Art Chowder November | December 2017, Issue 12 | Page 10

Art Chowder: Do you work exclusively with watercolors? Andy: For twenty years I only did water- colors. It’s my favorite medium. But I’ve learned that watercolors don’t sell well in certain areas, which is really frustrating. Plus once you have a watercolor painted, it is a nightmare to frame, show, and ship. For years I dealt with it; made it work. But about five years ago, I heard a little voice inside say, “You need to start to oil paint.” I didn’t want to. I said no to that little voice for two years because oils seemed boring to me, like there’s no ad- venture there. Watercolor is an adventure. You add water and watch it go! It paints itself some of the time. It’s cool and it’s fast. I figured you couldn’t do that with oils. Oil is going to be boring. But that little voice inside of me started scream- ing. “You’ve got to oil paint. Get to oil painting, blah, blah, blah.” So I took some classes to learn the basics of mixing colors. It was weird using white paint. In watercolor you never use white paint, it’s always the paper. I had to go through this learning curve, about how to use white oil paint, and what you can do with a paintbrush on canvas that you can’t do with watercolor. There are techniques in watercolor that I really love, like scratching or scoring the paper: using an Exacto blade to pick out highlights, like the hairs of a poppy in the sun; scoring to create the hard lines of a barn. After using and loving all these techniques, I wondered…how am I going to make the hairs on a poppy using oil? You mean I have to actually paint them? What a pain! So I’m still learning, and exploring with oils. What I like about oil painting is that you can go bigger! It’s much easier to do big paintings. They are lighter, and easier to ship, or haul around. Now the only issue I run into is, how big is my truck? 10 ART CHOWDER MAGAZINE "Palouse Country Summer" 24 x 40” - Oil on canvas Art Chowder: Nice! So are you using more oils than watercolors now? Andy: I wouldn’t say more. Probably, more real estate is being covered in oil right now, but I still do lots of little watercolors. I don’t paint big watercolors anymore unless I know someone wants it, and that it’ll go from my studio to their house. But big oil paintings? They’re just easier.