Jane Aukshunas
I
posted a couple of these prints a few weeks ago when I didn’t have time to do a
full Art Sunday post. They were just a taster of her work. I had never seen
this womans’ work before and even at first glance it immediately appealed to me.
Aukshunas
revels in the creamy medium of oil pastels and uses a hybrid technique that can
be regarded both as drawing and painting. She applies thick layers of richly
colored oil pastel to paper or wooden panels and works the medium with her
fingers and other tools. Her giclee prints convey the texture and richness of
the original work.
Jane
Aukshunas holds a Bachelors of Fine Art from Massachusetts College of Art in Boston, with additional studies of Japanese art at Harvard University
and fashion design at Parsons School of Design in New York City. The artist also studied
traditional Balinese painting in Indonesia, and developed her
current oil pastel techniques through experimentation in her studio.
She lives and works in the Willamette Valley
which is rich with diverse terrain supporting what may be the widest variety of
crops in the world. Over the years; she has traveled to Italy and Hawaii
to draw some of the world’s most beautiful landscapes and has studied
traditional Balinese painting in Bali,
Indonesia. All
of this experience reflects in her rich work of the landscape.
Training
Jane
Aukshunas holds a Bachelors of Fine Arts from Massachusetts College of Art, Boston, Massachusetts,
with additional studies of Japanese art at Harvard University
and fashion design at Parsons School of Design, New York City. Jane has also
studied traditional Balinese painting in Indonesia. She has developed her
current oil pastel techniques through experimentation in her studio.
Education
- BFA, Massachusetts College
of Art, Boston, MA,
1980
Additional
studies at:
- Parsons School of
Design, New York City,
NY
- Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
This is what she says of her own work
“People
who love my work say they feel as though they can walk right into my images and
take a deep breath, because the space there is so tranquil and inviting. My use
of vibrant color and undulating shapes create a sense of calm yet buoyant joy,
and the pathways and roads I incorporate invite exploration. The colors and
shapes carry awareness on a journey throughout the picture space.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhpcqvCFZTnkFu8yUEKurrWq_GVvvsC4XHBAGLL5Gz42Dsmu2kSJafpVwiwZcUol-Vwb-6Z878bX1nj7ni86TdWT0erB8_XJFMYQf9ftYB1sOTzMdyxORa2ae1iONnEWmt_DheUnwnvLiQ/s280/blue-river_150.jpg)
When I was about 10 years old, I
discovered oil pastels and have been enamored of them ever since. Oil pastels
consist of pigment mixed with a binder of wax and non-drying oil. They are much
creamier than chalk pastels, allowing a greater freedom of expression than
pencils and more control than paint. I adore them for their textural sensuality
and find them delightful to apply to the wood panels and paper on which I work.
Over many years of experimentation in my studio, I have developed oil pastel
techniques that blend both drawing and painting. To achieve my lush landscape
imagery, I utilize thick applications of richly colored oil pastels, working
the creamy pigments with my fingers and other tools.
I like to work “en plein air” (on
location in the great outdoors), but painting outdoors can sometimes be
challenging. At times, while working by the side of busy roads, I have had to
hold tightly to my drawing board when trucks roared by. I have had to devise
ways to keep my oil pastels from melting on hot summer days, and during the
rainy season, I occasionally have to work inside my car, using the windshield
wipers to clear my view of the landscape.
Perhaps because my formal art training
is rooted in design, I pare down the world around me to the essential elements,
shapes and colors that have become the crux of my imagery. Vibrant color and
sensuality of line give my work a playful and contemporary feeling, and the
images in my art reflect my love of rhythm, music and movement. I have had a
lifelong interest in textiles, and consequently, my imagery is influenced by
fabric design’’.
Jane
Aukshunas