after two weeks away from my latest work,
it felt as unfamiliar to me as if I had never worked on it all
shuffling papers on my worktable... printed edited photos, painted papers, drawings - nothing worked, it all seemed rather forced
this morning I had an idea...
flipping through the papers once again, I pulled out the ones I liked best
whether it was the colour, texture, location, item - whatever it was, if I loved it I chose it
gluing each into my sketchbook for a reference, I spent some time reflecting on what I thought as I looked at them, jotting down notes alongside each
water, wood, sky
an old building
once that was done I looked at the various lists and found some interesting commonalties
and some things I was surprised by, most notably strong lines and hard edges
I'm usually all about soft and subtle, blurred lines
after that I went back to the papers from the day before...
still thinking about wood and water - here I used a painted paper, a gelli-print and a print of a shrub on acetate
this next one is a crop from a photo of a northern lake, a piece of painted linen and another acetate print
love this one
it has the look of a landscape, almost as if the waves of the lake photo become mountains in this collage
next is to look at the photos again and think about drawing
I'm eager to do more prints but first I want to explore drawing
one thing at a time
3 comments:
Don't you just hate the fact that there's never enough hours in the day to explore all that you want to? Now that the Christmas prep is pretty much winding down here I'm getting anxious to get started on another landscape (one that will feature water....gulp!)
I think a few hard lines amongst the blurred edges bring a little focus to a piece and your explorations illustrate this beautifully. You have also demonstrated that patience wins when inspiration eludes us… a little time to let things ferment and develop with notes and quiet observations on what we have already discovered and there usually emerges a way forward that lights a spark to give us new momentum. Beautiful images as usual.
It is always intriguing to see how what we want to work with changes through time..
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