I'm back in the studio after two weeks going down to London almost every day. My computer is dying and I had a grey screen all last week.
There are few things I need to make work for, but I also have some ideas I want to test, lots of ideas. There has been so much input recently that I need to explore my own responses to things, and play. Today and tomorrow I have set aside for monoprints - above is 6 x 8inches and the first stab at going back to my starting place, the combination of landscape/figure, inspired by my most recent studio visit.
Last week I visited Bridget Moore. Bridget was in my original group of people I really, really wanted to visit but it was tough to organise and it is not an understatement to say that it lived up to my expectations and was worth the wait. You can see a little of her work here: https://www.newenglishartclub.co.uk/artists/bridget-moore-neac-rba-rws?art=101
Bridget was a generous visit, feeding me and then letting me look through her work myself and showing me piece after piece, and explaining the context. I saw her gouache plate, her tubes and some absolutely exquisite paintings and drawings. We talked about using memory, drawings and old photos, something I used to do but have lost the confidence to do, these days. We talked about that and she is a role model for working that way.
What happened when I got home is that the things that I look at daily (or DON'T look at) became visible - I had never noticed how mysterious almost iconic, a semi detatched house can be, until Bridget showed me. She likes silouettes and the light around the edges. So do I.
Showing posts with label monotype. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monotype. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 26, 2018
Monday, March 26, 2018
Three Media, three models
Feven, egg tempera on panel 16 x 23cm |
Feven, egg tempera on panel 16 x 23cm |
Esme ink on paper 10 x 15.5 cm |
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Akua Intaglio on paper 10 x 15 cm, NEAC life drawing |
Akua Intaglio on paper 10 x 15 cm, NEAC life drawing |
Akua Intaglio on paper 10 x 15 cm, NEAC life drawing |
Saturday, February 24, 2018
Colour of Morning Dog Walk
Returning to the dog walk drawings, I considered the light as it rose and the colours that light can make. I wasn't remembering colour so much as finding the colour that felt true.
Sometimes when I walk I can't help but exclaim about a particular light or the slant of the horizon and recreating that was the goal. In the top monotype I rolled a bright pink over the plate and wiped and painted back in colour, thinking of Milton Avery. On the bottom this is the second pull. The first was nightlight and I wanted to find the light of cold in this one. The cold is coming!
Wednesday, February 21, 2018
A few more from life
On Monday Barbara brought a big box with her to life drawing. she'd seen a performance at Dance East using a box and was inspired. Shadows fell in a different way. The body was brought into relief. the image below was without the box, with the mirror making the edges. I had decided to work in ink and was trying to let the magic of the ink speak, so made choices differently and had to work slower. I didn't want these to be line drawings, I wanted to use tone. These small sketches (between A5 and A6) were 5, 10 and 15 minute poses. It's interesting to reflect how they give me as much, though different information than a colour pastel drawing.
We had Esme the week before and I used my 10 x 15 cm zinc plate. The plate below still has a ghost that I am considering reworking. I realise that when I put release agent on top, I lose the whitest whites so thought I could consider that in the subsequent print. I only worked backwards in one of the prints so was able to print a few prints during the two hour session. Clearly my brain takes longer to work backwards - something to consider for NEAC drawing school.
The images below are from my last visit to London and NEAC drawing school with Mick Kirkbride. I was determined to get more done but we made a series of quick sketches first (which was great) but we didn't have as long on the pose. I worked backwards but was determined to get a quick print too. You can see how the release agent darkened the whole image in the middle print.
We had Esme the week before and I used my 10 x 15 cm zinc plate. The plate below still has a ghost that I am considering reworking. I realise that when I put release agent on top, I lose the whitest whites so thought I could consider that in the subsequent print. I only worked backwards in one of the prints so was able to print a few prints during the two hour session. Clearly my brain takes longer to work backwards - something to consider for NEAC drawing school.
The images below are from my last visit to London and NEAC drawing school with Mick Kirkbride. I was determined to get more done but we made a series of quick sketches first (which was great) but we didn't have as long on the pose. I worked backwards but was determined to get a quick print too. You can see how the release agent darkened the whole image in the middle print.
Sunday, October 8, 2017
Sunrise Over Suffolk Poplars
Sunrise over Poplars - monotype: Akua Intaglio on zinc, printed on Heritage 215gm paper, 10 x 10 cm |
Saturday, June 3, 2017
Re-using a monotype plate
Rapeseed, Oak and path 10 x 10cm, first version 1/1 monotype: Akua Intaglio |
Rapeseed, Oak and path 10 x 10cm, second version 1/1 monotype: Akua Intaglio |
Aldeburgh Beach 7.5 x 10cm, first version 1/1 monotype: Akua Intaglio |
Aldeburgh Beach 7.5 x 10cm, second version 1/1 monotype: Akua Intaglio |
And tonight we had a drink in the field. I took my new altered sketchbook for UK landscapes. A Bold Venture.
Field with Lime Tree, pastel on book pages (altered sketchbook) |
Monday, November 7, 2016
Trial & Error in LIfe Drawing
Oops, I forgot my roller again today so the monotypes are greyer than I like. I was working on a small plate 7.5 x 10cm today, though, so I was able to be more exact than I usually can be in a 15 minute pose.
When I make monotypes the marks I make become one of the key aspects of the work. In another 15 minute pose I made the drawing on top first and then spent the remaining five minutes being specific about the marks.
In a drawing session a few weeks ago, I remembered my roller but the first print was disappointing, the plate was beautiful, but the print was a let down. A few days later I rolled some release agent onto the plate and although it is weak in value, it has more of the feel from the plate.
Sometimes working back into a failed print or drawing gives me a head start for a different drawing. Originally this was a print of another model. I put some clear gesso over it and worked back in with pastels. although I am not convinced of the colour, the overall feel is much better than the original failed print!
Labels:
life drawing,
monotype,
pastel on paper,
Rebecca Moss Guyver
Friday, October 14, 2016
Regrowth and Sky
Regrowth and Sky 7.5 x 10cm monotype |
The good news is that I sold one of my mini prints at the East Anglian Mini Print Exhibition and Lesley (the curator) from Red Dot will be moving it to a new space in Bury St Edmunds in November. She wants a new print.
Early this morning I prepared some new plates, I took the ones I'd made earlier in the summer to Maine and didn't bring them back… Preparing the plates entails cutting some of them to size and filing the sides. After that I tried to approximate the feel of a walk with the October weather and the green that dominates as the wheat comes up in Akua Intaglio ink, drawing backwards, of course.
Tuesday, August 2, 2016
No bigger than 10cm challenge
There's an exhibition coming up (The East Anglian Mini Print 2016) in Aldeburgh to coincide with the Food Festival in the Garage Gallery. I have had so much on lately I didn't think I'd submit anything for it, but I have had some reminders and in the end I ordered some teeny tiny plates in the nick of time. I've applied my Inspired By Becker sensibilities to these 10.5 x 7.5 cm monotypes and will work on the 10cm square fomat next to see how that feels. It's a juried show, so no idea if anything will be selected, but am having fun exploring the very small plate.
Wednesday, June 15, 2016
Inspired by Degas and Becker
Light on shoulder, Monotype Akua intaglio on paper , 10 x 15cm |
Light on Hip, Monotype Akua intaglio on paper 10 x 15cm |
Afternoon light on birdbath, Monotype Akua intaglio on paper with pastel, 10 x 15cm |
I've joined a group: 'Inspired by Becker' http://ibbas.co.uk and want to make a seires of works capturing Suffolk light in the landscape with energetic marks.
Saturday, April 23, 2016
Experimenting with Becker's light
In the last few weeks I have been thinking about a new project. One of my artist friends told me about a group who call themselves 'inspired by Becker'. Harry Becker was an artist who lived from 1865 - 1928 in rural Suffolk. In 2002 the Wildlife Gallery had a show of Becker's work and although I didn't see it, our friends, the Hawkins have lots of his work so I have seen examples of his paintings, drawings, etching and lithos and watercolours regularly over the years. But I find that if your eye isn't in and you aren't attentive to a particular aesthetic/artist you don't necessarily appreciate him/her.
Last week Christopher gave me a copy of the beautiful Becker book by David Thompson: http://www.oldpond.com/becker-harry-becker-1865-1928.html and I have been reading it and imagining the time when he lived, what he saw and considering how suffolk has changed. I am now feeling inspired by Becker.
At the same time, I have been thinking about an exhibition of Degas' monoprints that is at the MOMA in NYC. My friend, Ann Sullivan, sent me a postcard from the exhibition, knowing that if I could visit it I would! Years ago I looked a lot at Degas and Prendergast monotypes and one of the directions I took was to make a series of monotypes using black etching ink which I put pastel over. This technique was one of the experiments that Degas made.
I wondered if I could translate the Suffolk light, one of Becker's concerns, the light he called the "true light of day" using this technique.
The top monotype is the first pull. I rolled lamp black ink onto a zinc plate and removed it with rags, turps and stand oil. I used a limited pallette of about 7 pastels. I printed onto Snowden which I sprayed with water and wiped dry with a j-cloth. The monotype below was the ghost and I made some changes to the plate, but did very little painting on it. I printed onto Arches. The paper is off white and softer. When I chose my pastels I wanted the field behind to be a higher key.
Thursday, January 15, 2015
More light studies
Light from Dairy, monotype: Akua Itaglio on paper 6 x 8" |
Mother and Sister of the Artist by Edouard Vuillard, 1892 |
Light From Above Piano, monotype: Akua Itaglio on paper 6 x 8" |
This print was actually made before the one above. You can see that I was little more faithful to Vuillard's pallette. I have painted and drawn this view repeatedly in the past. This medium seems to solve it more for me.
Woman in Blue, by Edouard Vuillard, 1893 |
I include this last drawing to show that as I said in an earlier post there are many prints that I pull back the blanket to in disappointment.
Light from Upstairs Window, monotype: Akua Itaglio on paper 6 x 8" |
Light from Window upstairs, soft pastel over 1st pull monoprint |
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