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It has always been my practice to cast a long paragraph in a single mould, to try it by my ear, to deposit it in my memory, but to suspend the action of the pen till I had given the last polish to my work.
-- Edward Gibbon


 

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November 2nd

 

A little further. It's fun to explore the colors in acrylics, even though this is like painting with white out. It's harder to paint thin lines, I've discovered. It goes on thick. But I'll work on that.

You know, we're always amazed when someone writes a book. They conceived a story and characters and wrote it out. Is it good? That almost doesn't matter - we're still impressed.

It's kind of like that with painting too. Hundreds and thousands of brush strokes go into a painting, like hundreds and thousands of words go into a book. I'm not sure that the talent matters so much as the simple fact that it was begun and then finished. Cool if the talent is there, but wow - the commitment to finish the work.

I once worked in a company that coined the phrase "BIC Time." That's the time when money is made. It stands for "Butt In Chair." I think that might just be the only talent that any artist truly needs to impress others. Just getting the butt in the damn chair. If that happens, then art happens.

Today, I've spent my 14,973rd day on this planet writing a web site at work, managing a project, talking to friends and co-workers and my kids, attending meetings, eating, playing HALO, cleaning my apartment, installing new software on my home computer, and painting. Painting was maybe an hour of it. It's amazing how much time there is to do things in a day, and yet it seems short.

But this November 2nd was good.

 


Read the whole story of "Waiting"
by Brett Rogers, 11/3/2005 12:02:46 AM
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Comments

I've had success making thin lines when I've diluted it with just a teeny bit of water... otherwise, it really IS rather thick and unwieldy.

Actually, I started out in acrylics, and when I discovered how much fun it was to dilute them with water, I began realizing that the more I diluted, the more watercolorish they became -- but they were permanent -- so I switched to actual watercolors and haven't gone back since.

Everybody finds their niche, I think.

 

 

Posted by Anonymous, 11/3/2005 9:37:41 AM



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