Monday, May 30, 2022

the slow go

all things creative are at a bit of a standstill these days

I'm back in Calgary, helping out with the wee ones so there is almost no time at all for anything else

it's not a hardship!

I did work on a bit of collage the other day, using some of my painted papers

torn strips, alternating dark and light, angling things

thinking layers...

ice forms in layers and at the Little Lake that's always a messy affair due to the big fluctuations in temperatures during the winter months

freeze, thaw, freeze and on it goes


I'm pleased with this torn-edge version though my initial plan was sharp-cut edges

they ended up looking awful but when the 3 year old wanted to demonstrate his cutting prowess I gave him a less-than-perfect painting and his safety scissors and let him have at it

the results of that cutting spree are safely tucked away for me to play with next week when I'm back at home - I figure he might just have a knack for this


so the next thing for this is to cut it from the background


today I snatched a few minutes and started sketching branches from my photos

I want to play with some of the common branch patterns I keep seeing, turning and layering them to create some interesting repeats and then add them here

this is me, truly working within "pockets of time"!

Monday, May 23, 2022

slowly...


moving forward, though rather slowly

I've finally decided on a rectangular concertina book for the ice/branches studies, but one with a horizontal orientation

the pages are folded and embossed, viewing window prepared (for selecting crops from painted and printed papers), a selection of crops are cut and ready to be glued in place and now I'm working on bringing fabric and thread into the picture

I've also been painting ice, trying a number of different paint colours and tools, slowly and steadily getting closer to something that connects with what I saw and felt that day

in thinking about the branches and possible methods for constructing them, I sampled some fme stitching on English scrim with the horizontal threads removed and stitching "branches" with the verticals

the white stitching is complete and to judge the effect, I've laid it on top of one of the painted backgrounds with the view-finder cut-out placed on top... getting a sense now of the composition

I still need to bring in some of the soft greys and darker browns but am thinking of doing that with straight stitches as I attach the fme

I'm also working on embroidered branches that can be cut out and applied... I've a feeling there are so many options - those are just the first two that have come to mind


the next trial  iswith  tissue paper collage made with leaves and scrim embedded in it

this is from an old sample that I have now torn apart and stitched together, changing the orientation of the stitching lines - shows promise but I need to paint it as the colours are wrong

it does seem more abstract though, and that's the point of this work

to take something I see and make something inspired by it but not in a perfectly representational way


and now on my daily walks I am noticing fallen branches and twigs on the sidewalk

it's the same thing but different
(I love statements like that - not correct but everyone knows exactly what you mean)


I've been photographing a few of them, picking them up and taking them home to sketch

more often than not I see letter forms, just as I did with the branches at the lake, and I am slowly gathering an alphabet, creating a font of sorts

I'm not sure if they'll play into any of my current work but it's one more thing on the creative journey that is giving me a fair amount of pleasure at the moment

Saturday, May 14, 2022

chipping away

still messing around with ice, this time using paper and cloth

trying to capture light and shadow, sparkle, cracks, roughness 

ice

I began with cmc collage as it's what I know best

an interesting surface for added stitching, good enough, but I want something different, something more abstract

a challenging idea that is pushing me into the unknown

it's been baby steps all the way


I found a piece I had made a couple of years ago while working on something inspired by cattails

close, could work, but not still not quite 

I question the three rows, the vertical strip-effect

although...

 branches laid along those straight lines did look rather interesting so I haven't ruled this format out entirely 


next was to take the essence of the "three rows" piece and break that visual up a bit

this time adding in some of the paper I painted


I still need to add more painted paper to the bottom but this is promising

next is to re-do it in a horizontal format


the crinkled silk is a favourite - it hearkens back to the grooves of the branches in the ice, and the branches themselves, when they are all frosted white, sparkling in the sun

lightweight Japanese papers with thicker fibres trapped in the paper

taking a break from the ice the other day, I began to paint paper I can use for wood

dark brown, light gold, stumbled texture, scratches of white... trying to capture the essence of the branch forms, partially,  or sometimes even completely, embedded in the ice, the exposed areas stripped of bark, bare wood exposed, frosted white

there is such a vulnerability in that, the effects of exposure on what is extending from the surface of the ice while at the same time you can't help but notice the wood trapped below that looks as it did when it fell


it's haunting and beautiful

and not so very easy to capture in paint, paper and cloth

but I am determined to try

Saturday, May 7, 2022

trapped in ice...

spring may be sprouting all around me but my head, and it seems my heart, are both still trapped in ice...

one of the things talked about in the "Inspired by Nature" course is "pockets of time" and how to make the most of those

I've known of this concept since my children were tiny tots; an article in mom's magazine called it "found time"... the minutes here and there, throughout your day, when you're waiting on something

potatoes to boil

a child to pick-up

bath time to be over

and how you could use that found time to work on small portable projects

to that end, my children still remember my needle case and a piece of stitching, sitting on the table morning, noon and night and me picking it up several times each day and adding a stitch or two

in that way, I accomplished a lot of stitching without having to dedicate specific time to it

pockets of time is the same, knowing what to work on and taking advantage of short periods of time to do it... and the results pile up

I've been making use of all sorts of found time lately - this week it's still all about ice and paint

working out presentation ideas for a concertina book showcasing all the techniques we've covered in the class
{I think this is a brilliant idea and will do it for each class I take from now on - a small book with a sample of each technique/idea; there are always off-cuts and small pieces that don't quite fit in but have value and keeping them all together in a small book format as a reference to a particular course or technique would be a nice thing to look back on for quick visual reminders}

painted paper with embossing


painted paper with embossed strips


collage with embossed strips

the one above is a sample done long before this course but it's giving me an idea for a way of abstracting the ice which I am working on today


gelli print on tissue paper

the images above and below were done with the last of the paint on my tray - roughly brushed onto the gelli plate, thoughts of sun on water in my head

the one above is the first pull, below is the second, also referred to as a "ghost" print

ghost print on copy paper

the print below was done with thoughts of the branches frozen into the ice

I made a printing plate using branches I picked up the day I first went down there for a late winter wander; glued to a piece of book board and sealed with gloss medium, a fabric handle affixed to the back, I can press it onto the inked/painted gel plate 

before using it I pressed crumpled tin foil onto the paint first


and this last one is using the tin foil only


as you can see, it's happy, busy days in the studio and the stack of painted and printed papers continues to grow

using my own papers to create with is one of the most satisfying things I've done in a very long time; it's another layer in the creative process and allows me to make work that is even more unique to me

it's sticky and messy, the results are always mixed, and it's just plain fun

I've a little more I want to try in my ice explorations and then I'll break out and try some branches

then rocks
and trees
and of course, sky
flowers - can't forget the flowers
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