Showing posts with label Umpqua Valley Wine Art Music Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Umpqua Valley Wine Art Music Festival. Show all posts

8.9.11

A WINE ODYSSEY: The Wine Painting that Started an Artistic Wine Adventure

"Wine on the Vine" 28x22 acrylic©Sandi Whetzel
My wine odyssey emerged from my love of curvaceous lines and shapes. Early in my art career I was strongly attracted to curvilinear, graceful shapes and patterns in my sensuous flora subjects. After several years, I took a slight artistic detour when I entered a painting competition to promote the "Greatest of the Grape", a premiere wine event. They wanted a painting to illustrate the theme of "Wine on the Vine" and reflect the 'elegance of the evening'. To win, I knew I'd have to create a concept that said, "Wine on the Vine" better than any other. 

This painting challenge was pivotal. I had limited experience inventing paintings from my imagination and I had not painted anything related to wine. I started thinking about all things wine--grapevines, vineyards, wine bottles, goblets toasting, grapes, cheese wedges, finely set tables, formally attired maitre d's, etc. However, I was looking for an exceptional concept.

I honed in on the curvaceous shapes of wine bottles; thinking I might paint some abstracted wine bottles nestled among grapevines. I sketched five robustly curved wine bottles in a group of three and two others hanging from grapevine stems. The graceful bottles were placed at slightly different angles; gently swaying in the wind. More ideas for the concept presented themselves as I continued the sketch. When I was satisfied with the arrangement of the wine bottles, it suddenly occurred to me that I could add a big cluster of grapes growing inside each bottle; each cluster of a different hue. 

I gathered fallen, dried grape leaves to observe their wind-twisted shapes and vein patterns. I sketched many leaves before determining their arrangement in the painting. To reflect 'the elegance of the evening' , I was inspired to place a golden moon rendered in a pearly pigment with upraised texture in just the right spot above the grapevines. I chose to paint the glow of the moon radiating out in circular brush strokes of a blue evening sky. As I gathered dried grapevine tendrils for observation, I was fascinated with their twisting, winding structure. I strategically placed a few tendrils in the painting.

The ideas for the painting continued to flow as I got deeper into details of the painting. I added glistening highlights, colored reflections and shadows to the grapes, bottles and leaves to show the sparkle of moonlight and reveal form and transparency. The wind-blown grape leaves and the climbing tendrils, the angled placement of the bottles, all following the radiating pattern of the moonlit sky, created an elegant, rhythmic movement that was appealing to many viewers. 

The painting was a success because it came entirely from my imagination.  I devoted much thought to every element of the design to express "Wine on the Vine" as well as it could be stated.  This experience of creating something from my imagination to illustrate a predetermined theme was very rewarding.  It will always remind me of what can be when you trust your imagination to lead you in your creative endeavors.

The response to this first wine painting was so great that I was inspired to enter other competitions to promote wine and other events. Each competition resulted in paintings of subject matter that I might never have tackled without these challenges. The wine paintings were selling more than my other graceful subjects. Wineries and wine enthusiasts were popping up all over the Umpqua Valley in Oregon where I reside. Between wine events, I started dreaming up other ideas for wine paintings to fit my own wine themes of whimsy, or elegant celebration, or romantic fantasy. My wine odyssey continues.  For a slideshow of my wine series, click here

With each painting my goal is to outshine the previous one. I aim to impress and connect with wine enthusiasts emotionally. It's almost as if I am creating commercials for the wine industry. In my wine frame-of-mind, I ask myself, what feelings are associated with wine and how can I convey those feelings in ways that are exceptional? If I can add a romantic hook, all the better. My passion for curvy shapes easily creeps into graceful wine goblets and wine bottles and the things I associate with them. Bold, stimulating, eye-catching color and novel subject matter, fluid lines, movement and rhythm are all part of the design to draw the viewer into the wine odyssey experience. 

My wine series will be exhibited at the Umpqua Valley Wine, Art and Music Festival, Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 10 & 11, 2011 on the Umpqua Community College Campus, Roseburg, Oregon, exit 129 off I-5.  My booth is located across from the food court and at the rear of the entertainment seating.  Festival hours are Sat., from 11-9:30 pm and Sun., from 11-5:00 pm.  For a schedule of events, click here

12.6.10

Happy Hour : A Contemporary Abstract Painting of Cavorting Wine Goblets by Sandi Whetzel

Happy Hour 12x20 acrylic ©Sandi Whetzel


When it comes to wine, why should the imbiber have all the pleasure? Shouldn't the goblet that contains and delivers the wine to the drinker get in on some of the pleasure, too, by becoming intoxicated and reveling in the moment? I approached the creating of this painting with that thought in mind.

I have some tall, elegant cone-shaped goblets that became the inspiration for the shapes of the goblets before they came under the influence of the effects of the wine they were to hold. I had fun sketching the goblets, purposefully exaggerating their shapes with curvy contortions to suggest their dance-like cavorting. The idea of letting the center goblet get so tipsy that it started to spill some of it's wine contents was an afterthought to the original sketch, but I succumbed to it. The addition of the flying, spiraling cork and the oversize bubbles effervescing from the goblets added even more whimsy and merriment to the scene. I chose the stimulating palette of reds to help convey the giddy, gaiety of the painting. The curvy strokes echoing the movement of the cavorting goblets added to the lively, playful flavor of the piece. Even before it was completed I knew the title of the painting had to be Happy Hour.

Inventing paintings from my imagination is challenging but rewarding, as I learned from the first wine painting I dreamed up to fit an imposed "wine on the vine" theme.  That painting became one of my most successful paintings and inspired me to use my imagination more.  It was the beginning of a wine series.  That was a great learning experience and showed me what real creativity is.  Real creativity is having to come up with something from nothing other than what you can imagine in your mind to illustrate an idea.

I'll be displaying Happy Hour at the annual Umpqua Valley Arts ARTrageous Summer Arts Festival the last weekend of June and the Umpqua Valley Wine, Art and Music Festival in September, 2010.

5.9.09

Sandi Whetzel exhibits at the Umpqua Valley Wine, Art & Music Festival, Sept. 12 & 13, 2009

Wine on the Vine ©Sandi Whetzel


Amid the flurry of putting the last touches on paintings, addressing postcard invitations, assembling greeting cards of my art, designing a booth space with a new metal rack system, restoring files from a computer crash last week, and other details, I am looking forward to setting up my booth at the Umpqua Valley Wine, Art and Music Festival, Sept. 12 & 13, 2009 at Umpqua Community College's Amphitheatre, Winchester, OR. This is a brand new beautiful venue for the wine festival on its 40th anniversary; the oldest continuous running wine festival in Oregon. The festival location is ideal with easy access off I-5 at exit 129.

The event is the place to be for family friendly entertainment and games, a car show and fire engine display, dozens of regional artists, local wineries and food vendors and first class live entertainment. Some of the music will be Volifonix, Paul Biondi and the Michael Tracey Band and the Colin Ross Band. For a schedule of the entertainment and activities click here
The festival hours are Saturday from 11 am - 10 pm and Sunday from 11 am - 6 pm. Tickets to the event are available at the gate or online, here

The image I am using for my postcard invitations to the event, (pictured with this post), is of my painting, Wine on the Vine, which was the first of my series of wine paintings. This painting was selected to promote this same wine festival in 2005 and also the Wine About Art Exhibit at Umpqua Valley Arts Association in 2004. I just couldn't resist the opportunity to connect the painting with this event again this year via my postcard invitations and with this post.

I will be featuring a hand embellished high quality giclee reproduction on canvas of theWine on the Vine painting in my festival booth. Other paintings in the wine series and framed giclees of Wine on the Vine and Wine on the Vine II will be displayed, as well as most of my succulent series and other paintings. The space will be brimming with bold, lively color.