
Lupines grow all over the Annapolis Valley, especially along the roadsides.
With my shoulders and legs sore from rototilling the garden, I headed for the studio at the end of last week to paint some of the fabulous purple lupines that grow wild around our house. I also wanted to capture the beauty of some masses of Siberian Iris that my friend Pamela gave me from among the hundreds that grow in her flower gardens.

My friend Pamela also gave me a clump of Siberian iris for my garden. She is one generous friend!
Iris represent to me my late mother and grandmother. They both grew iris and I brought some of their original rhizomes to plant here in Nova Scotia when we moved. I always think of their love of flowers when I see iris and each year for many years I’ve tried to paint their luscious shapes and colours in the short window of opportunity, for they don’t bloom for long.

These were my mother's bearded iris and before that, my grandmother's. I brought some to Bear River from our postage-stamp sized front garden in Toronto. I paint them every year.
I wanted my painting to reproduce the feeling of being outside (but without the very active black flies) so I pulled out all my vases and water jars at the studio so that I could create a garden on my table!

First I worked with watercolour in order to loosen myself up. I also love the way colour and water flow into each other and I wanted to ‘play’ with that.

I first painted some shapes with clear water and then loaded my brush with colour and randomly painted some flower shapes so that I would get 'accidental' colour bleeds into the wet spaces.
This is one of my favorite iris paintings that I’ve ever done with watercolour.

The Ancestor. watercolour by Flora Doehler, 1998. Collection of Gail Waiser.
I approached the acrylic like a wet-in-wet watercolour and tried to keep it very loose.

I sketched the flowers with watercolour crayons and then spritzed the canvas with water. Next I painted using watery acrylics. When the painting is finished, I'll fix the images by painting a mat or varnish medium over the entire canvas.
I’ve been inspired over the last year by reading artists’ blogs and online communities. There is so much creative work and exchange happening out there and it’s exciting to be able to see artwork online and to develop connections and correspondence with fellow artists all over the world, especially because I live in a tiny community that is a great distance from major galleries.
I subscribe to artist and writer Carol Wiebe’s blog called Silverspring Studio. I like Carol’s blog because it is a perfect mix of good writing and interesting articles. She writes about her own (beautiful) work as well as other artists. I have been introduced to many creative artists and websites through her descriptions. Carol recently set up her own online community called Cracked Paper Quilts and posted an online tutorial about her use of photo software, Adobe Elements, to digitally alter and enhance her artwork. I was very inspired by the mandela-like images she developed and I tried it myself with the paintings that I’m working on as well as this photo of lupines growing here with our new house as a backdrop.

Most of our wild lupines are purple, but we also have some pink and white ones.
I altered the colours in the photograph and experimented with some of the filters in Photoshop. To see more detail, click on the image.
I photographed a section of the acrylic canvas that I’m working on. I adore the colours.

Iris and Lupines painting, detail. Flora Doehler, 2009
First I altered the image with filters found in Adobe Photoshop. I liked that pen and ink look shown here.

First I made the alterations using photoshop.
Then I quadrupled the image and flipped and/or turned the image upside down to create the kind of image I might get when looking through a kaleidoscope.

Next I quadrupuled the altered image, flipped and turned them and reassembled them.
I am thinking of ways to use the resulting works. I get it that altering images can be endless and addictive! It’s fun to see how colour changes can totally alter the feel of a piece.
This detail of the iris with watercolour was next on my list.

These iris were like having graceful dancers in the studio.
I changed the colours and applied a filter in Adobe Photoshop.

I love the batik look of this altered painting.
You can view the whole set here
I wish I wasn’t so consumed right now with gardening, moving, packing, sawdust vaccuming etc because I just want to paint these gorgeous flowers while they are still in bloom.
In another month or less we’ll be moved in and then there will be another wave of blooms to do. Still, I am promising myself to clear the decks for at least 2 weeks next year during iris time.

I think this looks like a piece of fabric now.
The beauty of Adobe Photoshop is that it’s as portable as your laptop and is something to ‘play’ with after a long day of mowing lawns and pulling weeds and turning up more sod by hand. Especially when your partner is sitting beside you on the couch watching the Stanley Cup final playoff game. That’s h-o-c-k-e-y for those of you living in an alternative universe.










6 responses so far ↓
Sheri Gaynor // June 16, 2009 at 1:01 pm
GORGEOUS!!! WOW! What an amazing explosion of color.
Thank you for brightening my day.
Flora // June 16, 2009 at 2:45 pm
Thank you Sheri! We are so lucky to be surrounded by so much colour!
John Thompson // June 23, 2009 at 9:21 pm
I love all your “artistic adventures”, Flora. The computer variants are very cool, but your watercolours are by far my favorite. The iris are just plain exquisite!! Next year you will just have to set aside those 2 weeks to get lost in your iris and the rest of the world be damned! Is the” Iris and Lupines” painting for sale?
carolwiebe // June 23, 2009 at 10:04 pm
I agree with Sheri–these are all gorgeous, right from that original iris painting through all the digital permutations.
John has a point: your watercolours are exquisite, but it is also fun to take an original and play with it. I loved the kaleidoscope as a child (still do!) and it feels like playing with a kaleidoscope when I flip and combine parts of a photo or painting. How I used to wish that I could preserve a design when it was so beautiful, but one tiny movement and a whole new design would emerge.
With Photoshop, I can keep every change!
Flora // June 24, 2009 at 3:56 pm
Thanks John! I’m waiting for a blog where I can read about the kitchen design adventures of you and your wife because that is a mysterious world that I have been able to glimpse into this past year!
Yesterday I planted dozens more of those Siberians that my friend Pamela gifted me. Some were still in bloom and I wanted to cut them and take them back to the studio and work on them! However, it was very late by the time I finished planting and Larry finished sanding…..and neither of us done either!…Just ‘done in”. Next year I will FOR SURE set the time aside.
The Iris and Lupine painting, meant to look like a watercolour, is not quite finished. It is fairly large on a 30″ x 36″ canvas and will be priced at $950 when it’s ready. Unless I become too attached….which happens to many paintings if I hang them for more than 2 weeks in our house. lol. The best case scenario is that I paint the canvas, and then Rob from the Flight of Fancy comes over and takes it away to his store.
Thanks for your kind words.
Flora // June 24, 2009 at 4:20 pm
I love the rush that direct painting brings. The tactile experience, the run of colour, the experience of the setting etc, nothing could ever replace that for me. Using a digital altering device is really a whole other world that produces results that I could never do myself. It’s also forgiving….there is always the undo button. It’s fun to alter something that is your own creation too. It’s really apples and oranges though.
I much prefer painting, but I am also looking forward to playing with photoshop some more!
i really like the kalidescope bit and abstracting a piece too.