You can see "Mardi Gras", more of my mosaics and a lot of other art at theupcoming Jingletown Open Studios in Oakland California, June 2008.
Go to the Jingletown website for all the information.
I am a mosaic artist in Oakland, California. This is a forum to show you my mosaic art as well as my illustrations and other interests from time to time. All the original art on this blog is ©Kim Larson and use is by permission only. Also check out my website www.kimlarsonart.com and my Flickr page Kim Larson Art. Thanks for visiting. Most of this original art is for sale so go to my website for prices or write to me here: kslarson57@sbcglobal.net
You can see "Mardi Gras", more of my mosaics and a lot of other art at the
I'm showing you three different shots of this because I am finding that it is really
"Mardi Gras"
Okay - to understand this post you have to read the two previous ones. At least. Hopefully you have read every single post I have ever written and are hanging on every word! But I digress....
Here is a first try: This is called "Wallpaper" because that was what I was trying to make it look like. It even has a fly on it.
The background color was pink, then I added a layer of red dots, then yellow....Then painted the flower "design" in different blues and finally I added the fly and his shadow! Ultimately what I was doing was taking the color down to it's component parts. I don't know if you can see the effect here but in person they are very cool!
This was turning out to be a time consuming art form! I needed to work... and eat and sleep! Sometimes each piece seemed to take forever, depending on it's size. So I figured I could automate it somewhat by learning screenprinting. This next example - also a nude - was done as a screenprint. What this screenprint technique loses from the immediate, frantic look when it is hand done, it gains in being able to create many prints from one design. However, I still needed to make each screen of dots by hand! But in this example below, I had discovered that you can buy pages of machine-made dots, I think made by Letraset. So I used them to make the screens. And while the perfection that resulted has it's own beauty, there was charm in the pieces using handmade dots. 
And so that was my exploration of dots. This all happened from 1977 through about 1988 or so. Life moved on and I had to get jobs, pay the bills, get out and meet people, etc. But I was happy with my discovery. I hadn't been influenced by anyone or any other art philosophy, even though they may be out there. Thanks for reading this!!
This painting is one of my first attempts at my new color theory.
I settled on a strict "crosshatching" method of applying the paint. As you can see in this closeup , I broke up the scene into color "areas", painted in the background color of each one and then applied crosshatches of the other colors that would blend in the viewers' eyes to create my final intended color. I also noticed that this crosshatching gives the scene a subtle vibration and life.
Here is another example. It is a blue couch, indoors, lit by a reading lamp. If I had simply painted it in the traditional method, I would have used a blue color for the couch and a yellow color for the wall behind it. That was just not going to express the scene for me though! So first I divided the scene into its color areas - a narrow field of yellow at the top and a wider field of blue across the lower part of the canvas.
Then I laid in all the other attendant colors in a crosshatched pattern . This creates a 3-dimensional effect where the viewer's eyes have to put the colors together....it is like a color sandwich where each ingredient is separate but blends to one taste. Or it can be compared to a musical chord where each note is separate yet is heard altogether in the listener's ears.
Here is an example of a "typical" painting. As I painted, though, I struggled to get the colors to look like the scene.
Here is the outcome. It isn't "pretty" but it was a breakthrough for me.
If you notice in this close-up, each color is separate and yet in relation to every other color around it. The colors blend together as you look at them - and this is especially true the farther back you get from the painting.
Here is Van Gogh's "The Sower". Notice how he creates the hot feel of that morning sun by painting it using not only the typical oranges and yellows we associate with "sun" but with the opposite colors: blues and purples. He captured the full range of the color "experience" of a bright sunrise.
Fernando Reyes began his art career as a self-taught artist.
Fernando has produced a large and diverse portfolio of artwork. His work is primarily representational and includes oil paintings, charcoal/conte drawings, and printmaking. His primary interest is in depicting the human figure.
To me, he captures the "presence" of the figure; not only the weight and volume of the body, but the personality of the model as well. And with his paintings and prints - as with the Japanese erotic art I wrote about in a previous post - the viewer has to become involved with the work, unravelling the lines and colors to actually see the figures and movement of each piece. This is not art that just sits on the wall matching the decor!
These works have captured the attention of collectors throughout the region, nationally and internationally.
To see more of his work, visit his website Fernando Reyes
David Lance Goines is a graphic artist and printer in Berkeley, California.
In the early 1960s he was a Classics major at UC Berkeley but was expelled because of his role as an instigator of the Free Speech Movement there. In 1968 he opened his own print shop - Saint Heironymous Press in Berkeley - to design and print his own work.
Goines' specialty is advertising posters. Classical themes and Art Deco styles abound in his work.
His illustrations are a mix of sophistication and simplicity - straightforward yet always the perfect expression of whatever the subject matter is.
Goines' illustrations are so good, in fact, that the viewer almost doesn't need to have the verbiage that accompanies them. Yet sometimes the relationship between Goines' subject matter and his choice of how to illustrate it create in the viewer new ways to understand the subject.
Goines is probably most well-known to the public for his Ravenswood Wine Logo and his advertising posters for Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley.
This is a new mosaic that I finished yesterday.
I'm continually fascinated by the different attitudes toward sexuality in
In China and India, for example, sex was raised to a level of mystical significance.
I like optical illusions.
But by then the art has taken you on a little journey to it's center. And you can look at these prints over and over again and see the unmistakable artistry and beauty of them. They are sexual art for adults. Back in their day they were considered not only fine art, but were used as teaching tools. There were even books called sleeve books made expressly for women to carry in their kimono sleeves.
The history of April Fool's Day or All Fool's Day is uncertain, but the current thinking is that it began around 1582 in France with the reform of the calendar under Charles IX. The Gregorian Calendar was introduced, and New Year's Day was moved from March 25 - April 1 (new year's week) to January 1. Communication traveled slowly in those days and some people were only informed of the change several years later. Still others, who were more rebellious refused to acknowledge the change and continued to celebrate on the last day of the former celebration, April 1. These people were labeled "fools" by the general populace, were subject to ridicule and sent on "fool errands," sent invitations to nonexistent parties and had other practical jokes played upon them.