Peony and Parakeet

Fly to Your Inner World and Color the Emotion

Inspiration

Building a Mystical Course with Hilma, Georgiana, and Virginia

Mystical drawing in progress

Usually, after making a course, I think: never again! It takes time to get new ideas and energy. But this time, after finishing Wild Garden, I had a new idea right away, and it felt like someone was talking to me: “You must do this, Päivi. If you don’t, nobody else will.”

The upcoming course is called Mystical Minis. We will create abstract art with colored pencils.

Samples of the course Mystical Minis.

We will make small drawings, and each takes only about an hour to create. At the same time, we see our inner world in a new light and build a self-feeding process for creating art. This course will bring both excitement and depth to your art-making. I believe it will leave a permanent mark on you, and I hope you carry the influence of it with you for a long time what ever art you make after the course.

Mystical Trio: Hilma, Georgiana, and Virginia

With Mystical Minis, I honor three women from about 100 years ago. Two of them are pioneers in abstract art: Hilma af Klint (1862-1944) and Georgiana Houghton (1814-1884). The third one is the modernist author Virginia Woolf (1882-1941). You can’t find another course similar to this one, I promise!

In the exhibition of Hilma af Klint, a Swedish abstract art pioneer.
Hilma and I in 2014.

Mystical Flow

I have been super-motivated to create the new course. So far, I have also enjoyed making it immensely. Some courses are born with intention, while others come out naturally, and those love children need to be born without too much forcing. It’s the very same thing as in the art-making! This course wants to come out, and I will help it.

Paivi Eerola and her mystical minis in colored pencils.

I usually question the course idea many times before I start making the course. I especially think about whether anyone will buy it and what kind of people would. But here, it feels like Hilma, Georgiana, and Virginia do not care. They just want the course to be born. They want their voice to be combined with mine, and that brings an extraordinary meaning to this work that truly feels mystical.

Mystical drawing in progress

If you have been in my courses, you know that I am not a secretive person. I always try to explain everything as openly as I can, and I can’t help smiling. And when I asked Hilma, Georgiana, and Virginia, why they picked me, they said: we need somebody like you to complement us, just be you and everything will go fine. And I have trusted them and followed my inner voice to gather all of us together, not only Hilma, Georgiana, and Virginia, but also you who want to create a new kind of connection to your inner world.

Paivi talking in the course Mystical Minis with four candles in the background.

Mystical Minis – When?

I am currently editing the videos. I don’t have the exact publishing date yet, but I expect releasing this mystical course late this year or early next year.

About Music and Painting

This week, I share a painting that had a big goal: to achieve a similar effect to uplifting music.

Cosmos, oil on canvas, painting by Päivi Eerola, Finland
Cosmos, 80 x 120 cm, oil on canvas

I think that all painters envy musicians because music can make great emotions flow in an instant. Music can make us feel that the world is expanding into the universe and at the same time, shrinking to the size of a heart.

When I listen to Luciano Pavarotti sing Nessun Dorma, his complete self-confidence makes me, who is a mere listener, feel almighty too. And Avicii’s Levels is often my choice when I want to celebrate an achievement, for example, a newly completed painting.

But even if we painters envy musicians, I also think that musicians also envy painters. Music is experienced in a fleeting moment, but a painting can capture that more permanently.

Music I Listen to While Painting

When I start a new painting, I often listen to Kaija Saariaho‘s music. It is art music, and I don’t find it entertaining at all. But it helps me to think more spatially and paint a 3-dimensional space instead of a 2-dimensional surface. (See the video of my first encounter to Kaija Saariaho’s music from 2015!)

Artist painting in her studio while listening to music.

I try to avoid letting the music leak ideas into my paintings. I don’t want the music to create the illusion that the unfinished painting is better than it is. The music’ should mainly’s main function is to entertain my impatient side while my patient side paints.

Artist and her paintings in progress.

As the painting progresses, I gradually move to lighter music. First classical piano and violin concerts, then entertaining music television shows that play pop and rock.

Oil painting in progress.
Oil painting in progress.

When the painting is in the finishing stage, I listen to dry talk programs such as political analysis.

Painting abstract flowers in oil.

Music helps me to keep going. It takes many sessions to finish a big painting.

I painted this painting in 7 parts and as you can see from the pictures, it changed quite a lot over the months. I started in early August and the painting was finished in late November.

Cosmos, oil on canvas, painting by Päivi Eerola, Finland
Cosmos, 80 x 120 cm, oil on canvas

My painting called Cosmos is a flower arrangement, but at the same time, I was aiming for much more. I wanted to express both meanings of the word cosmos – both the flower and the universe. So I was aiming for the same thing that music can give: the expansion into a larger whole and the contraction into a single moment.

Details of Cosmos

The blue flower was the most difficult to paint because I wanted it to be modest and small and still refer to the universe. It had to be simple and delicate, but still strong enough. I rarely use Cobalt Blue this much. It’s my most expensive pigment and not very good with historical pigments that I mostly have. But in this piece, I think it perfectly represents the universe.

A detail of Cosmos, oil painting by Päivi Eerola, Finland

One of my favorite details is the flying orange petals. I think they look like a little melody playing in the background as the song slows down.

Some areas come more easily than others. The top right corner was finished early, and it was a lot of fun to paint. I prefer dark backgrounds over light ones, but dark paintings can be difficult to sell, so I try to be moderate with dark colors.

A detail of Cosmos, oil painting by Päivi Eerola, Finland

The red spot is both a supernova and a flower.

I love painting bowls and vases, especially when I can just freely compose them from strokes and shapes.

A detail of Cosmos, oil painting by Päivi Eerola, Finland

I also love to paint water. Here, the vase disappears under the waterline.

I often paint a flower so that it’s partly quite sharp and partly blurry or invisible.

A detail of Cosmos., artwork by Päivi Eerola, Finland

Music can use echoes as an effect, while visuals can have mirror images. The echoes and mirror images can differ slightly. I played with this idea when painting the red flower and its dark echo.

Ornaments and ornamental strokes inspire me a lot. I think that when you have found out how you want to draw a single line, you are really close to finding your style.

A detail of Cosmos, artwork by Päivi Eerola, Finland

Lines are like musical notes that a mind can interpret and sing. They have the painter’s voice.

Paivi Eerola and her oil painting Cosmos.

What kind of music do you listen to when you paint or draw?

Hand-Drawn Oracle Cards

This year has been rough, and I have been thinking about the next year for many months already. So, I decided to draw some Oracle cards for the new year. I want the new year to bring us hope, light, and connection to our inner being.

Hand-drawn Oracle cards.

I don’t have any Oracle or Tarot decks, but I could still drew some cards. So, not drew like randomly from a pack, but really drew. I believe that by creating hand-drawn art we can explore our inner wisdom more actively than just picking the cards someone else has created.

Hand-drawn Oracle/Tarot cards with colored pencils. You can draw your own cards!

You only need some paper and colored pencils to make these hand-drawn Oracle cards. I also colored the backsides of the cards, each differently, expressing the idea of each card, but in a simpler way.

Back sides of hand-drawn Oracle/Tarot cards. Colored pencil art ideas.

These cards are very small, only 2.75 x 4.75 inches (7 x 12 cm), which is a common size for Oracle and Tarot cards.

Hand-drawn Oracle cards with colored pencils. By Päivi Eerola of Peony and Parakeet.

Notice the simple but decorative borders that make the drawings look like a real Oracle card!

P.S. Remember the big sale! All classes are 20% off.

Black Friday Sale 2025

>> Shop here!

The sale ends on December 1, 2025, at midnight PST.

Making Florals More Modern

This week, we are making florals more modern! So, when you want to get away from a botanical look, and draw and paint flowers that are more abstract and expressive, here are my tips for you!

Gossamer, oil on canvas, 80 x 65 cm. A modern floral painting by Päivi Eerola, Finland.
Gossamer, oil on canvas, 80 x 65 cm.

In my recent painting Gossamer, I have stretched my style to a modern direction. The painting was born much faster than usually if you count the actual painting time only. But that’s not the whole truth because I practiced this style several times. You too, can make your florals more modern in this way!

#1 Choose Your Muse!

Pick a painter that has a modern abstract style for flowers.

My choice was Helene Schjerbeck (1862-1946). She was a famous Finnish modernist, and even if I find many of her paintings a bit too melancholic, her style fascinates me.

The famous modernist Helene Schjerfbeck. Self-Portrait.
Helene Schjerfbeck, Self-Portrait, oil on canvas, 45.5 x 36 cm, 1915. From the Finnish National Gallery’s collection.

Helene is more of a portrait painter, but she also painted many still lives. (By the way – I also have a blog post about mimicking Helene Schjerfbeck’s style in portraits in colored pencil.)

#2 Make Many Tiny Sketches on One Page

Paint or draw small sketches where you pick ideas from your muse’s paintings. Combine many paintings on one page. When the size is small, you need to simplify and thus, find the core of your muse’s modern style.

Watercolor sketches, watercolor journal.

I examined several Helene Schjerfbeck’s paintings in watercolor and combined them on one art journal page.

Helene Schjerfbeck, Still Life in Green, oil on canvas, 33.5 x 50 cm, c. 1930. From the Finnish National Gallery's collection.
Helene Schjerfbeck, Still Life in Green, oil on canvas, 33.5 x 50 cm, c. 1930. From the Finnish National Gallery’s collection.

Focus on the shapes and lines and answer to these questions while working:

  • Are the muse’s shapes light or heavy?
  • How angular are the single strokes?
  • How light and shadows are expressed?
  • Where can you find playfulness and creativity?

Helene Schjerfbeck’s shapes are rather heavy, and her strokes are quite angular. The light and shadows are treated like they are objects as well. The result is a puzzle where the material and immaterial are treated identically.

I didn’t first think that Helene’s paintings are playful, but when I browsed more of her paintings, I started to see humor in the way she painted the shadows. There is something human in their shapes. It is shown brilliantly in this piece “Trees and Sunset.”

Helene Schjerfbeck, Trees and Sunset, 24.5 x 28.5 cm, 1942. From the Finnish National Gallery's collection.
Helene Schjerfbeck, Trees and Sunset, 24.5 x 28.5 cm, 1942. From the Finnish National Gallery’s collection.

I started to think that maybe for my muse, the shadows were like animals, or dolls, and that they could be a little like toys in my paintings too.

#3 Create a Bigger Study More Freely

Next, use your observations to create a bigger study. Work freely and mix the observations with your original style.

Dylusions Creative Journal Square. Modern floral painting on an art journal spread.

I used left-over oil paints and made this spread for my Dylusions Creative Journal. I really like how playful the shadows are, and painting this was a lot of fun!

In the detail pic below, you see how angular my strokes are.

Making florals more modern - a detail of the tutorial.

When searching for images for this blog post, I found this small painting from Helene Schjerfbeck. My flowers are different, but still there are similarities as well.

Helene Schjerfbeck, Anemone, gouache on paper, 30.5 x 24 cm, 1942. From the Finnish National  Gallery's collection.
Helene Schjerfbeck, Anemone, gouache on paper, 30.5 x 24 cm, 1942. From the Finnish National Gallery’s collection.

My best tips for making florals more modern:

  • While working, think about surface patterns in interiors and clothing rather than the actual flowers.
  • Use angular strokes to build puzzle-like compositions.
  • Similarly to the parts of the colorful flowers, see the shadows and light as the shapes of the puzzle.

#4 Make the More Modern Piece

After practicing, you can now create a piece where you spend more time for finishing. Modern strokes often appear quick and careless, but they are still packed with aesthetics and style. Those kind of strokes can take a lot of attention and focus.

Here’s a pic from the early stage of my painting Gossamer. I started with a narrow color scheme, and many of the shapes and strokes were more like suggestions – a whispering start, you could say!

Starting with the modern look. Painting in progress.
In progress.

In the finished piece, I especially enjoy the playful color changes in the background and the new playfulness is present in lines too.

A detail of Gossamer, a flower painting by Päivi Eerola.
A detail of Gossamer, oil on canvas.

#5 Old and New – Compare!

Here you can see my previous painting of the same size and the finished Gossamer side by side. The styles of the two paintings are slightly different, but not totally!

Paivi Eerola's oil paintings in modern style.
Elixir and Gossamer. Both are 80 x 65 cm, oil on canvas.

I used leftover paints for these two miniature paintings. The one on the left is more of my original style, the other one is more modern.

Miniature oil paintings. Flowers by Päivi Eerola.
10 x 10 cm (4 by 4 inches) miniature paintings, oil on board.

If the weather allows, I always take the photo of the final piece outdoors. This fall has been exceptionally long and warm. There are still leaves in the apple tree, and it’s November!

Artist Päivi Eerola and her painting Gossamer.

I hope you enjoyed this little tutorial on how to make florals more modern!

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