ABOUT DANIELLE FOUSHEE

I am an artist. This website features my work and highlights some of the varied
inspirations that inform my creative practice. Read more about me here.

Check out my facebook page or follow me on twitter at
@ArtistDFoushee.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Recent Sketchbook Entries

I work in a lot of different media, experimenting to see what different effects I can get when combining different kinds of pens or pencils or inks, or whatever. These are some recent drawings from my sketchbook.

I usually carry my sketchbook everywhere... Some drawings are more “finished” than others. Some are just pencil outlines, others are completely shaded with color or graphite. I guess it depends on my level of patience from one day to the next.

I started this one at a campground in Canyonlands. I like it, but didn’t feel like working on it anymore so I moved onto something else. Maybe I’ll complete it in a different media or turn it into a painting or collage at some point.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Cardboard Art by Mark Langan


Ohio artist Mark Langon creates these beautiful compositions from nothing but corrugated cardboard, which he cuts using a generic x-acto knife. I love the use of reclaimed materials! I sometimes use cardboard cutouts in my own paintings, and I have to say I don’t think I’d have the patience to cut this volume of cardboard for my work. I have enough difficulty just cutting out 4 or 5 plain circles, much less the kind of detail you see in this work—one reason I’m eager to get my hands on a laser cutter!

Salutation

Mid-states packaging 101

Mid-States Packaging 112

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Art in Ojai

Another Magical Night

We got up this morning and decided to take an hour drive up to Ojai, California... One of our favorite little places to spend a lazy Sunday. They were having an art festival in the park—lots of jewelry, some interesting paintings, and photography. My favorite art wasn't in the park, though. It was in a gallery on the main road—Trowbridge Gallery. There were two artists represented that stood out above the others: Jeff Sojka and Ginger Moore Maxwell.

Mood Moon

Jeff Sojka’s paintings were of the landscape variety, and I especially liked the ones that were mostly about the big sky. I’ve been working on a series of photography that is all about the big sky, so I think that’s why I’m drawn to these. The red one is my favorite, and Matt liked the blue one.

Midday Dream II

Ginger Moore Maxwell’s paintings were a little more quirky. Her paintings of wildflowers (of course I can’t resist wildflowers!) are very representational and detailed. The thing that makes them so interesting is that the flowers seem to be like puppets, suspended from little strings, hanging from an unseen place. Are they puppets, happy and dancing? Or, are they hung like little dead men? I’m not sure.

Day Trip to Ojai, California

Entrance to the park in Ojai

We got up this morning and decided to take an hour drive up to Ojai, California... One of our favorite little places to spend a lazy Sunday.

We were really looking forward to visiting our favorite old bbq dive joint [Oak Pit BBQ] in Oak View, just a couple miles outside of Ojai... When we got there, we found it completely different than we left it a couple years ago. I guess someone bought it and renovated it. It’s no longer the homey, divey place we loved. Now it’s just a generic restaurant, nothing special about the new atmosphere. I wish I had a photo of how it used to be.

We decided to give it a chance anyway. The food was good, not great like we remembered. I especially missed the hand-cut fries they used to serve. Now they just serve regular old frozen fries—boring! And on top of everything else, we were too full after lunch to indulge in our favorite raspberry sorbet from the ice cream shop in town!

After we walked through downtown Ojai looking at some lovely art at the “Art in the Park” fair, we drove over to one of my favorite spots at Meditation Mount, where we took a walk in the peace garden and looked out over the Ojai Valley.

It really is a peaceful place! I saw this beautiful cactus bloom on the path.

There are working ranches, orchards and farms all over the place. We stopped to photograph this recently-bailed hay from outside Black Mountain Ranch. So beautiful. When I spend so much time in Los Angeles (after living there and visiting all the time) it’s easy to forget that much of California is rural.

Here’s a roadside produce stand in Fillmore. We stopped in and looked around on our way back to the city. Too bad we’re staying in a hotel or I would’ve racked up on some freshly picked strawberries!

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Back in Los Angeles

Matt and I are back in LA for the next week so I can do some work with FIDM—I’m trying to finish up their college catalog design so I can send my files to the printer... sigh... This project is really beginning to draaag. I think it will be a great piece when it finally gets completed—If I survive that long!

Our trip: We drove through several hours of rain in Utah, which was unusual simply because it rarely rains in the desert, and when it does it’s usually just for a few minutes. By the time we arrived in Vegas it was sunny and a warm 100°. Then, as we came down the hill at Cajon Pass, we could see a blanket of brown resting over Southern California... *cough, cough*

We’re thinking about going to Ojai tomorrow (Oak Pit BBQ—A dive with the best bbq in California, and the best fries too!)... or maybe hiking Mount Williamson in the Angeles National Forest. . . I’m definitely going to Golden Bridge Yoga several times this week for a few kundalini classes... and I won’t leave the city without at least one meal at my favorite Thai restaurant.

Update: Um, we went back to Oak Pit BBQ, and apparently the ownership has changed. They completely remodeled the interior, so instead of having a quirky charm, it's totally generic. And the same thing happened to their food. Instead of delicious hand-cut fries, now it's the frozen kind. Blech. And the sandwiches just didn't have the same oomph in the new sterile atmostphere.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

More Evidence of my Wildflower Obsession

Cliffrose below the Rattlesnake Arches.

Matt took me up to hike the Rattlesnake Arches within McInnis Canyons National Conservation Area in the late afternoon yesterday. The temperature was perfect, and since it was so late in the day there was hardly anyone else around. Matt and I agree, May is the best month of the year in canyon country.

Stemless Woolybase

Cushion Buckwheat

I love this one! It looks like a little mound of fluffy pom poms low to the ground. If you bend down and get a close-up look, you can see the little red stripe on each tiny petal. It makes me think of peppermint!

Penstemon

Sego Lily

Friday, May 15, 2009

Recent Paintings / New Color Palettes

A couple months ago I was working on these new small paintings and I needed some inspiration. I’ve been getting sick of the color palettes I typically gravitate towards, so I decided to put all my inks in a big pile, and force myself to use whichever 3 or 4 random colors I picked with my eyes closed.

I’m so glad I did this little exercise, because I never would’ve combined colors in exactly this way; these are much subtler and softer than I’m used to. I think I’ll continue this method for a while and see what happens.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

More Surprises / Southern Utah

A Native American grain storage building under a rock overhang in a cliff side.

The Southern Utah deserts are bursting with surprises — large and small, from wildflowers to thousand-year old native rock art to natural arches and springs. Matt and I have come across quite a few Native American drawings as we’ve explored our local region this spring.

This natural arch is called “Paul Bunyan’s Potty” and is located near the granary pictured above. You can get a sense of the scale of things by noticing Matt standing at the base of the rock at the bottom of the picture.

Native American rock art at the base of a cliff just outside Canyonlands National Park.


Monday, May 11, 2009

More Utah Desert Wildflowers

Claret Cup Cactus

Silvery Lupine

Milkvetch

Globemallow

Cliffrose

Heartbreaking Beauty of the Utah Desert

We were surprised to find a little patch of Manzanita at the higher elevations. This plant is really common in the Angeles National Forest north of Los Angeles.

I can’t find a name for this one. Looks like a lily, perhaps, but it’s not in any of my books.

Matt and I went (once again) to the southeast corner of Utah for a weekend of camping and outdoor enjoyment. We finally got our new truck completely situated the way we want it for going waaaay out into the sticks on bumpy 4x4 roads. I think we saw a total of five or six other people the entire weekend.

Dwarf Evening Primrose — This is by far the largest flower I saw. Each bloom is about 2" in diameter. The entire plant is a mound about 12" around.

The first week of May is, as far as I can guess, the prime time for desert wildflower spotting. The weather is just getting warm, about 75° during the day, and there are still a few patches of old snow in the shadiest spots.

Scarlet Gilia

The thing I love most about desert wildflowers is their tiny size relative to the vast expanse of landscape. If you don't keep your eyes open, it's easy to just glance right over them. They grow close to the ground, typically not very close to one another, and the blooms are rarely over a half-inch in diameter.

Our campsite (and our new truck!). The higherelevations are really green at the moment — big thunderstorms passed through last week. Everything will be brown again shortly.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Stephanie Liner’s Paradoxical Sculptures

I came across these beautifully unnerving works by Stephanie Liner through the pattern research I’ve been doing lately. Her work straddles ideas of beauty and traditional ideas of femininity and sexuality. She uses patterns in her work that evoke the Victorian period, when women had a very defined role in the household and in culture.

Many of the pieces Stephanie makes have secret compartments in intimate places that hold candy or other objects for viewers (men) to discover. Are these items gifts from the woman to her suitor, or is there something more sinister in the relationship between the woman and the viewer?

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Alex Blau’s Pattern Paintings


My friend Camille knows how much I’m obsessed with pattern right now, so she introduced me to Alex Blau’s paintings she saw recently on a visit to Anderson Ranch in Aspen, Colorado.


Ms. Blau’s paintings are relatively small, but are intricately detailed... using colors and graphic elements inspired by candy and junk food packaging. The use of acrylic polymer gives the paintings a little extra candy-goodness with a shiny gloss that isn’t altogether natural or healthy.

These paintings remind me of Krispy Kreme doughnuts — they look and taste soooo good in the moment, but ten or fifteen minutes later, you feel completely gross from all the sugar. It’s that attraction/repulsion of these sweet paintings that is so compelling.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Patterns on the Brain

Alan The Gallant

I’ve been filling all my spare time studying patterns... working on this book proposal. It’s a lot of work, but I’m learning a lot and seeing a lot of inspiring images. These are just four of the hundreds of patterns I’ve seen over the last few weeks. I’ll post more inspirations later.

Jessica Gonacha

Carla Arocha

Paul Alexander Thornton

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Meditate with Me on April 19, 5pm


Meditation comes in many forms— some are rooted in stillness and others are more dynamic. The similarities lie in the ability to connect your body, mind, and spirit in ways that promote a sense of peace and well-being.

Join me for a meditation workshop to center yourself and explore your own inner strength.

Moving Meditation (asana)
Breathing Meditation (pranayama)
Vocal Meditation (mantra)
Lucid Sleep & Relaxation (yoga nidra)

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When: April 19, 5–6:30 pm

Where: Yoga Vinyassa
2500 Broadway (near Albertsons in the Redlands)

How Much: $16

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Thursday, April 2, 2009

Bountiful is Beautiful!

I’m working on so many things right now... but they aren’t really in any visible stages that I can share with you now.

1. I’m almost finished with a new design for the FIDM College Catalog. The final book is due out in July. I have some fun specialty options on this book, so it’s going to be a bear on press.

2. I’m also working on some new paintings for a show called “Sun Worshipers and Junk Yard Dogs” coming up this September in Colorado. I need to finish at least six paintings for the show... I have two done now, and two in process, two still inside my head. I'm experimenting with some new materials (new to me) so keep your fingers crossed that everything will work.

3. Last week I was commissioned to write a serious proposal for a pattern design book with Rotovision. I’m working on the BLAD (Basic Layout and Design) now, which includes researching and writing several sample sections and designing the sample pages as they would look in a final book. If the rights to the book get purchased, then I’ll get the commission to complete the entire project. [Update 6/3/09—My editor got laid off, so they assigned me to a new editor, who basically changed the whole direction of the book. I decided to decline to continue working on this project... I already learned everything I wanted to know about patterns, so writing the book didn’t really seem necessary any more.]

4. And later this summer, I’m planning to work on a book design for a Southern California-based non profit group called Kids of Kilomanjaro. They raise money to provide lunches to school children in Africa. This book will be a documentary-style coffee table book showcasing the children and their environment, and will be used as a fundraising tool for the organization.

Send me lots of positive energy to help me keep all these balls in the air!