The art of the watercolor

SHARON —“I’m not a birder,†Peggy Macnamara says,right off, during an interview about her upcoming visit to the Northwest Corner (where she has never been before). She is coming for the inaugural party at the Sharon Country Club for an exhibition of her works this weekend that is also a fundraiser for Sharon Audubon.

Macnamara is a resident of Chicago, where she is professor of classical drawing and scientific illustration at the Art Institute and a visiting scientist at the Field Museum of Natural History — which is where she finds most of the models for her artwork. It’s so much easier, she notes, to draw animals and plants at the Field Museum — since they don’t move.

“They stay still for months,†she said happily.

That immobility allows her to get in close and study the “architecture†of the flora and fauna, and to create images that are super detailed.

Last week, when she was interviewed by The Journal, she was taking a break from working on a 6-foot-tall rendering of a caddis fly — a diminutive insect that is a favorite of fly-fishermen.

To translate the tiny bug onto a 6-foot canvas, she explained, “you  have to sit down with your face right in the scope. I work on a long sheet of paper which I roll up as I work.â€

All of Macnamara’s works are watercolors, an unusual medium for large-scale work.

“I started out in oil painting,†she said, and learned to add pigment on in layers, building her work up from blank canvas to finished image. Later in her career she transferred that technique to working in watercolor. For most artists, watercolor technique is the opposite of oil technique; it is done quickly and in fewer layers and it is considered very unforgiving — mistakes are usually torn up and the work is begun again.

Macnamara has found a way to take advantage of the light tones and airiness of watercolor without losing the flexibility of oil.

“Watercolor gives the impression that you have to make the right decision or you’re out, she said. “But it’s not true. If you get 80 percent right, you can get a great piece. It’s more forgiving than people realize.â€

There is a secret, of course: “I use heavy-weight paper. And I do as many as 50 layers, so  you get rich color. It takes persistence and patience.â€And of course, models who don’t move.

Macnamara’s work will be on display at The White Gallery in Lakeville from May 3 to 15. The gallery is open Friday through Monday, 11 a.m. to 4p.m., or by appointment (call 860-435-1029).

The show opens with a reception and fundraiser at  the Sharon Country Club on Sunday, May 2, from 5 to 7 p.m. Macnamara will speak at the event and do a short PowerPoint presentation on how she achieves her multi-layered watercolors.

The show and reception are sponsored by Sharon Audubon and a percentage of sales benefit the center. Tickets to the May 2 event are $75. For reservations, call 860-364-0520 or go online to sharon audubon.org.

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