Contemporary art by South African artist, Erna Wade; African wildlife, portraits, seascapes,flowers. In oil, acrylic, watercolour, collage and mixed media.
The last watercolour Still Life I did was this one
180 x 230mm
which I did in January 2008, from a still life I set up.
So, doing the protea in the clay pot was quite a change from my normal subjects, which tend to be nature, most often Nguni, lately a few Zebra, landscapes and a seascape here and there. The fun flowers that I did last year were done in acrylic, in a very different style. (More might be coming up!)
Thus, this watercolour was different for me: a different pallette of colours, different shapes and textures, different visual problems to solve. It took a bit longer than I anticipated, but I had fun and am happy with the result. I enjoy the interaction between the earthy reds and the greens, the almost glowing coral colour of the protea, which also mingles with the greens in the shadows, and the texture of the clay pot.
I am an African girl. I love the African sun and I love painting scenes of Africa. I love the wide open spaces of Africa, its warmth and its variety. Lately my attention has been drawn to the beautiful and varied skin colour patterns of the indigenous Nguni cattle of Southern Africa. Join me in my African adventure as I find and paint more Nguni, birds and people of Africa.
ALL MY ART IS FOR SALE.
Feel free to contact me at
ewade@absamail.co.za
to check on availability or prices.
I think painting is a little like trying to describe a dream to somebody. The images are somewhere out there on the edge of your consciousness, but you can't quite put it into words, because when you put it into words, everything changes...
Andrew Wyeth (Watercolour Artist): The Creative Process
"I dream a lot. I do more painting when I'm not painting. It's in the subconscious."
Renoir about Painting Flowers
"I just let my brain rest when I paint flowers" - Renoir
Ingmar Berman about Creativity
"Art lost its basic creative drive the moment it was separated from worship. It severed an umbilical cord and now lives its own sterile life, generating and degenerating itself. In former days the artist remained unknown and his work was to the glory of God."
Ludwig von Beethoven about Creativity:
"I change many things, discard others, and try again and again until I am satisfied. Then, in my head, I begin to elaborate the work in its breadth, its narrowness, its height, its depth... I hear and see the image in front of me from every angle, as if it had been cast, and only the labour of writing it down remains."