Monday, September 17, 2012

Kelly Sooter's Fascination with Landscapes


Quiet Moments, by Kelly Sooter.  11z14 oil painting
Kelly Sooter's favorite books as a child were a series of books depicting the scenery of America through photographs. She poured over those books again and again, and experiencing the height deficiency of most 5-year-olds, enjoyed them even more once her mother placed them on the bottom shelf of the bookshelf.
Sooter painting in her home studio

On road trips between home in Spokane and vacations to the San Juan Islands, Sooter would stay awake the whole trip, staring at her favorite parts of the landscape flying by outside the car window. She often wanted to ask her father to stop to she could examine something more closely, but knew he wouldn't understand.  This early fascination is only recently finding its way into her long career as a painter, as many obstacles got in the way.
Being part of a very musical family led her into singing and piano rather than painting. There were no visual artists in her family, so no tools or influences were around. Then in Junior High School, she took an art class that included painting, and absolutely loved it! Despite more art classes being unavailable, it always stuck in her mind.

Bled Castle in Slovenia,
by Sooter's mother
Out of the blue, while in high school, her mother picked up some canvases, paints and a palette knife and began painting scenes from National Geographic magazine. Many as large as 4' high, Sooter enjoyed the thick layers of paint and her realistic results.

A Moment in Desert Canyon, by Kelly Sooter. Oil Painting.
Along comes college, a business degree, and a husband! Sooter wanted to take art classes as well, but knew she wanted to learn structure, composition, design and color theory. Such things were not possible in any art schools with their emphasis on deconstruction, abstraction and modernism. She knew she wanted classical European training.

Bookcover of book
by Bjorg Kleivi
Her persistence paid off when she found Norwegian traditional folk artist Bjorg Kleivi, with whom she studied for 10 years. Kleivi would come to Burien every 18 months or so to work on 96 panels commissioned by a church there. Working in acrylics, Sooter studied hard, and her drive and focus paid off as her own panels now hang next the works of this master in the church, being done with such great skill.

Zhostovo style tray by
Slava Letkov
After that, she wished to move beyond that form and sought the tutelage of Russian Zhostovo master Slava Letkov, who is today the last master of this art form in Russia. This distinctive style features a group of highly realistic flowers on a black background, painted onto a tray. Sooter mastered this art form so well that she became a highly sought after teacher in this country herself. She continued to paint and sell her own works in this technique until 2010.

Pair of alder boxes, replicated by Sooter, inspired by
two boxes brought here from Europe
About two years ago, a life-altering trip to Laguna Beach brought it all together for Sooter. She'd been photographing landscapes for many years, but saw it only as a hobby. Then she began sketching the landscapes as well, with Bend and Leavenworth being favorite subjects. But it was in Laguna Beach that she encountered works by landscape masters Scott Christensen, Shane Townley and (now deceased) Wolfgang Bloch. Sooter knew she needed to do this herself, and let that 5-year-old who fell in love with those landscape pictures in the books find her voice.


Photo and initial sketching on left.  Final painting on right of
A Plumb Line in La Connor, oil painting by Kelly Sooter
She studied the works of these 3 painters, who were melding texture with landscapes. “What I needed to do with my art hit me with full force. It opened my artistic world to mediums and design that let my real artistic voice come to the surface.”

In the studio, showing various stages of a painting,
View of studio from corner,
Wet Paint area, waiting for next layers
Various brushes, and color
blending experiments
What we see in Sooter's landscapes today is a culmination of her very early, and lifelong, infatuation with landscapes, informed by the specific skills and methods learned from her mentors. This includes things like pushing oneself to “tone” colors (e.g. add some red to blue to gray it down for a good sky color, as opposed to simply adding white); applying composition and design tenets by finding balance between the lightest and darkest points on the canvas; pushing paint brushes to their maximum potential by knowing when to apply pressure, how much to apply, and when to release it. This last aspect is especially noticeable in the water features of her current landscapes.

Tubes of oil paints
in the Sooter studio
Having used acrylic paints in her previous art experience, Sooter also made a move to oil at this point. “The luminosity is simply not possible in any other medium.” And luminosity within her landscapes is a major goal for Sooter. In a 10-day Russian icon painting classes taken some years ago, she was mesmerized by the application of gold leaf, creating a fascinating effect. Sooter found a perfect oil to achieve her desired effect in Chroma's Pale Gold, which she applies as an undercoat to each canvas, helping achieve the luminous effect.

Early on in her landscape attempts, Sooter was frustrated with not getting just the right translucence in her clouds. A friend painter turned her on to Old Holland paint, which is the paint Vincent Van Gogh used, and is the only oil paint she has found that gets just the right look for clouds.

Reflections of a Young Heart, oil painting
by Kelly Sooter.  Great example of using
Old Holland paint for the clouds.
She loves to use Vasari paints, which like Old Holland paints, are made with actual stone-ground pigments. She also uses Gamblin oils, which are not stone-ground, but of very high quality. Each type of paint yields a different result, which her years of skill applies to the canvas to achieve exactly the result she's after.

Her love of landscapes is evident in her current paintings, which meld classical and impressionist art forms, striving to capture the beauty and serenity of the view. The Pacific Northwest offers a plethora of picturesque views to capture, and all the works in our current exhibition were inspired by them.





Meet Kelly Sooter in person on Thursday, September 20, at Manya Vee Selects. Enjoy a large showing of her work through October 16, as well as a smaller collection thereafter.

Manya Vee Selects
409 Main St
Edmonds, WA  98020
425-776-3778