Cyanotype paintings featured by Strathmore

Pleased to be featured on the Strathmore blog and their article helps illustrate my process in a clear way.

Here’s the link to the full article:

https://www.strathmoreartist.com/blog-reader/cyanotype-watercolor-and-gouache.html

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December 23, 2020 | Gouache Mixed Media Watercolor

Cyanotype, Watercolor and Gouache

Artist Julia Whitney Barnes has an absolutely fascinating process for creating her stunning botanical pieces, combining cyanotype, watercolor and gouache.

WHAT IS CYANOTYPE?
Cyanotype is a cameral-ess photographic printing process invented in 1842 by scientist and astronomer Sir John Hirschel, which produces a cyan-blue print when a chemistry-coated surface is exposed to sunlight.

Julia has combined this printing process with fine art to create beautiful botanical masterpieces. Here is a look at her process.

STEPS:⁠
► Julia cuts a roll of our 400 Series Watercolor paper to size. This is a heavyweight paper at 140lb/300gsm and is manufactured to withstand wet media techniques, making it an ideal choice for Julia's process.

► The watercolor paper is coated with cyanotype chemistry, causing it to have a temporary greenish color.

⁠► Julia uses real plants grown locally in her Hudson Valley home garden. Each selected flower is preserved through a pressing process in which she dissects and shapes each form (akin to a specimen from a natural history museum) then lays everything out in massive flat files in her attic studio. ⁠

► She meticulously lays out the pressed flowers in an elaborate composition at night.

► The piece is then exposed to natural or UV light to create the cyan-blue print.⁠

► After the cyanotype process is complete and the design is "printed" by exposure to light, she uses a mix of watercolor and gouache to paint the negative areas of the paper, creating her final masterpiece.

Mural highlighted in Apartment Therapy "12 Best Bedrooms We've ever seen"

During the early months of Covid lockdown I decided to transform my daughter’s bedroom with a collaborative work. It was highlighted in Apartment Therapy and then selected as #8 in their top 12 bedrooms, ever.

https://www.apartmenttherapy.com/best-kids-room-makeovers-36841253

Here’s the link to the original article that highlighted the children’s room mural I made with my daughter this spring.

https://www.apartmenttherapy.com/colorful-mural-kids-bedroom-diy-3675746

BEFORE & AFTER

Before and After: A $36 Project Turns a Plain Bedroom into a Colorful Wonderland

byMELISSA EPIFANO

published MAY 27, 2020

Glow in the dark stars used to be the marker of an ultra cool kid’s room, but nowadays these spaces have gotten even cooler—especially when your mom is an artist, like Julia Whitney Barnes. Julia typically works on wall and floor paintings for public and private venues, but this time Julia put her talents to use on her daughter’s bedroom using only materials she already had. 

Previously, Julia and her family had been living in Brooklyn, but the need for two art studios and enough space to parent and raise kids led them to head to the Hudson Valley. There, they found a charming 1917 home. They removed the carpet, refinished the wood floors, and painted over the “split pea green” walls. But other than furnishing, they didn’t do much to their young daughter’s room. “Our son was born almost two years ago and they pretty happily share the room now. It is the smallest room in our house, yet so often we find the whole family (including our dog piled) in here,” Julia says. The magnetism of the room was one of a few reasons that it became the perfect candidate for a little makeover. 

Because of the pandemic, there was plenty of extra time for art, and an idea that sprung from these creative periods ended up developing into the initial inspiration for the mural. “The walls are all original plaster in here and have a strange texture from their 100 years of life and I wanted to disguise the irregular surface and make the rather small room appear larger by accentuating the high ceilings,” Julia says. “Since the days were all starting to blur together, I was motivated to do something that would have an impact on our daily lives and bring joy to a somber time.”

The project took a week from beginning to end. Julia first did a small collage to plot out the colors and shapes for her mural, then made the painting come to life all on her own. All of the paint came from Julia’s existing inventory, so the only money she spent was on a fresh can of polyurethane sealer—just $36.

Julia used a mix of bold pinks, blues, purples, greens, and yellows from brands like Farrow and Ball, Benjamin Moore, Behr, and Glidden Paints. Following the color, she painted on the polyurethane as a matte top coat to ensure the mural would stay vibrant and last longer. In the closet area, Julia incorporated a chest of drawers with colors that matched those in the mural. A cozy little bed from Sprout Kids in one corner of the room feels like it’s in the middle of a magical garden.

Julia’s mural project totally transformed the basic room, turning the walls into art. “I love how the painting brings new life to the room and our whole family’s life,” Julia says. “It is also really satisfying that it was made with materials just laying around,” says Julia.

Inspired? Submit your own project here.

Melissa Epifano

CONTRIBUTOR

Melissa is a freelance writer who covers home decor, beauty, and fashion. She’s written for MyDomaine, The Spruce, Byrdie, and The Zoe Report. Originally from Oregon, she's currently living in the UK.

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Pleased to join the board of directors of the Mid-Hudson Heritage Center

POUGHKEEPSIE – The Mid-Hudson Heritage Center is pleased to announce the addition of 6 community members to its board of directors. Since its founding in 2011, the organization has continued to expand its arts and cultural offerings to the public. These new board members will help to develop additional creative opportunities for residents and visitors. The new members are:

Julia Whitney Barnes is an accomplished artist, muralist, and ceramicist who has been widely acclaimed for her public art installations. Julia is an adjunct professor in the arts at Marist College.

Nickesha Chung is the Environmental Outreach Organizer for Scenic Hudson, Inc. Nickesha was a Fulbright Scholar in the Kingdom of Swaziland, Africa, focusing on water supply issues and also served as a Human Relations Specialist with the US Army Reserves.

Tracy Dwyer is a designer and project manager at Ashworth Creative, where she specializes in website design and client relations. Tracy has also been a branding specialist with local and national firms.

Melanie Klein is an Associate Professor in the English and Humanities Department at Dutchess Community College. Melanie is also a published poet and a creator of kinetic art installations.

Franky Perez is a guidance counselor in the Poughkeepsie Middle School and was previously a counselor in the Poughkeepsie High School. Franky is fluently bilingual in English and Spanish.

Sarah Salem is the Development Associate with Dutchess Outreach, where she handles fundraising and program development. Sarah has been an intern with Hudson Valley Patterns for Progress and previously worked as a financial services representative for a local financial institution.

The Mid-Hudson Heritage Center is a non-profit organization, based in Poughkeepsie, dedicated to providing opportunities for community members to tell their stories through the arts and cultural projects and events. MHHC operates four venues in Poughkeepsie: the Heritage Center Gallery (317 Main Street), Art Centro (485 Main Street), PUF Studios (in the Poughkeepsie Underwear Factory at 8 N Cherry Street), and the Glebe House history center (635 Main Street).

"Gilded Phytophilic Bats" on view in Confabulations of Millennia

"Gilded Phytophilic Bats" on view in Confabulations of Millennia

Confabulations of Millennia
Institute of Contemporary Art at Maine College of Art

On view from October 6 – December 8, 2017
Exhibition Reception: Friday, October 6, 2017, 5:00–8:00pm

Curated by artist Richard Saja, Confabulations of Millennia brings together the works of 17 contemporary artists who take direct inspiration from the 18th and 19th centuries. Using established styles, techniques and objects perfected in the the 18th and 19th centuries, the 19 artists assembled deploy history as a springboard in order to speak to the intricacies and inconsistencies of modern life be they social, political or aesthetic.

Artists include: Elise Ansel, Martha Arquero, John Brauer, Joey Chiarello, Emily Diaz Norton, Douglas Goldberg, Jeremy Hatch, Beth Katleman, Ryan Wilson Kelly, Melora Kuhn, Livia Marin, Oscar Sancho Nin, John O’Reilly, Erin M. Riley, Richard Saja, Anthony Sonnenberg, Ryan Swanson, Vadis Turner, Julia Whitney Barnes

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"Super Natural" exhibition featured in The Poughkeepsie Journal

"Super Natural" exhibition featured in The Poughkeepsie Journal

Artists use nature to explore their visions in 'Super Natural'

Linda Marston-Reid, For the Poughkeepsie JournalPublished 9:00 a.m. ET July 26, 2017

For hundreds of years, nature has inspired and moved artists to create.

Thomas Cole, regarded as the founding father of the Hudson River School of Art, once said this about nature: “How I have walked … day after day, and all alone, to see if there was not something among the old things which was new!”

For the six artists exhibiting in the "Super Natural" exhibit at Matteawan Gallery, they have used nature as a jumping-off point to explore their personal vision with drawings, paintings and prints, bringing a fresh viewpoint to paintings inspired by nature.

Julia Whitney Barnes creates work with startling colors and compositions created from composite sketches of nature studies. This method may be the traditional way the Hudson River painters created their work, but Whitney Barnes brings surprising combinations together to create compositions that may symbolize more than beauty in nature. For instance, the painting “May Day/Domestic Bliss” incorporates a stunning pink sky with clouds behind a lovely vase of cut flowers. The vase sits on a slice of log; perhaps a symbol of the trees in nature consumed for the wood utilized in the homes that are the framework of domesticity. A plaid tablecloth creates a horizon of the human-made meeting nature.

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