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All Watercolors by Margaret Crowley-Kiggins, FWS
Click on the image to enlarge it. Information about each painting is provided below- click on the title of the
painting to jump to it.

This site is updated occasionally; the last
update was Monday, September 19, 2005.

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Information about the paintings:
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- Self Portrait:
- This painting was done in 1995. I wanted to paint a
nice self-portrait for use in promotional materials. I thought of it after the
article in American Artist/ Watercolor (Fall 1995) came out. They used a photo that
I took of myself; and I thought, "...Gee, too bad I don't have a nice self-portrait
to submit..." Well, here is my "nice" self-portrait. It is
painted on a half-sheet of Arches 140 lb. cold pressed paper. Framed, it measures
21" by 28". It received a "Special Mention" award in one of Palm
Beach Watercolor Society's Annual Shows.
[Back to the top?]
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- Christopher's Day Off:
- This painting was also done in 1995. I did this of my son
using a photograph I took of him, posing; at the time I was thinking I would get him into
the "child modeling" thing that is so hot right now. Well, my
friends are all into it, but after seeing how much they have to drive around and how the
kids don't really like it that much, I decided that I will stick to my painting and let
Chris enjoy soccer instead. This painting is also done on a half-sheet of Arches 140
lb. cold-pressed paper. It measures 28" x 21" framed. This painting
won a Judge's Recognition Award at one of Palm Beach Watercolor Society's Annual Shows.
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- Still Life II:
- This painting is very big and it took atleast three months to
complete. I originally did three of these large still lifes to submit for
consideration in my application for exhibition status in the Museum Artists Guild. I
was accepted. (The first time I applied I was rejected- but you should have seen
what I had submitted- yuck!) This is a very carefully painted still life. It
is on a full sheet of Arches 300 lb. cold-pressed paper. It is about 30" by
38" framed. This is the only one of the three that has not received an
award. Oh well.
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- A Good Place:
- This painting has been accepted into numerous shows and will be in
the Florida Watercolor Society's 27th Annual Exhibition. This painting was in
consideration for an award during one show but the judge confided in one woman who is my
friend, that he wanted to give it an award but felt it was controversial. I wonder
why. It is a couple of generations of actual descendants of slaves who annually put
on a music and art festival in the Georgia Sea Islands reviving some of the ancestorial
traditions. I took many photographs and like to paint from them when I don't have
something else brewing. This painting was created on a half-sheet of Arches 140 lb.
cold-pressed watercolor paper and it is 28" by 21" framed.
[Back to the top?]
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- The Art of
Reproduction:
- This painting was painted from a photograph that I took when I
visited the Louvre, in Paris, France. I went around this magnificent museum and I
set my shutter speed to a couple of seconds and placed my camera on benches, pedastals,
etc.- I took a whole roll of film like that and I got all these wonderful pictures of
great paintings, sculpture, architecture, etc. with these eerie ghost images of people
walking by. This is a painting of an artist copying a Flandrin painting. I
have won numerous awards with this painting. In fact, one show I had planned on
entering was being exhibited in a public building where there was a rule against
nudes. In my concern, I fashioned a pair of watercolor BVD's (underwear) and stuck
it on the outside of the painting- fashionable censorship? Well, apparently the
jurors were amused and slapped the third place ribbon on it. This was created on
Lanaquarelle 140 lb. cold-pressed paper. It is an odd square-size of approximately
30" by 30" framed.
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- Sarah:
- This painting is of a neighborhood girl who was playing in one of
her trees when I caught her on film. Sarah is a very sweet and shy little girl who
likes Cinderella and Barbie and climbing trees and getting muddy! This painting has
been featured in two magazine articles and was chosen along with several other paintings
to grace the front of blank greeting cards by the now defunct Garden Gate Press. the
painting was created in 1994 and is one of my favorites. It is done on a quarter
sheet of Arches 140 lb. cold-pressed paper and is only a mere 16" by 20" framed.
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- Retro Self Portrait:
- I recently finished this one. Originally, I wanted to make a
painting of my grandmother, mother, myself and daughter as children (my daughter is still
quite young) around the age of 10 to 12 years old- of course, Grace, my daughter is only
four but I was happily going to make an exception... I have photos of my mother and
grandmother as young girls and I though it would be kind of interesting to have us in the
same garden playing. The problem I faced was one of even vs. odd. I prefer an
odd number in my composition and I just couldn't make something I was happy with. So
I did a single portrait of myself at age 10 and in the background, on the wall, I wrote an
entire years worth of diary entries- complete with mispellings and 70's lingo. This
painting won first place in the museum artists guild show last April. It is done on
a full sheet of Arches 140 lb. cold pressed paper. It has some acrylic paint on it-
but it works as a whole. It is very large- 38" by 30" framed.
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- Grace in the Garden:
- This is the painting that was going to have four generations all
playing together. The garden was inspired by couple of pictures in a book on
Monet's gardens. I kept Grace there, alone, with her favorite umbrella and her
favorite turquoise suede clogs and a lovely dress that I made for her. Hopefully
this painting will serve to remind her of some of her childhood things. After I
painted it and Grace was judging it, she became surprisingly angry. I asked what was
wrong? She replied, "That girl is wearing my shoes and has my umbrella."
Well, I was glad that atleast she thought those were realistic enough. I want my
paintings to breathe because they look so real. This is done on a full sheet of
Lanaquarelle 140 lb. cold pressed paper and is 30" by 38" framed.
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- Dan Flying Man:
- People always used to ask me why I hadn't painted a portrait of my
husband. I felt I had because I drew in pen and ink almost every plane that he had
ever flown in. I remembered how attractive he was to me in his uniform so I thought
that I should do a portrait of him that way. Also, he is not a vain human being so I
would have been wasting my time if I had painted a mug shot without any meaning (because
he would just stick in his closet- out of sight). This turned out beautifully- it is
full of symbolism and yet very realistic. He loves it. I am happy. It is
done on a half sheet of Arches 140 lb. cold pressed paper and is 28" by 21"
framed.
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- Beauty:
- This painting was an award winner. It is of a woman that was
thoroughly enjoying the Georgia Sea Island Music Festival and was captured forever in the
background of a photograph I took of this silly Boston Terrier trying to scratch his
hind-end on the ground while all these teenagers were laughing and pointing at it.
This woman was oblivious to the craziness that was occurring behind her and fully focused
on the show in front of her. In this painting, I placed her in front of a nice
stained glass window and she now looks as if she is pleasantly waiting. It is done
on a half sheet of Arches 140 lb. cold pressed paper and is 21" by 28" framed.
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The Best Summer Vacation:
- This painting was a commission that I never had the opportunity to
show. I feel certain that had I the opportunity to enter it into a show it would
have taken a prize. It is done from a photograph sent of two girls that I had
never seen and I am told that the painting truly caught the girl's likenesses. I
loved painting this because the photograph was of a nice and un-posed moment;
two sisters running out of the ocean, laughing and enjoying a perfect day. It
is done on a full sheet of Arches 140 lb. cold pressed paper and is about 30" by
38" framed.
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- Papa Loo's American
Dream:
- This painting was an award winner. It is of Papa Loo, my old
boss (from about 15 years ago!) busy at work in front of his wok making chinese lunch
specials for all the hungry, hurried business men and women. He and his family left
Taiwan to come to America and fulfill their dreams. They would talk about Taiwan
frequently and I remember wondering if having a nice home (that they only slept in) and a
couple of cars was worth the time spent chained to a wok. It is done on a half
sheet of Arches 140 lb. cold pressed paper and is 28" by 21" framed.
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