Saturday, September 7, 2024

back to the drawing board

when I learned to quilt many years ago I spent a lot of time studying the quilts I saw in books and magazines that I liked, the ones I was really drawn to

I looked at the colours, the values, how the shapes and pattern were defined... what types of prints were used - what was the coverage of the design motifs on the fabric?

all of these things and more, when looked at for dozens and dozens of quilts over multiple years, told me quite clearly what it was that drew me to the quilts I loved and in turn that showed me the way to making such quilts for myself

I was consistently drawn to a lot of variety, in both colour and value in each quilt

sparse prints held far greater appeal than dense prints

fragmented patterns rather than boldly defined ones

a very sparing use of bold geometrics

the use of subtle secondary patterns

what could be achieved through combining tones with brights

I realized I didn't have to like every fabric in the quilt, in fact there some I didn't like at all but taken with the whole, they were perfect and the quilt would have suffered without them

and so on

last week I decided to do the same with the the photographs I am most drawn to as well as the samples I've made that resonate the most

I have an inspiration board in my studio space and a while back I had printed some of those photos and put them up along with some of my favourite samples - over time I began combining them, photos with samples or samples with other samples, noticing how some might look good together

the other day I was looking at them again and thought perhaps doing the same kind of analysis with them as I did with quilts might be an interesting exercise and give me some directions to work in

I took photos of the groupings, printed them and have put them in my sketchbook

today I started making a few notes, first of what I'm most drawn to


in this photo, it's the water that strikes me first - the silver gleam, the broken pattern, how it looks like burnished metal in places

the scrubby darkness of the tree-line

the texture of the cliffs

in the painting scrap, it's the abstract nature of the brush strokes, especially at the bottom

in both, I like the high contrast of dark vs light 



in the next photo, again the water holds great appeal as do the trees

I like how you don't notice the cabin at first (at least I don't)

the faint broken shadows of the trees on the water

the sky, mottled grey with a yellowish cast in the centre

I find the subtle colours calming and there's a kind indistinctness to the photo I like very much

in the painted piece, its the lines with dark blue smudge of colour and the grey at the bottom

(the fabric behind isn't meant to be there)


for these two its the colour (no surprise there!) but I also like the fragmentation and the lack of strong regularity

not all of the marks are good but that means they make the good ones look better - perfection can be the death of expressiveness


I love the dark ink on the rough linen, the smudgy, gritty look of it

the black ink on white paper - loose, expressive, done with the cardboard tube from a roll of aluminium foil... random mark-making that was great fun and when torn into pieces the marks became even more random

the painted piece on the right is a favourite - when I look at it I can the swiftness of my hand as I made those marks with grey paint

swish swoosh

the way the white sparkles through in places because of the rough texture of the paper

that pale blue at the top with a torn white edge

so, now I've done that, what comes next?

I think looking at the commonalities over the four groups and then making notes for other samples to work at; ideas drawn from each pairing utilizing the colours, marks, media and methods that resonated the most

and then putting the three together and looking at it all, again with that analytical eye

and then do it again

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

"The fabric behind it isn't meant to be there"... and yet the way the papers and the fabric have landed together looks so good. I spent a while looking at the first one... my eye and brain playing games with each other. My brain understands that this is a photo of a bank of trees against a snowy rise of land behind... and yet my eye argues that this is a photo of a huge white tile wave curling over it's own shadow about to crash into the lake. The conversation continues...

Anonymous said...

.... tidal wave... not tile wave

Rachel said...

Oh, much food for thought and further experiment there!

Brynwood Needleworks said...

Oh, Jillayne:
I'm so curious to see where this is going to go! I love what you're doing already, and the subtle shades will make this something truly wonderful. I'll be watching...
xoxo
Donna

Fiona Dempster said...

I love that you are doing the analysis - I have just come back from writing a note to myself in my journal - "go through this book and work out what it is I am responding to. Then use them as a kind of mood board"! I often wonder what it is I love - and so often it is simplicity. But also line, and colour, depth and texture...I really enjoyed reading you have done the same for quilts; and to watch your thinking on the black and whites.

Ester Wilson said...

It seems to me that you might like the work of Chamil Garden: https://www.instagram.com/chamilgarden/

Magpie's Mumblings said...

I skidded to a hault when I read 'perfection can be the death of expressiveness' and actually said wow right out loud. I can't tell you how much that resonated with me.