I
love working with groups.
I
especially find it satisfying to have workshop participants and classes in
my studio.
This
way I can paint right along with them- sharing the experience, the ups and
downs,
the
structural mechanics of how to make a painting from the ground up.
I
paint in layers, lots of layers, and as a process painter my paintings go
through many incarnations.
I
feel this is of benefit to witness- especially if you are new to
painting.
I
can just imagine the years of torment I could of saved myself had my graduate
school professors shared their own process in their own studios away from
theory and finished product.
If
artists tell you that their process is a breeze and they just paint with ease and
passion on a constant basis:
A.
They are lying.
B.
They do not work very much (or only when the inspiration hits them).
C.
They are a production line and have found a formula that works and rarely veer
from it.
By
working in a group setting, not only do you see how paintings are not made
instantaneously
but
you can see the true gift of how so called mistakes inform the process along
the way. A true dialogue begins to take place between you and the painting when
you take the time to embrace the whole experience around you, instead of trying
to make the painting exactly what you think it should be. It's a subtle
practice and when shared in a group can be a powerful ally.
For
not only are you stepping away from your own self doubt- that can happen when
working alone- you get to realize that you're not alone.
Another
thing I have been thinking about is this. Every artist or anybody who pursues
creative work, questions, fumbles and constantly responds to and interacts with
new forms of information. If not- then you’re not taking risks and risk is what
leads us to original and authentic insight. Risk is what leads us down what at
first feels like dark narrow pathways but can often lead to large bright
epiphanies that show us what is uniquely ours. Learning to trust and listen to
our intuition while painting is not something that is achieved and forever held
like a learned brush

stroke but it is actually something more elusive.
March
28th and 29th I am hosting an art intensive in my studio: "All About
Paint"
Working
from the ground up we will learn acrylic and oil techniques while working on
multiple pieces at once and learning to balance so called mistakes through risk
taking.
www.laurenmantecon.com