Be careful what you wish for

One in five houses in Maine is someoneā€™s vacation home. The potential implications of COVID-19 are terrible.

Four Ducks, Cape Elizabeth Paint for Preservation, by Carol L. Douglas

One thing Iā€™ve dreaded doing was striking out upcoming events on my website. As Iā€™ve written before, I think the plein air festival has lost its punch. Because of this, I deleted all but a few key events in 2020. The ones I kept had strong revenues or provided unusual opportunities for painting. Then cancellations started flooding in from organizers rightly worried about promoting events they canā€™t deliver. Now Iā€™m left with what Iā€™d thought I wanted: a summer where I can concentrate on painting here at home, and where I can run my studio-gallery without interruption.

Of course, I donā€™t know whether anyone will be able to come. Like everyone else, I have no idea what shape the summer will take. The state of Maine is on lockdown. Thatā€™s not irrational: one in five houses in this state is someoneā€™s vacation home, the highest percentage in the nation. That makes us very vulnerable to visiting pathogens.
Ottawa House, Parrsboro International Plein Air Festival, by Carol L. Douglas
But tourism is one of our top economic drivers. In 2018, over 37 million people visited Maine, spending $6.2 billion and supporting 110,000 jobs. The cost of this lockdown, if it continues through the summer months, is incalculable. The cultural costs are being felt already. Our bicentennial was March 15, but the state had to postpone a host of celebrations that have been years in the making.
In the near future, Iā€™ll be teaching painting via Zoom. Teaching via the internet is going to be radically different from teaching in person. I need to figure out new ways to prepare, since we wonā€™t all be looking at the same scene, carefully curated to address a specific issue in painting. The issue isnā€™t technology; itā€™s creating projects that are doable in studentsā€™ homes.
Ocean Park Beach, Art in the Park, by Carol L. Douglas
Iā€™m kicking myself for not paying more attention to Katie Dobson Cundiff while we were in Argentina. She teaches at Ringling College of Art and Design. Her students were all sent home while they were on spring break. While the rest of us were larking around the glaciers, she was creating a template for remote teaching.
The only analogy in my lifetime was the economic collapse of 2008. My income fell by 2/3 in one horrible year. Both painting sales and classes were way down. My strategy was to stop showing and selling until the market had time to recover. Even my teaching practice was reduced. Instead, I used that time to focus on my own development.
I donā€™t think the current crisis will have the same shape as the 2008 crash, but Iā€™ll probably do something similar. Iā€™m retracting, watching, and trying to be nimble. And Iā€™m really curious about your ideas.

But first I have to feel better. Iā€™m entering week four of being ill. This morning, Iā€™m breaking my quarantine to drive to my PCPā€™s office for further testing. If I get arrested, you can send me a file in a cake.

The pernicious practice of ā€˜feedback’

Ditch it, says a business consultant. We artists could learn something from him.
Blizzard, by Carol L. Douglas. We all want to be outside, so my students painted out the windows yesterday. I’ve done that a few times myself!

One of my students just came back from wintering in Australia. Weā€™ve been practicing formal analysis in her absence. That means we consider a painting on the basis of its formal structure. This isnā€™t a like-vs-dislike process, but rather an objective one, talking about how the painter uses various techniques to advance his goals.

The protocol for criticism in my studio has always been the sandwich rule. We begin by pointing out something the person did well. We then discuss what might have been handled differently. We finish by pointing out something else that the person did well, so that each session ends on a positive note.
Snow squall, by Carol L. Douglas
This method has been mocked as ā€œfluffy bunā€”meatā€”fluffy bun,ā€ but that misses the point. Most people are all too aware of their failures and not aware of their strengths. Catch them doing something right and theyā€™re likely to repeat it.
Since I hadnā€™t given my wanderer adequate instruction, she was lost. It didnā€™t help that the painting we were analyzing (by another student) was a stunner. It was all too easy to gush.
Thereā€™s nothing wrong with that, and weā€™ll continue to use the sandwich rule for our critique sessions. My goal in practicing academic criticism with them was different. I wanted to them to start seeing how form, shape, repetition and rhythm work together in painting. But I also wanted to take the judgment out of looking at art.
Tree line, by Carol L. Douglas
The Feedback Fallacyā€”an article thatā€™s about to be released as a bookā€”takes aim at the pernicious practice of feedback. Marcus Buckinghamwrites for a business audience, but what he has to say is applicable to the arts, in schools, and in families. He says our culture of criticism as based on three lies: 

  • The best way to help you is to show you something youā€™re too blind to see for yourself;
  • Learning is like filling an empty vesselā€”you lack abilities and itā€™s up to someone else to teach you;
  • Great performance is universal and measurable. Once defined, it can be transferred from one person to another, regardless of the recipientā€™s strengths and weaknesses. 

Focusing on an imaginary standard of greatnessā€”and how we fall shortā€”doesnā€™t enable learning. In fact, it shuts it right down. Learning happens when we see how we might do something better, not when our errors are pointed out to us. I can tell a student a hundred times to not dab, but it isnā€™t until I pick up his brush and show him how to make a proper mark that he will understand what ā€œnot dabbingā€ means. And it wonā€™t be until he has made great marksā€”uniquely, idiosyncratically his own, with power and confidenceā€”that he will have mastered mark-making.
My backyard, by Carol L. Douglas

Positive reaction, done right, is harder than negative criticism. You need to catch a person doing something right before you can comment. That means constant vigilance and a rock-solid understanding of process. It requires being able to differentiate between idiosyncrasy, style, and the real technical issues that can cause a painting to fail. Above all, it requires confidence. Nobody is supportive from a position of weakness.
We live in a corrosive culture, and it affects all our interactions. But one thing we can do is ditch the unnecessary feedback in the studio. If youā€™re ever wondering whether a ā€˜bit of adviceā€™ to another painter is a good idea, just donā€™t.
Note: my next eight-week session in Rockport starts March 12. I think I’m full up, but if you want to be wait-listed, email me. Details on my classes are here.

Try not to bankrupt your students, fellow teachers

We should remember that pinch in the pocketbook when we draw up our supply lists.
Plastic wrap, by Carol L. Douglas. I can paint without cadmium yellow or cadmium red, but not without cadmium orange.

During my absence last week, one of my students took a workshop with another painter, an excellent artist I quite admire. Studying with other teachers is good practice. It reinforces what is essential. And since every teacher has ideas that are simple preference, it helps put those in perspective, too.

Before she went, we spent time talking over the supply list. A student should go into a class with the materials the teacher has requested; otherwise she is hobbled from the beginning. On the other hand, I have had too much experience to not be skeptical of supply lists, which often include everything but the kitchen sink.
True to form, she came back with three or four unopened tubes of paint. I really wish teachers would stop doing that. Itā€™s expensive and its irresponsible.
Teachers should strive to help students navigate through color space. This was a class exercise by Jennifer Johnson.
I moved a tube of Cadmium Green around for years. It currently lists at $24.95 for 37 ml. Itā€™s a great color for the sallow greens in skin tones, but an effect that can easily be approximated with black and yellow. I was painfully poor the year I took that class, but we never touched the tube.
Iā€™ve come to feel the same way about Cerulean Blue in oil painting. Itā€™s a heavy, dense blue that sells for $34.95 for 37 ml. I learned to paint skies with it, and there is nothing more luscious. Still, skies can be painted quite adequately with Ultramarine or Prussian Blue, which cost exactly a third of what Cerulean costs. 
However, because itā€™s dense and opaque, Cerulean Blue occupies a niche in watercolor that canā€™t be easily filled by other pigments; hence it stays on my watercolor palette.
Cobalt violet is beautiful but hardly indispensable.
Cobalt Violet is another very pricey pigment that can be approximated at a fraction of the cost. Note that I said ā€œapproximated,ā€ rather than mixed. You canā€™t mix a respectable Cerulean Blue or Cobalt Violet hue. (For an explanation of hues and other arcana of paint tubes, see here.) You can only learn ways to paint with less expensive pigments. When possible, that should be the starting point for the teacher. Let your students shop for their Cadillacs on their own.
Our responsibility is more than just financial. We have a duty to train up new artists in safe, environmentally-friendly techniques. All three of the colors I mentioned above are toxic inorganic pigments. Theyā€™re harmless as paint, unless you eat or bathe in the stuff. The problem lies in their manufacture (and, to a lesser extent, their disposal). Thereā€™s only one plant currently making cadmium pigments in the US, under our strict environmental and worker-safety controls. That means the pigments in your paint are probably coming from offshore, and we have no idea if the process is safe or not.
Itā€™s nearly impossible to clear all the inorganic pigments off our paint-tray, but we can minimize their use. My palette still contains cadmium orange, Iā€™m afraid, because Iā€™ve never found an analog that answers.
Part of my goal is to teach people to mix colors rather than buy them.
Then there is the question of substrates. Most beginning students are fine with cheap boards, with the caveat that once they start selling work, they need to move up to an archival-quality board. The problem is in the backing, and thatā€™s an issue for future conservators, not for painting class. When I was a student, we worked as often on gessoed paper as on canvases. There is absolutely no reason to make your students buy archival boards for value exercises.
The exception to this is in watercolor and pastel. In both cases, the substrate is as important as the pigment. But even here, one can buy decent-quality student products.
The flip side of this is the teacher whoā€™s afraid to tell his or her students what to buy at all. I find itā€™s helpful to just list what you carry and work from there, being mindful that some things are just preference, not necessities. Be specificā€”if you want sanded pastel paper, specify that, for example. But donā€™t be so specific as to be restrictive. If a student is using a phthalo blue, thereā€™s no point in having him replace it with Prussian blue. They function in the same niche.
Here are my supply lists:
Iā€™m happy to share them with painting students and as a template for teachers to create their own supply lists, but please donā€™t copy them without credit!

Iā€™ve got one more workshop available this summer. Join me for Sea and Sky at Schoodic, August 5-10. Weā€™re strictly limited to twelve, but there are still seats open.