Jennifer Zalewski Studio

painting, printmaking & all things DOG…

Black Friday Wildlife

Thanksgiving is one of my favorite holidays of the year. You know why?

1- Pumpkin Pie

2- Tofurkey Feast

3- More Pumpkin Pie

4- BLACK FRIDAY SHOPPING!

 

I was SUPER excited to find an aisle of really great dog toys at Big Lots on Black Friday. Big Lots can be a crapshoot, you know? A lot of times you only find the cruddy canvas stuff, but on Black Friday… YAY! They had some really great toys, including the “AKC” Wildlife line which I’ve always wanted to buy but didn’t want to shell out $11+ for. But $3? $5? Heck yeah! Even though Jack and Lela deserve a lot of coal  in their stockings this year,* I couldn’t resist. I also couldn’t resist waiting for Christmas to dole them out, so I decided to introduce a set of toys each weekend through Advent. Fun! :)   This weekend… Canadian Goose and Santa Possum!

*Victims of Jack and Lela’s Reign of Terror in the past 3 weeks:  Umbrella. Snow brush. Mortgage Bill. Recycling bin. 3 sticks of butter. My slippers. The Aloe Plant. 1 Bottle of Silverpoint Ground. The Pennysaver. 2 dog beds. Seat belt. Carpet in the back of the Scion. Sunday newspaper. Aluminum water bottle. MY SANITY.

Happy Tofurkey Day!

It is a beautiful day here. I look forward to eating lots of Tofurkey, mashed potatoes and … my favorite… PUMPKIN PIE. I could eat anything pumpkin flavored. Yum. Drool. Then… napping. The best.

Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!

 

New on Etsy…

Hi folks! Two pieces just added to My Etsy Store… Jack’s Dream (I posted this one on the blog a few weeks ago) and a new Graphite Drawing on Gessobord I’m calling “Ol’ Boy”. I did this a few days ago. It was supposed to be a Silverpoint, but the feel of Graphite on the roughness of the Gessbord surface was wayyyyyy too tempting. Will definitely be using more!

Jennifer Zalewski Studio- Etsy Store

 

Catch of the Day -Monotype

“Catch of the Day”

11 x 14  Monotype

Akua Intaglio ink on Seth Cole paper

 

My newest monotype! I used brayers on the plexiglass for the first time  which pretty fun–led to the “roll” marks in the grass and sky.

More pics from the process:

My drawing taped under the plexiglass and hinged paper across the top. Jack is inspecting. :)

First colors painted on the plate, the paper flipped over onto the ink, and my marble rolling pin used to press the wet ink from plate to paper. The ghost is in the background. It came out REALLY light.

Second “run”… Pink tongue, Red toy! Sorry for the pinky tinge to the paper… bad lighting.

Next run was Jack’s brindling. Here it is painted on the plate. I used Pthalo Green and Crimson Red again to get a nice purplish-brown…

Here it is printed onto the paper.  There’s almost NO ink left on the plate!

 

4th run of colors…the green grass. I wasn’t happy with the way this came out at ALL. Hmmm.

Pondered what to do at this point. I tried to paint & drop another layer of green, but didn’t like that either. I decided to put the green and blue on the plate using a brayer, and print that way. I really liked the brayer (i.e. roller) marks! Will definitely utilize this technique more in future monotypes. Final:

 

I really miss this toy!!! I think it was called a “Squirrel Log” and we got it in the sale bin at Petsmart. It lasted a relatively long time (2 months or so) until Jack, for some reason, took a shining to ripping the plastic log into pieces and EATING them. So unfortunately, for the sake of his intestines, we had to toss it in the garbage. If anyone sees this toy around… please let me know!! I am dying to get another one (or 2, or 3)…

(Funny… I realized when making this monotype that the Squirrel Log had a striped tail… wouldn’t that make it a Raccoon Log? LOL!) :)

Who’s Your Daddy?

So excited!! Lela’s WISDOM PANEL INSIGHTS “doggy DNA” test arrived in the mail Friday. I know these tests *can* have laughable results but for $49 and a money-back guarantee, I was willing to take the chance. Apparently every single dog breed has its own unique DNA and by collecting a sample of spit from your mongrel’s mouth, you can send it to the lab for analysis and find out what breeds make up the mix. Wisdom Panel has 185 breeds in it’s database and seemed to be the most reputable of the brands I researched.

I decided to make a movie tonight out of the DNA collection. I have never made a YouTube movie before (with myself in it) but it was kind of fun.  Needless to say, Lela was NOT happy about “giving a sample up” and Jackie Boy kept presenting his ass to me, to be scratched. WTF Jack, you’re on camera! LOL!

Lela came to me as a German Shepherd/Lab mix. She has a black tongue and distinct look that makes me 99% certain that there is Shar Pei or Chow in there though… plus she’s only 40lbs which would make for VERY small GSD and Lab, right?  We get approached a lot about her and people have all sorts of guesses:

  • Pit Bull Mix
  • Akita Mix
  • Chow/Pit Mix
  • Shiba Inu Mix (someone once swore she was a purebred Shiba, LOL)
  • Chow/Lab
  • Terrier/Shar Pei/Lab/Boxer
  • Carolina Dog Mix
  • Carolina Dog/Jack Russell

I do have to tell one story though. It’s so funny that I had Jack’s physical therapist in stiches over it. About 8 weeks ago I was getting the dogs out of the car at a local state park, and there were 3 people kind of hanging around in the parking lot. They seemed nice and were chuckling as I hauled Jack’s ramp out and had him get out of the car via ramp. Anyway, one of the guys in the group was very excited when Lela came out. “Wow,” he said. “Those dogs are so rare, you never see them around!”

“Jack?” I asked. “He’s a retired racing ground.”

“No, the other one,” he said. “The Rhodesian Ridgeback. I used to have one. Man, you don’t SEE those dogs around here, wow!”

Now… okay. People are always guessing Lela’s breed but never… NEVER… has she been mistaken for a 90 lb., African Lion-hunting Rhodesian Ridgeback. Never. It was all I could do to keep from laughing in his face. I pretended an air of curiosity and intrigue though, asking, “Really? Rhodesian Ridgeback? You think?”

The guy was adamant. “Absolutely. She’s absolutely a Ridgeback.”

“But she has no…Ridge.” I pointed at her back.

The guy shook his head. “No no, they’re there.  Do the hairs stand up on her neck, and back, when she’s scared or mad at something–?”

“Um..Yeahhhhhh…”

“That’s the ridge!” The guy said proudly.

Lord have mercy, I was laughing for weeks at that one.

Anyway, Lela’s DNA -laden swabs (oops, I dropped one on the floor) are going back to the lab tomorrow and we should get results in about 3 weeks. I am going to be on the edge of my seat waiting for those results!! Stay tuned…

 

Super Lela! Na na na na na na….

Defeat of the Happy Caterpillar – Monotype

I’ve been having a lot of fun delving back into Monotypes lately. Previously, I was experimenting only with subtractive monotypes but after getting 2 great DVDs the past year (SAFER PRINTMAKING WITH AKUA WATER-BASED INKS and PAINTERLY PRINTMAKING WITH MONOTYPES) I decided to try additives. It’s been…messy… but so fun! I find I’m able to be as expressive and energetic in this technique as I’ve wanted to be for years but couldn’t achieve in other mediums (media?).

I decided to take one of my wrinkly Jack & Caterpillar lithographs from a couple weeks ago and use it for my first additive monotype. I taped it under a piece of plexiglass and hinged a piece of paper across the top.

I first decided to paint Jack’s base coat–using the taped lithograph (underneath the plexi plate) as my guide….

That hinged paper across the top? I flipped it over the wet ink and used a marble rolling pin to press the wet ink onto the paper. I do have a couple printing presses here but unfortunately their beds were too small for my plexiglass!!

The marble rolling pin is from a local restaurant supply company and only cost about $12! It’s a wonderful, cheap alternative to a press.  A tip I learned from one of the monotype DVDs… use a low table so that you can lean all your weight onto the rolling pin, giving you a better transfer. I used a coffee table that’s been storing my CDs. :) Worked great!

Here it is (sorry for the poor color… it gets dark soooo early now! By the time I get home, feed and walk the dogs and get started working… it’s black outside and I have wicked poor lighting in the studio. Must fix.)…

As you can see, there’s still ink left on the plate so I put another piece of paper on the plexiglass and burnish it with the pin again. This gives me one more image, much fainter, that is called a “ghost print.” Here’s the first pull and the ghost pull side by side…

 

Now I just start adding more colors to the plexi plate. I suppose I could have painted all the colors at once but I felt more “in control” doing a few at a time. First order of business was Jack’s brindling. Eek. Why did I get a brindle dog again, they are so hard to draw and paint LOL!!!!! And sadly, my Akua Ink set didn’t include any browns besides ochre (which I used as Jack’s base color). I’m a HORRIBLE color mixer, so this led to some anxiety. I decided to try mixing Pthalo Green with Crimson Red, in hopes of making a dark brown of some sort to use for Jack’s stripes. It worked… kind of. It was a dark brown with a purple tint, which I guess is not a bad thing.  I wasn’t trying to make an uber-detailed piece anyway.

More painting the plate, bits at a time. I use paper towels and Q-tips to add interesting textures into the ink.

 

Making monotypes is MESSY. Really messy!!!! This is one of the last stages (the grass).

 

Here’s the final pull… the monotype with the much lighter ghost image…

The final monotype!! It just needs to be signed, and then it’s ready to roll.

 

The model(s)… and yes, Jack soundly defeated poor Caterpillar!!! With Lela’s assistance, the poor bug is now in tatters across the house.  It’s always kind of a bummer to, you know, spend $15 on a stuffed toy that lasts, oh…. 4 days. LOL.

 

The New Creekwalk!

This month a new urban “parkway” opened up… the Onondaga Creekwalk extending from downtown, through the northside, way up to Onondaga Lake. It is VERY exciting to have this sort of thing happen here, in the center of the ‘Cuse! It’s kind of gritty here, and you never hear much good stuff about the city. All the cool people have fled into the suburbs where crime is low and (presumably) they don’t randomly have McDonalds cups, chicken bones, and dirty baby diapers thrown in their front yard. (I’m also assuming they don’t hear random gunshots occurring at 10 pm on their blocks either, sigh, I mean really WTH).  It’s rust belt, it’s past-it’s-prime, it’s an old Erie Canal city that has seen WAY better days. But it seems things are changing.  It’s so nice the city investing in such an awesome civic project like the Creekwalk! Hooray!

With the nice Indian Summer we’ve been having, the pups and I decided to leash up and go hiking after church today. Here are some pics from our morning:

It was a wonderful walk. The actual Creekwalk starts in Armory Square, but because of Jack’s muscle injury, we decided to shave a few blocks off and park near Clinton Square, which was much closer to The Inner Harbor (our destination).

The city did a great job with signage, especially the parts that branched away from the water’s edge and into downtown. Of course I’ve driven through here a million times but… walking. Nice. Got to get up-close-and-personal with the buildings. Saw a lot of people enjoying the new walk. Stopped and had a great discussion with an elderly woman about The NiMo Man. Stopped to talk to lots of other Dog People. It was so nice!

 

At one point I was trying to get the dogs to “SIT” and “STAY” so I could take a picture, but they were giving me hell. A couple came along and offered to take a photo of us all together. Awwww. I am the only one who looks happy , oh well (LOL, wait until they get their “photo with Santa” next month, I can’t wait to see Lela’s expression of horror rofl).

More photos from our walk. If you’re in the ‘Cuse I highly recommend you explore the Creekwalk! It’s clean, beautiful, and very dog-friendly. I noticed there is a trailhead at Wallace Street, with an old (non-functioning) fire-station that has about 10 parking spots. You can also start at Armory Square, which apparently has a new statue commemorating the Creekwalk (“Walter the ‘Lock’ -Ness Monster”). The walk goes all the way to Onondaga Lake, and apparently is going to be extended south to Kirk Park and then to Nedrow. YAY!!!

 

Map of the Creekwalk.

Polyester Plate Lithography Experiments

I had some fun this weekend re-exploring polyester plate (aka “pronto plate”) lithography. I’ve never really been super-successful with it (and wasn’t this time either LOL) but had the itch to do some printmaking. I have to say, working in Oil Pastels and Acrylics is kind of… boring… compared to printmaking. I just wish it wasn’t so hard!

Polyester plates are paper-like but more waxy/slippery. I drew on it with a China Marker and Litho pencil, which was FUN. Something about the greasy pencils sliding over the slick surface…eeeee! So nice!  Makes it easy to get into “the zone.” :)

Anyway, the picture above is the plate. Below, I’ve started “etching” it with a mixture of gum arabic and water. You need to keep the plate wet with this solution while you roll the ink, or else the plate scums up. I’ve always found this really irritating, lol. Water gets ALL over. The brayer slides uncontrollably. It makes everything a complete disaster area.

There’s also a delicate balance between under-inking the plate and over-inking it. If you under-ink, the print comes out of the press very light:

… but if you over-ink, the print comes out really dark:

…and once you over-ink, it’s almost impossible to get the plate back to  normal- it’s essentially ruined.

I used Seth Cole Vellum which I love for woodcuts/linocuts, but sadly all the wetness involved in Lithography printing did a number on it. I now have 7 under- or over-inked prints curled and warped to oblivion. :)

So the plate litho experiment kind of bombed, but it was fun anyway and I’m going to try to use my Jackie sketch (with his super-large Caterpillar toy, $12 Country Max!) in another medium. I was going to try Oil Pastel, but maybe monotype. Mmmm…. we’ll see. :)

Jen

The Evolution of Bitey-Face/ Gator-Mouth

Since Lela came to live with us this summer and taught Jackie to wrestle, both pups have been honing their skills like mad.  It’s almost become like a ballet now, watching the two. Lela has a scrappy edge, throwing herself in and out of the fray with a huge production of snarling, growling, and teeth gnashing (something she picked up from Jack, lol. She doesn’t -quite- have the ‘gator mouth’ though… more like a, uh, piggy mouth).  She now seems to realize that Jack’s height is the big issue in play- so she does her best to bring him down to her level.  She’s like a crow taking on a huge hawk- dive bombing him over and over and over and over with utter abandon until he falls.

 

Jack, meanwhile, has learned some interesting techniques of his own. He does his best to stay in the center of the area rug he’s wrestling on, knowing Lela will try to drive him off and onto the slippery floors where he has a disadvantage. His ‘signature move’ seems to be grabbing the rolls of extra skin around her neck and pulling it up-and-over the top of her head, dropping her front end off-balance and to the side. If that doesn’t work or he’s feeling particularly naughty, he goes for a “cheek grab” and makes her yell. When they wrestle up-close, he’ll tease by grabbing her legs or paws in his mouth and gently biting down… other times he’s rough, intent on nipping and dominating.  Whether he is gentle or rough 100% of the time (so far) is a reflection of how Lela is playing with him, which is really interesting. If Lela is being gentle, he will handicap himself to her level, mouth her gently and nibble. If she’s spastic and whirling-dervish-crazy, he’ll snap, froth, grab, and be as nasty as he can get away with. He will never intentionally escalate play, but if Lela does he responds asap.

 

Some other favorites from this session… Lela’s facial expressions are hilarious… and Jack shows off his gleamingly-huge fangs and 90 degree head rotation in the last picture (WTF, how did he do that?!?)…