Garage Mural - Trail of Fireflies: Hot Summer Nights

Trail of Fireflies: Summer Nights, 83” h x 190” w , spray paint and acrylic on metal, 2024.

Summer and winter seasons merge in this otherworldly landscape with shapes and patterns derived from the dance of the fireflies. The winter season is shown by painting trees without their leaves and summer is represented with green grass and firefly markings. Looking at sunsets is one of my favorite activities as they are colorful, ephemeral, and forever changing throughout different weather and cycles of nature. I used artistic license with the colors of the sunset behind the weaving lines of the river. Different species of fireflies create different marks when they glow and fly through the sky. Some make a dot, dash, squiggle, zig zag, or a even a j-shaped flash. It’s pretty rare to be able to see this many synchronous fireflies glow at one time. I have only experienced it though viewing time-lapse photography. The images and phenomena were so inspiring to me that I wanted to immortalize them in a painting. It gives me great joy to imagine their nightly flights. The firefly marks have become a recurring motif in my work and I have incorporated their glow in many paintings. I used Montana Gold spray paint for the background and Nova acrylic mural paint for fine details on the trees, pink flowers, and firefly marks. As typical in my work, the pink flower forms are not literal flowers but flower inspired. They could also be marine creatures, amoebas or something else. I try to evoke a hybrid of subjects in each of my artwork forms and invite the viewer to use their imagination.

See other artworks that incorporate my firefly motif here. The mural design was inspired by one of my smaller studio paintings shown on the firefly blog. That painting is in now in a private collection.

The project took about 36 hours including 6 hours of priming. I used an existing painting and slightly altered it for the initial design to fit the garage format. The smaller studio painting took around 3-4 months of full-time work spread out over 1-2 years time.

Please reach out to me about custom murals. I would love to collaborate with you.

Mural Process

 

"Release" in a collection

I love when people share photos of my work in their homes. It’s so fun to see where they live as I don’t often get to see. This artwork from 2007 found a home recently.

For the painting “Release” I was thinking of a release on several layers. I was thinking of it relating to what’s happening in the painting and also a state of mind when I created it. Like a flower releases a seed, or like a star turns into a supernova, or a coral releases a polyp, or a chrysalis releases a butterfly. These happenings all occur at different scales in nature. It shifts our perspective to being set free. “Release” symbolizes many layers of freedom from the micro to macro in our world. The 3D dimensional relief texture shapes create another physical release in the painting. My work at this time utilized a lot of low relief textures like modeling paste.

 
 

Horizons at Evanston Art Center

Evanston Art Center Oct 6 - Nov 5, 2023

Horizons, a 5 person exhibition with artists:
Annie Briard, Mary Farmilant, Kellie Klein, Renee Robbins, & Nina Weiss.

Renee Robbins

Renee Robbins

Renee Robbins

Renee Robbins

Horizons at Evanston Art Center

Renee Robbins

 

Recurring Motif - Blue Buttons

Recurring Motif - Blue Buttons

This is one of my most beloved inspirational creatures called Blue-Buttons. I wanted to share this painting and etching collection. It shows how I have painted the same creature in several different pieces in different ways. These jellyfish-like creatures are colonies of individual polyps that function as one organism. They are very tiny in scale, hence the name Blue-Buttons. They are very tiny in scale and float across the surface of the ocean.

On the Surface, 12” x12”, acrylic on panel.

Trail of Fireflies: At the Drive-In, 12” x 16”, acrylic on panel,

Blue Buttons, 5” x 7”, etching.

Hydrozoa: Blue-Buttons, 14” x 16”, acrylic on canvas.

 

Artist Panel at Brushwood

Connecting to Our Common Ground - Artist Panel 

 

Brushwood Center's Connecting to Our Common Ground Art Exhibition was part of the 40th Annual Smith Nature Symposium Event Series. The 2023 Smith Nature Symposium theme, Connecting To Our Common Ground, was inspired by this year's Smith honoree Baratunde Thurston. In his PBS show, America Outdoors with Baratunde Thurston, Thurston travels the country to uncover our complex relationship with the outdoors. In this exhibition, we explored the ways that artists from different communities experience the natural world.

On September 10th the artists of this joint exhibition with Hyde Park Art Center gathered to discuss their work at Brushwood Center. Watch the full panel below to hear from the artists about their relationships to nature and the natural world, and this special exhibition!