to it. I'm working on that.
What makes me absolutely overjoyed is when a collector says they would like to own a piece of my work. It is the full circle moment when the love I felt with the initial idea lands with the right person to receive it. It feels like a give and take exchange of positivity and LOVE.
It's my goal and hope that the paintings currently in inventory and the ones that I have planned for the coming years in my career will continue to connect with people in a meaningful way. That my art will make a difference in the world. That I will be able to donate paintings for a philanthropic vision, doing good for others beyond a single collector.
Onward we go. Bring on 2024. I'm ready to celebrate over the holidays and meet the new year with new vitality for this amazing career.
Thanks for coming along on the journey with me.
- Published on
True fact, John and Eva Brodie were our neighbours. I would go visit them. Their home, the bones of it anyway were beautiful. Inlaid hardwood floors in all the main rooms, lino in the kitchen, bevelled glass french doors, the works.
Untrue fact, the spaces were lovely. Here is where the 'wait a minute' pause comes in. As I walked away from posting this little story, I hear myself say, "it wasn't like that at all." No disrespect to John and Eva, but the place was a cluttered mess. Papers stacked upon stacks and that smell that you can't quite pinpoint. A touch of dust, age, and forgotten corners. Nothing foul, just age.
True fact, Eva did have a gorgeous garden. Is there where my love of flowers came from? Who knows. I don't really think so. I do remember her having lovely bouquet's inside that perfumed the house.
Untrue fact, she had a baby grand piano. I think she had an upright.
So why have the details gotten all scrambled in my own mind? Because I'm an idealist. I likely walked into her home, saw the clutter, and my imagination took over and imaged the spaces all cleaned up and beautified.
Quick fact about me, I see the beauty in even the most mundane things. Certainly in my paintings, I'm able to focus on the beauty of an everyday object. See they come alive for me. Something about the shapes, the colours that are cast as the sun moves across the surface. I find it mesmerizing.
My husband and I were talking about my work versus say landscape scenes. Where I am focused in a localized colour, dancing in the subtle nuances of a closely cropped image, a landscape is filled with so many textures, shapes, lighting effects - I think I find it a bit overwhelming.
The flower paintings allow me to at peace with the image and relax into the variations that create the shapes. It's fascinating to me.
All this being said, I'm currently working on a landscape and really enjoying it. There are a few differences with this piece.
1) I'm not working from a detailed line drawing, which I do when I paint the complicated florals. I had a detailed line drawing, but it vanished when I applied the first wash of oil paint. Darn it.
2) Without a line drawing I'm really relying on the shapes, colours and placement of the pigment. It feels easier somehow. I feel a learning lesson in the process of all this. Pretty excited about it.
Back to my idealist ideas. Ideally I can capture the beauty of this place that has special significance for us.
The ramblings of an artist finding her authenticity in the idealistic memories.
- Published on
The wins include completing probably my best work, so far. The paintings are amazing.
That has not been the case. I also know that art sales have been slow for every artist that I've spoken to regardless of price, genre, sales channel or experience. It's not just me.
As a result, I've been doing some personal work to try to sort myself. One of the books/interviews that I keep going back to are those from Rick Rubin. Now if you are not familiar with Rick he is multi-award winning music producer who has been in the industry for 40 years. While he has decades of experience his ego does not come charging into the room to tell you all about his collaborations.
Rick is an intuitive, meditative man, with some really wonderful insights.
- being great is a devotional act
- his only goal is to make something that he likes and he continues to work on it until he likes it - simple formula
- the audience comes last - if you truly do it for yourself it will ultimately be good for the audience too.
- making art is like a diary entry - it has nothing to do with anyone else
- make things to have your experience with it, then share it.
- manifestation is never based on the outcome, never asking for the result rather rising to the occasion to make something great.
This, I think, is where I've gone astray. I think I was focused on the outcome more than on the love of creating what I was truly inspired by. Which isn't entirely a true statement because the pieces I've created are absolutely loves to me, but the context of creating them for show/accolades and the expectations of sales has tainted the experience for me.
I think this creative act is sacred. It's between me and God. It's the precious gift I can give of my heart and spirit. It's a piece of me that I make myself vulnerable enough to create and then share.
I want to add that Rick's words about art being like a diary entry and really not about anyone else has been a valuable concept. In the past few weeks I have had another artist bring some pretty harsh comments to me. Her reflections on the quality of my work and how I've missed the mark in the perfection of my creations. Yikes.
The work comes through me, once I share it, it's available for interpretation and critique. I know that. What I find challenging is to stay true to my creative soul in the face of these comments. They still shake me, which is likely the lesson here - growing my own resolve so the comments do not shake me.
For Christmas my son asked that I make him a painting. I've chosen a landscape with a scene of Okanagan Lake at sunset. It is going to be amazing.
I am not known for landscape work as I haven't focused there in my career. However, I'm enjoying myself. What I've learned from the floral paintings is helping me so much in this landscape. I have about 8 days of work left on this piece. The top quarter is all that has been properly painted in. (If you were wondering why the foreground looks all fuzzy).
In the act of creating art, I meet myself at the canvas each and every time. I meet my doubt, my worry, my insecurities as well as my hopes, joy, and excitement. Being creative is a full bodied, full emotioned experience.
I want to pay tribute to a fellow artist whom we lost. It is such a tragedy. He finally had arranged his life in such a way to be a creative full time. I don't know what happened, what challenges he was up against, however, he stepped off this life journey and decided not to continue. He was so talented and had so much he wanted to accomplish. I'm grieving for him. I never met him. I knew of him from social media and a mutual friend. I'm grieving the potential that has now been lost.
I'm also grieving for the genocide that is currently going on in Gaza. The destruction of lives is unconscionable. Why is there such brutality in the world? Why are people still starving in Africa? Why do our first nations not have clean drinking water? So many questions I can't answer.
All I can do is my best with this life I have been given to live and as far as I can tell I'm meant to create beautiful art for the sake of bringing beauty and love into the consciousness of those who interact with it.
Next year I'm planning to product and donate a painting/products to fund the installation of a water well in Malawi Africa. Stay tuned. The painting will be revealed in early May 2024.
Thanks for coming along on this journey with me. Happy Holidays. I wish you all the best as we close out this year.
What should I know before commissioning flower art?
Commissioning a flower painting is not only about choosing something beautiful for a wall. The right piece can become part of the emotional atmosphere of your home - something that steadies you, comforts...
What Size Should My Flower Painting Be?
While there are certainly practical things to consider, the answer is never just about measurements. It’s about how you want to feel in your space. I believe beautiful original artwork has the power...
How Long Does It Take to Paint a Custom Floral Artwork?
People ask this question often, and the truth is, it is not as simple as naming a number of hours or days. There is a process, of course. But the time it takes to create a custom floral painting depends...
Archives
- June 2026 (5)
- March 2026 (1)
- January 2026 (2)
- November 2025 (1)
- October 2024 (1)
- September 2024 (1)
- June 2024 (1)
- April 2024 (1)
- March 2024 (4)
- February 2024 (5)
- January 2024 (3)
- December 2023 (7)
- November 2023 (2)
- August 2023 (1)
- July 2023 (2)
- June 2023 (3)
- February 2023 (2)
- January 2023 (1)
- October 2022 (1)
- August 2022 (4)
- July 2022 (4)
- May 2022 (1)
- April 2022 (2)
- March 2022 (1)
- February 2022 (3)
- January 2022 (2)
- November 2021 (1)
- September 2021 (1)
- August 2021 (5)
- February 2021 (1)
- January 2021 (1)
- December 2020 (2)
- October 2020 (2)
- August 2020 (2)
- July 2020 (2)
- June 2020 (2)
- May 2020 (2)
- April 2020 (3)
- March 2020 (2)
- February 2020 (2)
- January 2020 (1)
- December 2019 (1)
- June 2019 (1)