i'm slowly working my through an online course demonstrating various ways of interpreting landscape whilst exploring a variety of materials
as ever, there have been exercises that on first glance held little or no appeal but i've done them all anyway, knowing enough about myself to recognise when i am getting in my own way
these little landscape "stacks" did not fall into that category at all
so much fun to do
the first ones i made (not shown here) were done using the colours suggested in the course
i struggled with them, both the colours and the landscapes themselves, and in the end was completely dissatisfied with the results... over the course of the day i began to wonder if perhaps the problem was that i had no understanding of a landscape that looked like that
the next day i changed the palette to one of the north and began again
i know that land, how it looks, what the sky is like, the water - where the colours are and where they aren't
much, much better
these aren't meant to look exactly like a properly laid out landscape; it's more a "stacking" of the elements, though the sky is always be placed at the top - it's a layering of colours and playing with marks
responding to something you see in your work as you go and enhancing it further if you want
water, rocks, hills, trees, grasses, flowers - whatever, wherever
and in the end they're to be torn horizontally and re-combined, looking for new connections, different landscapes, sometimes adding more painting or drawing
again following what you see and any impulses that arise from that
i'm not ready to tear these ones though - i think i need to make a few more first
but for now, it's "stacks" like the one below that need my attention first!
3 comments:
Oooh I love these! Graham, looking over my shoulder also commented on how 'delightful' they are. But, more than just delightful, they are such expressive little bundles of changing colours, weather, land forms, sky and most importantly your own gut feeling and familiarity of this place within you as well as around you. And, yet again, you have shown that art cannot be forced but needs to be allowed to flow from instinct, understanding and feel for your subject. I can see potential here, just by they way you have overlapped the torn edges. And I love the idea of landscapes as stacks!
Thanks for the time and dedication you've put into this blog
Yes, the palette really matters - I know, going from painting my familiar Northern European surroundings, to trying to depicted the sunburned country and glaucus leaves of Australia. So rewarding when you work out what is needed, though!
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