• Work
  • Journal
  • About
  • Contact
  • Shop
Menu

Liz Ewings

Painting the inner workings of the ocean for water lovers
  • Work
  • Journal
  • About
  • Contact
  • Shop
The making of Waves of Love . For sale here

The making of Waves of Love . For sale here

2021: We Could All Use Some Extra Love This Year

February 3, 2021

What a long, strange year it has been! This time last year, I was shopping for plane tickets to Baja to go see the gray whale calving ground near Loreto. Amazing trip! There were more gray whales than I could count in Magdalena Bay, active, and mating, and babies everywhere. And enormous blue whales in the Sea of Cortez. The tour operators use pangas which are small boats that sit really low in the water, so the whales seem really close. I imagine it’s like kayaking next to a submarine, even though I’ve never seen a submarine in real life!

I guess I’m fantasizing. I miss the sun this time of year! And being warm. And on the water. With whales. And fish tacos. I wish I had photos to share, but I was too busy experiencing life to document anything. In the age of influencers and curated posts, I highly recommend taking some time to STOP documenting life. Just live it.

Sometimes it feels like I’ll never travel again.  Last year when I left Seattle, the world was still ‘normal’. COVID had begun, but nobody was too worried in the US yet. One week later the world had changed. The border officials at the Loreto Airport were wearing surgical masks. There were a few empty seats on the airplane. It still didn’t sink in for me. Not long after that cases were discovered in King County. And the NBA cancelled its season. And Seattle shut down.

And the world changed. On the plus side, I can make a mean cast iron pizza. I have time to make art. I made and sent Christmas cards this year, something I rarely manage to do. And my card making has expanded into a whole group of screen-printed wave-themed cards. Then I remembered IT’S ALMOST VALENTINE’S DAY! I NEED A VALENTINE’S CARD! AAAAAHHHHHH!!!

I came up with the Waves of Love card. It’s a limited edition—I’m only ever going to make 50 of them. They are hand screen-printed by me in metallic gold on heavy 140lb. watercolor paper. I send them in rigid mailers so you can fill them out yourself. OR, tell me what you want to say and I’ll fill it out and mail it for you! Totally worth ten bucks! I’m selling them on my website, and in my Etsy shop. I think we could all use a little love note this year, that special someone, mom, BFF. And if we send enough of them we can make our own Wave of Love!

Shop Link: Here

Etsy Shop: etsy.com/shop/LizEwingsStudio

Seattle Night

Seattle Night

January 15, 2021

New little watercolor—Seattle Night from a CLEAR, that’s right CLEAR winter night. And by clear, I mean NO RAIN!! Whew! I walked around outside just to remember what dry air feels like. Air. Hee-hee! Can you tell I’m giddy from the lack of rain? Enjoy the weekend.

ewings-winter-trees (1).jpeg

Winter Trees

January 12, 2021

Welcome to 2021! We’re less than two weeks into it, and things already feel crazy. I wondered what to expect to see falling out of the sky, so I checked the Seattle Weather Blog. Did you know that Seattle has already had 5” of rain this year? No wonder that’s what I’ve been painting! It’s one of my favorite things to paint. Car headlights and streetlights reflect off the wet streets at night like Las Vegas neon swimming in a pool.

Still Life With Orange 14" x 11" Oil on Panel © Liz Ewings

Still Life With Orange 14" x 11" Oil on Panel © Liz Ewings

Slow Snap: Painting Still Life in the Age of Instagram

October 29, 2020

Googling ‘still life blogs’ summons a list of photographic blogs, written blogs, as well as a few blogs about oil painting. The term ‘still life’ refers to a drawing, painting, or photograph of an arrangement of one or more non-living objects. In French, they are known as nature morte, dead nature.

I began my foray into still life painting to visualize what diatoms would look like on land. Diatoms are microscopic organisms that live in the ocean and photosynthesize. They are the base of the marine food web, an ocean analogue for plants.

Still Life With Glasses Red Yellow Green 14" x 11" Oil on Panel 2020 © Liz Ewings

Still Life With Glasses Red Yellow Green 14" x 11" Oil on Panel 2020 © Liz Ewings

What would diatoms look like on land? I have photos of them taken under a microscope. Their appearance changes dramatically with different lighting, so they would probably look completely different out of the water. But like what? The exterior of a diatom is made of glass, and inside are colored pigments used for photosynthesis. Glasses filled with colored water seem like the best available proxy. I used a completely blank light colored paper background to separate the colors of the reflections and shadows from everything else.

Reflections of colored light on other glasses and in their shadows fascinate me. I added a plastic bottle half filled with colored water to see the difference in texture and reflectivity between glass and plastic.

Still Life With Overlap 11" x 14" Oil on board. 2020 © Liz Ewings

Still Life With Overlap 11" x 14" Oil on board. 2020 © Liz Ewings

Once I noticed how the colors played off other glasses, I thought it would be interesting to line the glasses up and look through them at the transparency. And because the interplay between the objects is interesting. And aren’t relationships the only thing that really matters to humans?

Is an iPhone photograph of a painting of glasses of colored water. Is that a meta still life? Second derivative of a still life? Or just a really slow snap?

Making Underwater Videos from a Surfboard

September 29, 2020

The plankton that I paint in my work I collect on oceanography cruises and photograph under a microscope at the University of Washington. Since cruises have been restricted due to Covid-19, I am getting creative. I took a GoPro with me out on Puget Sound near the Ballard Locks and recorded underwater video to see what waves look like from below.

I came across a few challenges the first time out! How do you hold a camera on a floaty stick and paddle at the same time? I carried it in my mouth like a labrador retriever. Puget Sound water, yum!

Next, how do I talk to myself without looking like a total idiot? Somewhat harder to solve. Maybe next time I will leave the chatting part out. Let me know what you think! I especially love the part where I got distracted by a seal. I tried to get it in the video, but I totally missed. Talking and taking pictures at the same time is harder that it looks.

It was worth it! I love the images looking up at the waves, and I look forward to making paintings of them.

plankton-82 (1).jpeg

I am close to completing 100 Paintings of Plankton. This is number 82, I’m getting close! It’s available in my online shop. Hey, that’s more news! I have an online store! Come visit!

ewings-photic-zone.jpeg

AND, I have some of my larger pieces on Saatchi Art. Including this one, Photic Zone. Check it out here: SaatchiArt.com/LizEwings

← Newer Posts Older Posts →

Recent

Featured
Dec 1, 2025
First Thursday is almost here! Here's a map:
Dec 1, 2025
Dec 1, 2025
Nov 11, 2025
Holiday Open Studios at 57 Biscayne
Nov 11, 2025
Nov 11, 2025
May 15, 2025
Open Studios on Thursday June 5, and more art things
May 15, 2025
May 15, 2025
Jan 21, 2025
Arts at King Street Station, February 6, 5-8PM
Jan 21, 2025
Jan 21, 2025
Dec 16, 2024
Fresh Perspectives
Dec 16, 2024
Dec 16, 2024
Nov 25, 2024
57 Biscayne Open Studios and Holiday Party
Nov 25, 2024
Nov 25, 2024
Nov 7, 2024
It's time! First Thursday at Locus Wines in Pioneer Square, 6-8 PM
Nov 7, 2024
Nov 7, 2024
Oct 16, 2024
Upcoming Events
Oct 16, 2024
Oct 16, 2024
Aug 28, 2024
Square Deal and Open Studios September 5
Aug 28, 2024
Aug 28, 2024
Jun 14, 2024
News News News!!!
Jun 14, 2024
Jun 14, 2024

Powered by Squarespace