Painting Holidays in South Africa

Entries from November 2008

Seasonal Holiday Special

November 30, 2008 · Leave a Comment

There is so much doom and gloom around at the moment I started wondering how I could lighten the atmosphere and bring a smile back to everyone’s face. Then I got it! I am going to give you a tremendous end of year gift by offering 10% OFF any South African Painting Holiday that is booked before the end of February 2009.

Max my accountant didn’t like my idea at all, (don’t you find accountants so inhibiting?) but I hung in there and refused to withdraw the offer, however I couldn’t stand Max growling every time he looked at me and muttering under his breath, so to make Max smile again, I compromised I said “OK Max I’ll make it an offer for the first 100 people who book their South African Painting Holiday before the end of February 2009″

He’s smiling again and I’m happy to be able to offer you a fantastic painting holiday at a fantastic seasonal price but you’ve just got to be quick about it as there Max (Scrooge)is only allowing 100 holidays at this price.
Now, that’s not where it ends – I’ve sneaked in a few extras for you if you are in the lucky 100. I’m going to throw in a whole bunch of really nice extras…

  • You will get absolutely FREE, access to our exclusive private Painting Circle for 90 Days. Our Painting Circle is brim full of tips, hints, videos and much more. Everything you need to keep your painting inspired!
  • You will also be able to enjoy a one-on-one mentoring session with one of our tutors for 90 days, while you paint a picture. That’s 24 hour access to a professional artist who will guide you through your painting with plenty of on-line helpful advice and constructive critiquing right up to the last day of your painting.PLUS
  • I’ll give you the opportunity to ask Gill (our senior tutor) about any three painting problems you have, and Gill will reply by sending you a personalized video blog where she will show you exactly how to get back on track.Do Remember this offer is on a first come basis for the first 100 people to book their 2009 holiday, so don’t miss out on Seasonal Madness of ours.

    For Info About This Seasonal Holiday Special

    Click Here

  • PAINTING TIP NO.10

    The knowledge of what to leave out is almost as important as that of knowing what to include: Be selective.

Categories: art · south africa · travel · visual art · watercolour painting holiday · watercolour painting holidays
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Hippos at St Lucia

November 27, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Look what these lucky people saw on their hippo tour up the iSimangaliso Wetland Park estuary a world heritage site situated on the North Coast of Kwa Zulu Natal. (Formerly St Lucia).

If you come and join us on a Painting Holiday you could be the one sitting this close to the hippos while you sketch away or take photos for a later painting.
How cool is that?

Last time I was there taking a stroll down the road to have some supper and there wandering along also looking for supper was this young hippo. I couldn’t believe my eyes.

This stopover is day 2 on my Painting tour

Categories: Drawing · art · family · painting holiday · photography · south africa · travel · visual art · watercolour painting holiday · watercolour painting holidays
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Netherlands Reality TV adventures in SA

November 26, 2008 · Leave a Comment

We in South Africa seem to be attracting a whole lot of international interest. Not only are celebs like Lionel Richie,  Rod Stewart and Katie Melua, falling over themselves to come on tour to South Africa but so to are actors buzzing in like mad to make a film. Now the reality programme producers are also getting in on the act. Seems we must offer one of the best areas in Africa with wild and exotic appeal, check out this article of what the Dutch are doing:-

“In the first episode, broadcast on 10 November, five teams, each comprising one model and one disabled person, were assembled. Over the next nine episodes, the teams perform a series of challenges – including a specially developed tandem bicycle route – at scenic locations across South Africa.
While each stage involves cycling, each episode also includes new and uniquely South African challenges as teams compete for a head start in the next episode – and ultimately for the 20 000 first prize.

Expedition Unlimited provides viewers with a glimpse of different worlds: South Africa versus the Netherlands, models versus people with disabilities, the African bush, the desert, the sea and mountains.
“South Africa is a prime example of a country full of contrasts and extremes – the ideal place for challenge and adventure,” says Ilse-Marie Sobering, marketing and communications manager at South African Tourism in the Netherlands.

“As such, each episode aims to depict South Africa to Dutch consumers as both exotic and challenging, but also accessible and engaging.” For more information, visit Expedition Unlimited.
Source:
An extract from SouthAfrica.info

Come on one of my Painting Holidays and you too can enjoy this exotic and accessible country

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What a day!

November 16, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Wow what a day Friday was. I woke up to a truly stunningly beautiful day, blue skies, sunshine a warmth and a crystal clear atmosphere. Absolutely lovely and just the day to celebrate my daughters birthday. So off I went to a nearby restaurant where we had agreed to all meet. My one big happy family. Steph looked radiant and happy and we all had a delightful time together. Shortly after we had split up to go our separate ways I got a call from hubby Fred to say “its hailing outside so hang on a bit longer before setting off.”

Thought nothing more about it and finally wended our way home only to hit a huge traffic jam which had resulted because the road was inundated with water necesitating careful driving! Wow we thought they must have had some rain here. Then we realised just what we had missed…
As we drove up the final hill home the whole valley was just devastated. The trees looked like some angry giant had just twisted and ripped off all the tops. Not just one or two but the whole hillside.
As we looked around more we saw trees had fallen down and tiles had been ripped off roofs. We now feared for our own houses.

Well what a mess! But then I was one of the lucky ones, my house was fine nothing broken and the roof in tact but there were 5 broken trees in the garden; one huge avocado tree reduced to a splintered stump!

I went off to get a chainsaw and noticed loads more damage with people slowly trying to get access to roads through the littered trees and wires hanging precariously. They were out of saws but I met up with a delightful man named John who said he would come and sort me out. Well what a hero he was, working away in the rain clearing the trees from off electricity wires and fences making all safe for us. And then guess what? He only wanted a donation! Obviously I paid him fairly but I could have ripped him off badly cause he never even looked at how much I gave him.

But that was not the end of the day. We found out that this tornado or whatever it was had annihilated a low income area down the road where our staff stay. Dreadful. 4000 people had absolutely no house or possessions any more and 7 children died. Awful! It is inconceivable to understand such loss and can only thank our lucky stars for our own good fortune and try our best to help those who didn’t have our luck that Friday. John went on to work till 9pm cutting up trees and clearing roads so people could get to their houses. A true knight in shining armor.

But that is still not the end. Actually as they say every cloud has a silver lining. Our silver lining came in the form of a telephone call from my daughter saying “Mum, Brandon asked me to marry him!!!”

So we are now proud ‘in-laws to be‘  and very happily welcome Steph’s Brandon to our family.

What a lovely way to end the day.

Categories: family · south africa
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Never be short of a good painting location

November 16, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I live in KwaZulu Natal which is the eastern most province of South Africa. It measures just 92,100 square kilometres stretching from Port Edward in the south to its border with Mozambique in the north and has  a population of nine million. Mainly Zulus but also boasts the largest gathering of Indians living outside India. This is where my Watercolour Landscape Painting Holidays begin

The coast has 120 kilometres of Magnificent Beaches lapped, by the warm Indian Ocean -
Sometimes rocky inlets sometimes miles of sand dunes often with people enjoying

  • Kite surfing,

  • Kayaking,
  • Surfing, or
  • Para-gliding which gives the landscape a human touch.

Up North there are the Elephant Coast, Dolphin Coast and Isimangaliso Wetland Park (formerly the Great

er St Lucia Wetland Park). Here you can sketch or paint amongst nature’s bounties up close and personal with the elephant and then watch the hippo and after painting all day sneak up on the turtles as t

hey come back to the beach to lay their eggs. If you really fancy revving it up a bit, theres always Quad Biking.

Down South the Hibiscus Coast plays host, in July most years, to the incredible, annual migration of

sardines with their following of dolphins, sharks and whales. A “wow” moment in anyone’s vacation! For the adventurous there is

  • Scuba Diving on the famous Aliwal Shoal with the sharks and dolphins, or
  • Swing Line & Bungee Jump in the Oribi Gorge as well as Abseiling down waterfalls offer a great backdrop to another Watercolour Landscape Painting

The Drakensberg or uKhahlamba mountains are perfect for painting- it is pure, untouched, magnificent splendor, and hidden amongst the caves and mountains you can visit some of the first art work of the world the San rock art. Awesome to think of the years these masterpieces have lasted.

The Midlands have 4 meandering tourist routes with 400 places to visit. An art & craft haven as you can visit artists in their studios, join them in a painting session and later enjoy some of the fun pursuits , the Treetop Zip Line Tour, Horseback Safaris, and White Water Rafting.

Zululand boasts some of the best Game Reserves on the continent where, if you want to indulge in some watercolour landscape painting of bush, waterholes amongst the animals, this is the spot.You can also visit the cultural villages and try your hand at drawing traditional Africa

There is so much Painting Enjoyment in South Africa and I’ve only told you about KZN. South Africa boasts such a diversity of Cultures, History, natural splendour and outdoor activities you are sure to find just what you’ve always been looking for so come and meet me and have a really great time! I look forward to it.

South Africa got you hooked yet?

Categories: art · painting holiday · south africa · travel · visual art
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Bushman painting as documentary

November 6, 2008 · Leave a Comment

This I found absolutely interesting. Someone has managed to work out just how the Rock Art was done and stood the test of time and now is actually reproducing the images as a recording for posterity and a novel form of his own art!
Stunning have a read it was written by Lucille Davie on 30 October 2008 for South Africa Info

There were no Bushmen about to ask how to create the paintings, so artist Stephen Townley Bassett learned how to recreate Bushman paintings the hard way – by trial and error.

His dedication to the task over the past 18 years has led to the first major exhibition of his Bushman works – 30 extraordinary paintings assembled at the Origins Centre at Wits University in Johannesburg in an exhibition entitled Reservoirs of Potency.

The exhibition, which opened last week and runs until February 2009, consists of 19 artworks from private collectors around the world, and 11 from Bassett’s own collection.

“I threw away my penknife,” Bassett says, together with plastic containers and metal tins. And went out into the bush discovering. He learned how to use animal blood, saliva, ochre, cobra venom and ostrich egg shells to create pigment to paint the images, precise copies of Bushmen paintings from around the country.

He learned too how to use porcupine quills, buck horns, rocks, animal hairs, bird droppings, feathers and animal skins that would become his stock in trade. He made mistakes along the way but got it right.

‘I learned that fat is a good binder’

“I learned that fat is a good binder. I would make a paste which was easy to carry. I learned to liquefy it again with gall, saliva and blood.” Bassett also learned about the different quality of hair of different animals, giving him fine hair for a paintbrush, or thicker hair for a bushier brush.

He even made his own stone tools to skin spring hares and foxes he’d shot, to use the skin as a pouch in which to carry his painting implements.

The animals and people in his works, which Bassett calls “documentary paintings”, are the precise size of the originals. The works are done on 100 percent cotton sheets. Each piece, he says, is a one-off.

“So much has gone into each painting,” he explains. He would spend days at a site, deciphering the original, with a miner’s lamp on his forehead.

“The first thing is to document as accurately as possible, doing it with pigments available to them, absolutely life size. I would only record what I saw, making it a little darker, to take account of dust,” he recounts. Then back at home a painting would take between six and eight weeks to complete.

“The work is very exacting, very demanding. There is no debate, the work has to be right – everything exactly there. It is a blend of science, art and craft,” he says, referring to the tool-making as craft.

Endorsements

Such is his attention to detail that the professor emeritus and renowned researcher and author on Bushman art, David Lewis-Williams, comments in the caption of one piece that it was only after Bassett captured the work, the Leaping Lion, that Lewis-Williams noticed fish around the lion’s body.

“Often I return to the site with my half-completed painting to compare colours and overall appearance of my rendition to the original on the rock,” says Bassett. “All paint marks on the rock that are within the frame of reference of the chosen scene must be recorded. All marks must be acknowledged and recorded. The final product must be the next best thing to the original on the rock, a kind of historical document of what has been deciphered from the rock face.”

His paintings have brief notes or paint blotches around the edges which don’t distract from the work, but help to guide him as to colour and markings on the original.

And he has the full endorsement of Dr Benjamin Smith, the director of the Rock Art Research Institute at the University of the Witwatersrand, and Lewis-Williams, who describes the work as “wonderful” and “very special”.

“You must either do the work accurately or not at all,” says Lewis-Williams.

Smith says: “This is an artist like no other; he bleeds for his art,” referring to the fact that Bassett has used his own blood in his paint mixes.

The exhibition has a case displaying his tools, the first time they have been on show.

Source: City of Johannesburg

WOW!
Wouldn’t you like to see some rock art up close?
It really is quite an emotional experience and gets you thinking about how we all evolved and how our painting has changed, or has it?

Categories: art · painting holiday · south africa · travel · visual art
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Your South Africa image search is over!

November 5, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Look what I found today – A really cool site full of pictures that you can look at and use freely.
2 000 high-resolution photos in the MediaClubSouthAfrica.com image library is a stunning free resource for publishers, media practitioners – and anyone else with an interest in South Africa.

A great way to get some interesting painting  resources to hone up on your African art. Then I can promise you , you will be itching to get here and see it all for real and what better way than by coming with me on a South African Painting Holiday

Go to SouthAfrica.infoSource: SouthAfrica.info
The all-in-one official guide
and web portal to South Africa.

Categories: painting holiday · photography · south africa · travel · visual art
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Which paintbrushes do I really need?

November 1, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Well with it being Halloween yesterday there will be plenty of us who painted various festive items to trick or treat our friends, but if you are more serious about your painting you will need to know more about your brushes
Gill Van Wyk our friendly tutor at South African Painting Holidays says:

  • Brushes are probably the most important investment you make when you begin watercolours so you have to know what you’re looking at and what to choose.

You immediately think size.
Three or four sizes are probably adequate for any watercolourist and as you become more experienced you will realise that you were conned into buying a lot of brushes because you thought they would do the job for you but actually you’re the one doing the job..

  • Use a size 14 round brush to cover area, but look for a brush that will keep a good point for the detail later.
  • Use a size 6 or 8 to help cover rocks and smaller areas but it still needs a sharp point for some basic detail
  • You need a small brush for grasses and foreground calligraph
  • And a square or angled brush for leaf areas

So that’s it in a nutshell, just a few carefully chosen brushes and you are well on your way to starting your next great painting

To listen to Gill with more tips and helpful advice and much much more why not join the Painting Circle where you can even get mentored by Gill while you paint from home. Never feel alone with your painting again!

A painting tip

from Andrew James who recommends that you always “Start and finish your work with the largest brushes possible” found in A&I March 2008

To get more tips straight to your emails click here

Categories: art · painting holiday · south africa · travel · visual art
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