Wednesday, November 01, 2006
You're Invited Sat. Nov. 4 and 11
This Saturday (November 4) from 9-4 you can come to 6815 Malton Court, Centreville, VA 20121 and check out all the items available.
Then the following Saturday (November 11) we will be in Manassas at 9641 Looking Glass Ct., Bristow, VA 20136 at the same times.
Hope to see you there!
Friday, October 13, 2006
Thursday, October 12, 2006
More New Paintings



Friday, October 06, 2006
Upcoming shows


I have 3 upcoming shows in the next month. October 14th I'll be in Reston doing a home show. I'm also doing an event with 3 friends the first 2 Saturdays of November. The first week we'll be in Centreville and the second Saturday will be in Manassas. Click here to see the flyer and feel free to stop by anytime the day(s) of the show. I'll list the Manassas information when I have it but it will be the same show, just at a different location.
Friday, August 11, 2006
Back at the Easel
So, hopefully when I'm back in 2 weeks, I'll have a lot of new things to show you. In the mean time, here are a few pictures from my last home show:





Friday, July 14, 2006
Home Show and New Art
The following 3 paintings are recent completions. All 3 are larger than my usual sizes. The 3rd piece is a commission so it is not available for sale. The others will be shown for the first time at the Doan show so you'll be able to see them in person there along with approximately 18 other paintings and 29 prints.



Monday, July 03, 2006
New York and Finishing Up
I’ve recently returned from my trip to
In other news, for all of those who are waiting on your print orders – they are in!! I will be contacting you and setting up a time to deliver them to you this week.
I am also wrapping up the large commission piece I’ve been working on. It is a large abstract that I’ve been putting quite a few layers of texture into. Each layer has to dry before the next can be applied so it’s been tedious but I’m loving the light that comes through from the background to the top translucent layers. I’d post pictures but my digital camera batteries are dead and it appears I left my recharger in NYC.
Monday, June 19, 2006
New works
I have quite a few pieces that I haven't posted pictures of yet, but I promise I'll put them up soon, hopefully some before I leave for New York on Thursday. Tonight's piece is what I've been doing intermittently with the commissioned piece. Often when I have my brushes out already and time to paint - when one canvas is wet and a section needs to dry before I can proceed, I'll take it off my easel and put a blank one on so I can stay in my creative flow. So this work in progress is not the commissioned one, and it's not similar to it either, but for me, it's the perfect interlude for the vein I'm in.

Friday, June 16, 2006
Prints!
Thursday, June 15, 2006
Following up
Last night I recieved a new commission from a collector of my works. I'm really excited about seeing it develop on canvas. I'll post pics as it comes together. As I walked out of their door, paintings in hand, I ran into the next door neighbor who had also purchased some prints at the show and she invited me in to talk to her about doing a mural. Leaving her place I ran into my sister-in-law who lives on the other side of the 2 townhouses I had just been in. She is one of the main reasons I've been able to keep painting. About half of the work I've done so far is somehow related to her telling people about my work. She stopped me to tell me about someone she knows who is interested in a pieces of mine. In her row of town houses, there are 4 murals (soon to be 5), 8 paintings (soon to be 9), and I'm not sure how many prints. I've enjoyed working over there quite a bit - very nice people and the commissions have been pieces that I've really enjoyed doing. It's kind of a little creative island e over there.
This week I am following up on all the orders I recieved at the show for limited edition prints. I'm hoping to get the mat boards in and get them assembled in their archival bags and everything before I leave for NYC in a week. If I don't get everything together by then, I'll get them right after I'm back the following Tuesday. I'll deliver them ASAP for those who are waiting. I'll also hopefully have my prints online for sale here later today as I am getting requests daily for that.
Thanks everyone for making the home show a great time! I'm looking forward to the next one and later this summer I'll have one in NW DC. And a special thanks to Meredith Norris, who has made so much of my work possible so far!
Friday, June 09, 2006
Saturday's Show
Friday, May 19, 2006
Blooms in white

I mentioned that on Mother's Day I got to paint some. I've had some of these ideas burning in my mind for months now, so it's a relief to get them out on canvas.
I have a series based on the 'Bloom' piece started. This is an angle view of one of the first new pieces. It is entitled "Clean: Blooms in White" It is full of metallic paints that I need to photograph under a spotlight to show the affect I was after when I created this.
Gallery Updated

I've also added new items for summer in my private cafepress store if you haven't been there recently.
Check back soon for information about June's upcoming shows!
Thursday, May 18, 2006
Lately

After several weeks of intense painting doing murals and other things, I took some time to reabsorb some art by visiting several galleries. My first stop was to visit Heather Levy’s show at The Graham Collection. Her exhibit “The United Series” showed the connectedness we all share as humans. My favorite was a gradient of green, yellow, and blue with what seemed to be dancing figures intertwined. I met Heather when we showed together at the Nowuno Gallery.
I then visited the Cézanne in
On another day I visited Grant Wood’s exhibit at the Renwick followed by the Dada works at the National Gallery. The contrast between the two exhibits was rather strong to experience in one day. In Grant Wood’s pieces I saw a thousand memories of my own life. Although my life has been divided between inner city, suburbia, and rural life, I have had a great deal of influence from the latter category. Having done a great deal of farm labor as a child, I’ve had countless hours to soak up the scenery. Being strongly connected to my extended family and the older generations thereof, I have had an immersion in the culture and mindset behind the wrinkled brows Grant Wood paints so well. Knowing of his recluse life and looking at his obsessive perfection made me wonder if he might have fallen somewhere on the autism spectrum.
Dada was the complete converse of the Grant Wood exhibit. Although shocking at times and un-nerving at others, I loved the rebellion of it all. The daring to see things in new ways, the boldness to call things “art” that were not understood by the establishment. Man-Ray was clearly my favorite and I ended up having to rush through the end of the exhibit a bit because of time, so I clearly missed some things.
I did paint a little on Mother’s Day (breakfast in bed is a truly inspiring way to start the day). I miss my brushes and paints so much when I don’t get to do much of my 'own' art. I needed the time to just look at art and to soak in their colors and moods and light though at the galleries. I am hoping to get out this summer and see quite a bit. Art truly comes alive when you see it in person. I have a deep appreciation for those who ‘do art that has never been done before’ and although I strive to make each piece my own, I would never for a moment deny that to me, art bears a great sense of connection to all who have created before me and all who will create after.
Thursday, April 27, 2006
Alone in the Meadow

I never did post completed pics of some of my paintings I finished recently. This one is called "Alone in the Meadow." I put quite a bit of time into this one. I especially enjoyed doing the sky. I have always loved clouds and still find myself looking up every time I step outside to see what new forms are there that day. In many of my pieces you may notice that the central clouds are light, celebrative and peaceful or joyful. Off to the edges there are usually dark grey clouds. To me this is symbolic of the transition from dark to light that we experience on our spiritual journeys in life. With each new understanding, we have new light to illuminate our lives.
The tree in this painting reflects how I feel at times. I am perfectly comfortable with aloneness and often enjoy it. I love my friends and family and need them. I also need my alone time and this painting expresses that way I feel when I have a little time to just enjoy life for a few hours by myself doing whatever I really want to do. The tree is basking in the sunlight that is pouring over it and it reflects the way I often feel that life is pouring over me and wrapping around me with goodness, be it in my child's hug or in the way I feel when I paint.
Most of my paintings are filled with meaning and emotion to me. I don't often share them because I have never really known if I had an audience who cared. A recent conversation with a patron of mine changed my mind that some people actually might be interested in knowing some of the long details about the thought process and meaning behind my works. So I will start putting some of the explanations behind my works on my blog. Others I'll write out and file away if they're too personal to share right now.
I always have atleast a dozen paintings in my head. Right now I have 26. We'll see if I can get to them sometime here. I have another large painting project this weekend and then after that I may be able to start on the main series I'm feverish to do. A wonderful artist and very interesting man I met on my trip to Ohio 2 weeks ago, observed as I was browsing his works in his studio/gallery, I have a busy mind.
Tuesday, April 11, 2006
Art at the Mill
I was one of the first people in line because I had to be back in Fairfax at 11am and they didn't take any works in for hanging until 10am. I did get a chance to look around. Almost everything there at the time was realist work and most of it landscapes. Almost everyone else in the building had been an artist about 40-50 years longer than me. It was a bit intimidating. It's not that I can't paint realist landscapes, though maybe not with the drama that the masters there did. I actually tend to shy away from traditional realism and lean toward a bit of abstract in my scenes. But their work was beautiful. And the white haired artists standing in line with their paintings tucked under their arms, were a lovely sight.
I could have sat in that old mill for hours, absorbing the hues of the paintings that were being hung. It smelled just like my parent's barn - in fact the beams looked like they were cut the same way.
I'll be going to Ohio this week and probably spending some time sketching and photographing at my parent's farm. Maybe once I get back, if I can find the time, I'll get some Ohio landscape on canvas. My parents have this 400 year old oak tree that I've been wanting to paint for some time now. Maybe that one will be a good subject. We'll see what catches my eye when we're there.
Wednesday, March 29, 2006
Dancing Flowers

Here's a closeup:

Tuesday, March 28, 2006
The Difficult Job
One of the more difficult parts of professional art is pricing your work. You are told to add up your materials cost and factor in a dollar per hour fee or to use a price per square inch scale or to price all your pieces of one size the same amount or... there are a lot of formulas. So far I haven't really been pricing my work at a living wage by any means. In fact I'm barely recuperating costs. But then there's the issue of "price at what the market will bear." I've mostly sold via personal connections and haven't through a business venue. I assume that galleries and dealers could get a bit more for my work (but will charge me the normal 50% or more to do so), because they have direct connections with art collectors. I've been selling my work for almost 2 years now mostly to family, friends, and their acquaintances. At first I was just happy that people wanted my work. I still am thrilled about that factor, but it doesn't pay for me to pursue making more art.
There is also the myth out there that artists should just create their work and never think about money. Hence the starving artists out there. Many people feel that art shouldn't be worth anything until the artist is dead. There are many current ideas about how artists "should" and "should not" be that are derived from nineteenth century art critic Theophile Gautier (written by Tom Wolfe): "[W]ith Gautier's own red vests, black scarves, crazy hats, outrageous pronouncements, huge thirsts, and ravenous groin... the modern picture of The Artist began to form: the poor but free spirit, plebian but aspiring only to be classless, to cut himself forever free from the bonds of the greedy and hypocritical bouqeoisie, to be whatever the fat burghers feared most, to cross the line wherever they drew it, to look at the world in a way they couldn't see, to be high, live low, stay young forever - in short, to be the bohemian."
There are things about that quote that I agree with. We all want to ride on the excitement the artist experiences when their work is created and to imagine the rush it must surely give them with every stroke. Watching Chihuly work and live very much demonstrates this experience. It's thrilling just to see. But Chihuly is not exactly a starving artist (though he may have been 30 years ago). And not all artists fit the Gautier mold.
In the art world the vast majority of the funds are accrued by galleries, curators, dealers, etc. Artists as a category make the least in the food chain. It is to be recognized that the galleries often make it possible for most artists to exist. It is also often too common for artists to be taken advantage of by unscrupulous business deals. Part of the reason that happens is that there are so many variables in the industry, with each 'product' being unique in entirity. Also because the work of creating art itself is rather consuming, it is difficult to also be abreast of legal, tax, business, marketing, and other issues that affect artists.
There are many in the general public that are either intimidated by art and it's often high prices, or look at artists as undisciplined adolescents who don't deserve to make a living because their work "should be payment in and of itself." I've had plenty of people drop the, "Wow, but that's so great that you get to do what you LOVE." It's true. I do love it. I would do it regardless of pay.
Transitioning from the world of 'hobbyist' to 'professional' is not an easy one. Many full-time artists spend any where from 50-80% of their time 'conducting business'. Preparing presentations to galleries, press releases, and lots of other activities that increase the dollar value of their body of work (sold and future), is considerably energy and time consuming. But to be able to have the time to create art, those activities are necessary. Being able to guarantee that the value of their collection will increase because the artist is pursing greater recognition, is one of the driving forces behind collectors. Collectors make the world of art possible. They want to know that what they buy today will be worth more in a few years because the artist will be working the system actively to increase their value (kind of the opposite of the bohemian role we're supposed to also fulfill). There are a few rare individuals who have a wealthy benefactor who pay for them to do whatever they like and actually play the 'role of the artist' that we've all heard about since grade school. But most artists don't fit into the box we've all imagined they live in.
I'm going to keep my prices low probably for the remainder of the summer. I'm planning on taking some time off from painting new pieces to refocus and sketch. Late summer/early fall I will begin working on larger series of works. I am going to move toward a more cohesive body of work that will be based upon the things I have previously done, but will be done in larger series and with a more connected feel among all my pieces. I'm moving toward a more personal style that reflects more of my love for color and the graceful way that it combines. I'll do series of 5-15 pieces at a time when I restart. At that point I will have to decide if I want to go through galleries only and cease from selling directly to the public on my own, or not. I'll have to really reconsider the pricing of my work because I will put 4 months of planning into the work I'll be doing, as well as the actual work creating them. I may just sell prints from my website and paintings through galleries... I don't know. I have a stack of books on art business sitting next to my stack on art history that I'm pouring through. Hopefully I'll read something that will answer all of my questions, but probably not.
My to-do list of getting started as a 'legitimate' artist gets longer every day but the more I read the better I feel that I can do this. The learning curve is huge but if there's anything I love, it's taking on something with a bit of impossibility to it and learning something new and difficult. When I was 17 I got hired by a web designer and was given a key to his downtown office and access to a library of 4" thick books on html and photoshop. I rarely ever saw the guy who was supposed to mentor me, and he still owes me several paychecks, but the job did a lot for me. I had to teach myself everything but just having access to the material was all I needed. That was my internship in web and graphic design and I made a living off those skills for the next 9 years.
I've had a lot of other opportunities to learn a variety of technical and other business skills that I'm finding myself drawing on heavily as I attempt to start a a career. There is an incredible weight of things to accomplish to get this thing off the ground. At times I get a bit depressed as I realize how much further away the next mile stone really is, but a lot of times that just makes me run harder. I may run myself into the ground (Ryan's seen me do that I lot of times in our 6 years we've been together). But I always do get myself back up and find my pace again.
So, here's to the horizon I'm chasing:
Sunday, March 26, 2006
through the glass
Monday, March 20, 2006
Flowers
Also the cafepress sale 20% off sale I listed in a previous post will be wrapping up Tuesday by 9 pm so be sure to let me know if you want me to add anything to the rest of the orders I've gotten.

Wednesday, March 15, 2006
Home Art Shows
Little Sale
Tuesday, March 14, 2006
On the Easel



I've been painting up a storm lately. None of the following pieces are complete. Some are further along than others. I rotate them out as painting involves deep concentration at times and one can only concentrate on one thing for so many hours before you get a headache. So I work on one for a day and another the next. The red and gold pieces will have multi-colored flowers on them. The framed print is my first archival giclee test print which I recolored for my sister- in- law.



Saturday, March 11, 2006
Your Favorite D.C. Scenes?
Monday, March 06, 2006
road trip - well sort of
Sunday, March 05, 2006
End of the Show


Friday, March 03, 2006
Saturday's Closing Show
Prints
I'll post pictures of the pieces I'm working on tommorrow maybe.
Wednesday, March 01, 2006
Closing Show Saturday
Why I don't do reproductions/ knock offs
Once you get known for doing certain styles of art, you basically get pegged. The industry wants to be able to count on artists to produce the same style, reinvented over and over again. Collectors in general want their collections of one artist to look right when hung in the same room. We all can see a Van Gogh and know immediately what makes it a Van Gogh for the most part. It's his unique style.
Although most of my art fits easily into the 'home decor' category, there is only so vanilla I want to be. I've done a few pieces that are a bit too much in the trendy category as it is. I know impressionist landscapes have been done before but for me that is who I really am. I actually took an art quiz on the BBC and it confirmed that my personality type/ age/ gender naturally likes the kind of art I do. I may do my own take on O Keefe one of these days because I do love her art, but I want to make it my own, not peg myself as an O Keefe mimic.
The other thing is that very cheap copies of most famous paintings are readily available from underpaid workers in china so it's not a market I want to compete with. I get fliers in the mail for $99 'Original Oil Paintings' and these are probably what they are. For one thing $99 doesn't even cover my supplies most of the time (depending on the size of the work), let alone labor. It's not a market I'd ever be able to be competative in. There just isn't a lot of profit in it, let alone enjoyment.
So while I continue to draw inspiration from many of the masters as well as new and even unheard of artists, to me it is very important that to stay unique and true to my own style as well. I do always appreciate input and ideas and requests to paint things I've never done before, but copying other's work (even the stuff in eminent domain) is just really not for me. Thank God it's illegal to copy liscensed characters. That saves me from having to do murals I'd deplore and never put in my portfolio.
obnoxious post
So here goes:
Rebecca Tiffany, Becky Chapman, Becky Tiffany-Chapman, Rebecca Tiffany Chapman, Becky Tiffany, Rebecca Chapman, Rebekah Tiffany, Rebekah Chapman, Becki Tiffany, Becki Chapman, Bekki Tiffany, Bekki Chapman, Centreville, Virginia, VA, Washington D.C. DC, Northern Virginia, Centerburg, Ohio, OH, Knoxville, Tennessee, TN, Artist, Acrylic, Muralist, Dan Tiffany, Wayne Tiffany, Bill Tiffany, David Tiffany, Jan Tiffany, Ryan Chapman, Janet Chapman, Ralph Chapman, Landscape, Abstract, Scenery, Impressionist, Waxham, Murphey, Fredonia, New York, NY, Gallery Exhibited, Professional Artist, murals, RCC, RCI, WCBI, FMI, Westerville, Ohio, OH, Collected artist, clients, original works, giclee prints, gallery wrapped, Centerburg High School and for added emphasis: Rebecca Tiffany, Becky Chapman, Becky Tiffany-Chapman, Rebecca Tiffany Chapman, Becky Tiffany, Rebecca Chapman, Rebekah Tiffany, Rebekah Chapman, Becki Tiffany, Becki Chapman, Bekki Tiffany, Bekki Chapman, Centreville, Virginia, VA, Washington D.C. DC, Northern Virginia, Centerburg, Ohio, OH, Knoxville, Tennessee, TN, Artist, Acrylic, Muralist, and again: Rebecca Tiffany, Becky Chapman, Becky Tiffany-Chapman, Rebecca Tiffany Chapman, Becky Tiffany, Rebecca Chapman, Rebekah Tiffany, Rebekah Chapman, Becki Tiffany, Becki Chapman, Bekki Tiffany, Bekki Chapman, Centreville, Virginia, VA, Washington D.C. DC, Northern Virginia, Centerburg, Ohio, OH, Knoxville, Tennessee, TN, artist, acrylic, muralist.
I hope that's not against any of the rules about web ranking - you can post anything in your actual text I believe. It's the tags and mirror page stuff that gets you in trouble.
Please pardon my having to post that but I'm not easy to find on the web right now and am hoping that will help a little. Ahh, perhaps that wasn't so painful afterall. I hope that it will help those who might search for my name to find me.
Sunday, February 26, 2006
Toddler Room











Saturday, February 11, 2006
Ahead
I talked to my brother the other day and he is going to make me some sculpted metal frames for my art and he's working on some sculptures I'll include in my store as well soon. My uncle who is a fine furniture maker is making me some frames this week as well and I'll be using those with my landscapes I think. I'm going to use my brother's frames probably with my abstracts more since that's more his style.
I'm hoping both of them will be interested in doing sculptures. My uncle has done quite a few that have gathered dust in his basement and attic and some eventually been chopped up for firewood. Beautiful mahogany and metal. Some are/were giant - 4' by 12' wall hanging pieces. I saw some things still intact covered in dust last time I was at their house when Sophie was 6 weeks old.
I was reading through art blogs and stumbled across this article that kind of had me depressed but the comments left me with some small scrap of hope about making art in the future.
Tuesday, February 07, 2006
Nowuno Gallery
Wednesday, February 01, 2006
On the easel today

I decided to go up a level in paint quality. That means my paint is going to cost 5-8x as much but the better materials are easier to work with and last much longer in colorfastness. There is another level up from where I am now that is another 5x jump in cost but we'll wait until I want my stuff to last 400 years without any color change. I'm not there yet. So I got started with the sky and background on a new piece. Here's the beginning (I'm having fun - looove the new paint!)
Friday, January 27, 2006
Sunday, January 22, 2006
Show!




