Showing posts with label fused plastic collage with paint and stitching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fused plastic collage with paint and stitching. Show all posts
Saturday, November 4, 2017
Green Scrolls
Whoop, Whoop, I finally have had a little time again and my studio and house are pretty clean and tidy. The annual deadline for the Pastel Society has passed and that means I can turn my attention to the other media that I work in and although I am itching to paint, I wanted to explore an idea that's been buzzing in my head that I thought might be interesting. There is an open submission coming up that it might work for.
By titling these I have given you an in into what is in my head. I didn't tell Patrick anything but showed him the top fused plastic collage and asked him for three words. He looked worried, but when pressed, his first word was 'Chinese'. I was so delighted by his first word that he never gave me the other two words. As I worked on the 'Green Scroll' over a few days, I began to feel something Asian in it. I wanted to play with the power of different colours in the arrangement. I was thinking about my night light drawing. The medallions are landscapes and may tell stories.
Green Scroll II was even more difficult to realize. I wanted a companion piece and as I worked in a similar way, the plastic melted differently, my shapes shrunk and contorted and when I finished working yesterday it was a mess. The background colour began as yellow then became whites and finally today I masked the medallions with tape and painted in tones of blue and green acrylic paint to float the focal plastic shapes.
Wednesday, March 8, 2017
Fishing for Biscuits with Cups and Clutter
Cups and Clutter |
Fishing for Biscuits, fused plastic collage with stitching and paint (21 x 21cm) |
I was able to finish last week's Dining on Plastic, though. It was predominately made of vegetable wrappers - mostly different kinds of lettuce. Earlier in the week, I polished off a packet of water biscuits and the shimmery royal blue comes from that. Andrex toilet paper blue is a staple and I didn't find any roadside plastic!
Yesterday I drew in my sketchbook as the light was fading. I found a box of old pastels, so old I can't remember where they come from… were they Patrick's? New colours are always inspiring and chasing the light makes you concentrate hard!
Saturday, February 25, 2017
Sketching at the Edges of Abstraction
This altered sketchbook (using soft pastel) is about the edges where figurative and abstract mark making meet. I have said before that making fused plastic is a playful part of my practice where I am freed to respond and which is more like solving a puzzle than drawing. It is intuitive and does require careful looking, but it isn't as rooted in eye-hand coordination, it is more about discovery. As I progress through the altered sketchbook, will it be possible to combine the two in a different kind of drawing?
Last year I made a series of pastel drawings where I combined still life objects with some of my painted paper collages, drawing about the two together. They were surprising. Is this a direction that could be intriguing?
These are the last two of my dining on plastic pieces. You can see more about them and the other from previous weeks at that blog here:
.http://diningonplastic.blogspot.co.uk
Mozarella and Mangoes at the Pier |
Carrots Downriver |
Tuesday, November 24, 2015
Discovering snow light
23 x 23 cm (framed) fused plastic on paper with paint and stitching |
23 x 23 cm (framed) fused plastic on paper with paint and stitching |
30 x 40 cm (framed) paint on book pages |
I'm getting work ready for the upcoming Freudian Sheep exhibition that opens on the 5th of December, COLD. We had a little dusting of snow the other day and have had some hard frosts that bleached the grass and created the orangey-pink sky that is peculiar to the cold and I've been thinking about that. I've just glued the work to board and I'm hoping that solves the wrinkles… if not will have to take apart and reassemble differently.
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