Showing posts with label mixed media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mixed media. Show all posts

Monday, March 25, 2013

Sentinel


 
 Failed  Fishery - Margaret Ryall

Time Changes, Butter Point, Jerseyside - Margaret Ryall
Growing up with access to a beach with a fishing stage nearby brought me in constant contact  with all sorts of angry ocean remnants. I continue to seek the sea's treats during the summer months on the beaches of my then and now homes.


 
 Keels, NL - Margaret Ryall

 Codfish bones remain one of my favourite things to find. 


  They have such delicate fluted edges and the colour is a wheaty white. As a child we had funny names for  all the different bones and we found creative ways to use them in our play. 

 Sentinel (2013) mixed media  (codfish bone, paper, gesso, encaustic)  6 x 6 in.

This work stems from that period in my life.  Our original name for this bone was soldier, but age has moved my thinking along to Sentinel.  This is another work in my "Finding my way" series.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Where did April go?

I can't believe it  is almost May and I haven't posted in a month.  I'm also not reading about art and thus my absence in blogland.  I seldom go to the studio these days because I seem to have lost all interest in creating.  Am I worried about this? Not really.  I've had other times when I've felt this way and my inspiration has returned.

 I'm hoping my attendance at the International Encaustic Conference in Provincetown NJ at the end of May will ignite me again.  I thoroughly enjoyed the conference last year and came away with all types of things I wanted to experiment with.  This year I'm excited about a two day post conference  workshop with Catherine Nash that explores using paper with encaustic. It's a perfect fit for me because I already use lots of paper in my mixed media works.

I like Catherine's artist statement because her beliefs are similar to my own.

Creating images and objects of beauty and visual poetry that express reverence offers me grounding.  Enough time has passed by in my creative life to notice that I spiral through ideas and concerns.  I discover tiny roots of an idea were hidden in previous works, but have emerged in a different way.  Completely understanding a narrative while creating is not important. I’ve learned to not question the internal juxtaposition of imagery, to listen and let the work lead me.  A conversation with paper, wax, branches, brush, pen, saw and twine.

 Boat of Myself

Mixed media encaustic painting, 150 year old Japanese paper bought in a Kyoto flea market. Poem by Jelaluddin Rumi. 12” X 15”

Her work is diverse and often forays into three dimensional pieces.  Take a look.  I'm sure you'll be hearing more about her and the workshop. 

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Creating texture in encaustic

One of my favourite attributes of encaustic is the ease with which you can create  surface textures.  I've been experimenting  using fabric and paper to create various effects.  Sometimes the exploration results in a completed work that I am proud of, and other times I end up with a sample board I use to illustrated points in encaustic workshops.


Starting with one piece of  patterned paper....


I began this piece with something totally different in mind as is often the way in art.  My interest in the patterns used in quilting and other hand crafts pervades my work in various ways.  This purchased paper in repetitive strips of patterns called to me.  I glued it on the panel with Yes Paste and added two coats of encaustic medium. It didn't inspire me in any way.  New road needed...  I began to cover up the patterns until only the white and black grid remained.

 

 That sparked me to find the scrap of tobacco netting a friend gave me and I was off to the races.

 

 Black and white #1, 2012, mixed media encaustic on cradled panel , 8 x 10 in.

 The grayish white area at the bottom and the black area at  top of the painting  was created with the netting and varying amounts of encaustic.  I let the white /black grid show through and then added the white squares using a stencil. 


Take one piece of white lace and ....

 
 attach it to the board using  black  encaustic.  Add several  more layers of  black  and then change to  red.  Fuse each layer.  When the pattern is completely covered with encaustic stop  and let cool.
Using a large blade scrape back to reveal the original pattern of the lace. A great sample board to show how to build up designs with fabric.you need two colours to show up the pattern.

Start with a very delicate paper..

Add layers of green encaustic and then blue and scrape away  to reveal the circular shapes with a blade.  The  raised grid is added using a stencil.

Ocean # 1 , 2012, encaustic and paper on cradled panel, 8 x 8 in.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Stamping to create pattern in encaustic





2010 Tangled,  Sorted, Revealed, Woven (8 x 8 in.) mixed media encaustic

Decorative patterning is a motif in much of my work even when the work isn't about patterning. 

I use various techniques to build up patterns in encaustic. To date fabrics and papers were my favoured materials. My latest explorations involve creating and using stamps.  The previous post shows stamps I created from embossed paintable wallpaper samples.    Right now I developing a "store" of these papers to use in later compositions.  So I am free to play to my heart's delight.

 Positive Stamping
  1. Create a background surface using basic monotype  techniques in encaustic (see youtube video in previous post)
  2. Use part of palette to lay down a bed of coloured encaustic to dip the stamp in.
  3. Place paper on hot palette. 
  4. Take up encaustic on stamp and then stamp it onto the prepared paper. The paper has to be on the palette  If you try to do it on the table the encaustic will dry before you get it to the paper.

Stamp used

 Stamping with similar colour as background at top.  At bottom you can see the faint traces of stamping with white.  I like the subtle nature of this.

 High contrast

 Decorative overlay in gold over a vibrant monotype


A new stamp

 Stamped in gold over a ghost print made with  cadmium red and bits of blue.  I then hand painted more blue between the gold stamping and greatly modified the original design.  This has possibilities because I am modifying/changing the original into my own interpretation.  Doing this in repeats (layers) creates a totally new design. This is a technique I use in acrylic when I start with an image transfer.

 More over stamping using gold.


A new stamp

 Over stamping a previous print

Negative Stamping

  1. Lay down a bed of encaustic on palette.
  2. Place stamp into the bed of colour (encaustic will be stamped with the pattern removing some of it)
  3. Take a print from the palette.
Stamp seems to be on the missing list!


you can see that the stamp removes the encaustic from the plate in a very interesting way leaving an outline of white around it.  I've just begun to play with the possibilities of negative stamping.  Stay tuned for more adventures.

Friday, November 18, 2011

Redefined - Hinge



My latest work is a reexamination of objects that I used in a body of work three years ago. Many of them were picked up at the sight of an old family building which has long fallen into the ground and disappeared. Only rusted metal and rotting boards are left.  The hinge and wallpaper in the piece below reference the separate  male/female worlds of work prevalent in the fifties and sixties when I was growing up. Like the eroding wallpaper and hinge things are changing in that arena. 


Wallpaper with Hinge (2008) 26 x 14 in. Mixed media on board
Newfoundland and Labrador Provincial Art Bank Collection


 Redefined - Hinge ( 2011)  16 x 16 in. Mixed media on board

My new work is leaving the realm of male female roles and work behind as I study the object themselves and how they relate to the interior and exterior landscape. This piece has different characteristics than the other two pieces from Redefined I  recently wrote about.  The hinge is not integrated into the background, rather it hovers like some kind of alien ship.  No matter how much I tried to give it an embedded feel it didn't work out.  I stopped trying and listened to the painting.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Redefined again


 Here's more work from my Redefined series which is a small subset of a larger body of work titled Remnants . If you've read previous posts you will know that I am reworking imagery that I felt didn't live up to my initial expectations. I am pleased with my new take on previous work. 

Untitled , (2010)16 x 16in.  mixed media on canvas


 Redefined - Barrel (2011) 16 x 16 in. mixed media on board

What did you notice when you compared my first and second attempt?

Friday, October 21, 2011

6 little gems

Here's more work from my encaustic paint- in several weeks ago.  On and off I've been working on a small series of paintings called Surfacing.  The aesthetic is definitely influenced by my stay in Venice several years ago; I can't seem to get the colours and textures out of my mind. They keep re-surfacing at odd times in my work so I decided to go for it.   The text you see  in several of these is tissue thin and of course purchased in Venice. I plan to mount them  side by side on one long narrow panel and then frame it.






 2011 (6 x 8 in). encaustic mixed media on board

I'm in my gold stage!


Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Linking to Landscape

 I'm a wanna be landscape artist who never seems to paint landscapes unless they are close up versions of what I see.  I'm talking about the sprawling distance that can be captured so well by many artists. I've certainly connected to landscape and landscape artists, but so far it's all just fuel for the old creative juices. One of these days I know something will come out of all this looking and thinking, but as of yet there's nothing that I want to show.  On to the artist of the day...

Beached Boats, Mixed media, 14 x 22.5 in.

Harbour Cottages Cornwall, Mixed media , 15 x 19.5in
Devon landscape seems to ignite  the imagination of  many artists who respond to it in diverse ways. Installment 2 in my Devon  landscape series highlights Mike Bernard whose work I also saw at Marine House at  Beer for the second time.  His collage painting style using paper cuttings attracted me because it uses  elements similar to my own technique. Layers and texture immediately draw me in.  His paper applications appear to be used to create an overall structure for the composition and then he paints into it using various levels of detail. I enjoy his work that is more abstracted with less colour, where texture and subtle hints tell the story.  These  quick introduction gives you a sense of his work.






 
Morning Grand Canal, Venice , Mixed media,  18 x 24 in.

 
Venetian Doorway, Mixed media, 15 x 17 in.

Venice, my favourite city in the world which is currently being challenged by Prague, also offers great subject matter for his work. If you're interested there's  a short YouTube video about this series.

Feeling like getting away from it all to paint?  Mike Bernard also offers self catering cottages at Nutcombe and there's a studio. This is news for me.  Oh the missed opportunities from my past two visits to Devon.  I'm feeling a holiday coming up.....


And last but not least, I've enjoyed reading his book available at Amazon.


Hopefully, I've written about something that strikes your fancy.  Let me know.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Thinking landscape

Our  month in Europe passed quickly and I've see lots of interesting art, people, landscape, shows, houses, decor and heavens knows what else.  It is all up in my head in a gigantic jumble that will right itself when I have enough time to download and sort all my photographs.  There will be many posts to come describing my new inspirations.

For now I have to focus on something so I chose some of the last art work I saw in  Beer, Devon at Marine House Gallery   .Driving through this beautiful countryside and walking about in the fairytale perfect towns helps you understand why landscape is the most prominent content for many English artists.
Tinners' Coast , Collage on canvas, 39 x 39in.

Botallack, Acrylic on paper,  14 x 15 in.

Martin Procter is one artist whose work I liked.  He appears to be interested in man's imprint on the landscape through walls, buildings, field boundaries, and industrial architecture and represents these themes through mostly abstracted imagery.  As I surveyed his work certain characteristics were retained from work to work. His most recent works painted during a stay in the US can be found on his website .

Hopi Village, Mixed media on board  , 40 x 40 cm.

Kiva, mixed media on board, 40 x 40 cm.

There is a two dimensional quality to his work which is dependent on a strong use of line and colour blocking. His paintings frequently have a vertical segmentation to them, leading the eye in lines up the picture. You can quickly see what he determines are the most important aspects of the landscape. In his work the geology and scale of the natural world is overlaid with man's efforts  which often appear minute in scale.

A closer look reveals the inventive use of a variety of media (which is probably why this work appeals to me) .  His colour choices can be dramatic and all colour usage produces a solid look by chunking repeated forms together.



This is how one artist in Devon relates to the landscape.  Stay tuned for several others.  It should be interesting to see the commonalities and differences in their imagery and vocabulary.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Refining

Sometimes subtle adjustments are necessary in an art work if you want to set objects into the background. One of the best ways to do this is to glaze the areas in question.  When I glaze I sometimes use just water to dilute a colour and layer it several times drying between each.  Other times I use an acrylic glazing medium.   I have another trick that always works well for me. Because I use quite a bit of paper to layer my work, I choose very transparent papers and apply them over the areas that I want to set back.  The tricky part is figuring out exactly what colour will work best.  You have time to whip it off before the gloss medium dries.  I admit this is a well practiced solution for me.

This is an almost completed painting.  I've begun the glazing using papers in the bottom portion but the top is unaltered after applying the image transfers.  To see what happens as more glazing is added check below.   
The area around the centre received the most attention with paper glazing.  Before that rocks looked very similar in tone but it didn't take long to bring interest and variety to the area.  The whole painting received a glaze of transparent brown (one of my favourites) to finish it off (or so I thought).  I also released the rope from under the rock, but it just isn't working  because it looks like it's hovering.  So much for great ideas.  This one is going on the "needs further consideration wall" for now.

I planned to write a second post on mounting my strappo pieces but I seem to have filed my shots and I'm still playing detective to find them.  Stay tuned.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Busy, busy, busy

I had a productive weekend with encaustic which seems to be taking over my painting a little lately.  I managed to complete a piece to submit to the International Encaustic Artist Conference Juried Show this June.  I will wait to post the image as we get nearer to the show no matter how I make out with the submission.

I spent the rest of the time exploring textures and patterns  on  8x8 panels.Paper and fabrics were laid down initially and then various techniques were used to replicate ( with variations) the original patterns.  I'm interested in the subtle changes that happen in this layered process.  Although you can recognize both patterns when you compare them to the original, changes have occurred. As in my previous works, these subtle changes produced by the passage of time and actions that intervene  are my primary interest.  If you think nice patterns or textures, that's fine too. 


 paper modified
 lace modified

 wallpaper modified

 In previous posts I showed some of my earlier work on 4x4 here and 6x6 here.  I use small panels to create studies in encaustic.  I'm planning several larger works that are a mix of abstraction and realism (floral based), but  I'm not confident to dive in and fully execute them, so I explore my ideas in a safe environment. 

  I can't imagine messing up an 18 x 24 piece  full of encaustic- that's expensive stuff.   In all of these small works I'm  keeping a similar palette (obviously red) and then I can hang them grid style for a summer show I am in. Nothing gets wasted and I"m working out my strategies for background integration. I guess I will soon be ready to use some of what I've discovered in what I  consider my "real work".   The large pieces won't necessarily be red!  I'll soon be over my red phase.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Re-presenting


My new work presented in my last post finds its beginnings in past explorations. In 2008 I completed a body of work titled Remnants. A remnant can be so many things: vestige, residue, trace, leftover, debris, mélange, scrap, refuse, detritus, relic remains, fragment. It all depends on your personal take. Here's mine from a recent proposal for an exhibition of Remnants:


In abandoned or soon to be refurbished homes, in trunks and old boxes, in debris hidden in grass rests layers of history waiting to be uncovered and interpreted. While the place and time might be specific, the information gathered reveals universal truths. The examination of what remains provides a sense of the past and direction for the future. These pieces of history help to define identity and understand place.


Using various art techniques, I explore the themes inherent in remnants left behind. I’ve placed my family history within the process but extend the exploration to old houses, some abandoned and some in the process of renovation. While one of the houses has a personal connection, the rest I adopted as I came across them in my summer wanderings. The houses continue to come to my attention and I continue to document them for future works.

The peeling walls are metaphors for the lives lived within the houses and are similar in many ways to my early years. The beauty of the wallpaper patterns is in direct opposition to the basic work filled lives led by many of the women in these homes. Seeing beauty perhaps made their environment more aesthetically pleasant. Many of these woman created work by hand that adorned their home made furniture and children. It was the inside life of women while many of the objects I painted to pair with the wallpapers represented the outside life of men at that time: building, fishing etc. There was a strict division of labour and definite male and female roles.

These works are about my memories as much as they are about the objects that I have chosen to revere in the work.

As Estes notes in Women Who Run with the Wolves many of our memories are rooted in the body itself and need the merest touch to resurface.

"The body remembers, the bones remember, the joints remember, even the little finger remembers. Memory is lodged in pictures and feelings in the cells themselves. Like a sponge filled with water, anywhere the flesh is pressed, wrung, even touched lightly, a memory may flow out in a stream."

I became interested in the concept of sensual memory while writing my first artist statement. As I struggled to understand why I needed to work the way I do, I realized that my strong tactile style had a direct connection to the crafts I created in my formative years in rural Newfoundland. My hands have to create layers of meaning through the manipulation of materials. Paint isn’t enough; I need direct contact with materials, tearing and cutting fragments, applying layers, building up, patterning, hiding and revealing. I am building a network of connections in the content and the creative process just as my ancestors did as they created objects of useful beauty, without waste, from materials at hand.

My process itself is based on remnants created by tearing and rearranging image transfers. My new work has moved beyond some of the ideas explored in Remnants. Teresa said in her response to my last post ... "The first though that popped into my head was "haunting memories" in that it seems like memory born from a dream-like state". Haunting memory is definitely part of it, but the memories are born through the process of creating and layering. They are stored memories released through touch.