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The Sound of Stromess Fused plastic, paint and stitch 23 x 23 cm |
Wednesday, March 7, 2018
The Sound of Stromness and Pigeons
Monday, March 5, 2018
pastel over monotype
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monotype plate before printing |
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monotype (ghost) with release agent |
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pastel over monotype |
Sunday, March 4, 2018
unimpeded by weather, I work from life
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Valentina, oil on panel 30 x 40 cm |
Back in the studio I printed the ghosts using release agent, wiping it away to get some pure whites back where I had wiped previously. I also printed one that had been hanging around from the week before, with Esme. That seemed to work!
On Friday, even though we were advised not to travel, I went to London. The morning was spent at the British Museum and after seeing the Victorian photos, I went to the Mall where I made a few prints, following on from Monday. The print below is the best of the bunch and IMHO one of my best!
And on Saturday, I was back in London at Heatherley's for a brilliant painting workshop with Peter Clossick. This time I braved snow and bus replacements, travelling for 7 1/2 hours for the workshop! Still, totally worth it. The suggested technique was similar to the way I make a mono print to begin, putting on a neutral and then removing the light with a rag. I was very susprised how thinly I painted after that, considering I was taught by Peter. I had imagined working in thick paint… I think I never really got the structure aspect of the technique but I was enjoying what the paint was doing and was chasing the light. At the beginning I had decided to make two paintings. Peter stopped me with the top one (reclining nude) about an hour before the end of the session. I didn't resolve the head but it has triggered a chain reaction of ideas. Hopefully more soon!
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Emily, monotype, akua intaglio on cartridge paper |
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Mary, akua intaglio on Rives 10 x 15cm, NEAC |
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Emily, monotype, akua intaglio on heritage paper, printed with press using release agent |
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Emily, monotype, akua intaglio on heritage paper, printed with press using release agent |
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Emily, monotype, akua intaglio on cartridge paper |
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Emily, monotype, akua intaglio on cartridge paper |
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Emily, monotype, akua intaglio on cartridge paper |
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Emily, monotype, akua intaglio on cartridge paper |
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Valentina, oil on canvas 30 x 23 cm |
Tuesday, February 27, 2018
Snowday
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Snow Light, monotype: akua intaglio on Heritage paper, 10x15 cm |
Sunday, February 25, 2018
Pin the colour down before it fades
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Reduced Flowers, pastel on paper 15 x 14 cm, pastel on paper |
The orange under the jam jar is a pair of PJs I bought from Anthropologie in their reduced reduced sale - I have been meaning to hem them for years, literally. The pattern to the left at the top is a scarf I got at a charity shop last year and the fuscia on the right is an Indian top that I got at the car boot a few years ago. The green cup was an early wedding present from Patrick when we'd first moved to Singapore. The purple is a placemat I bought in Rome. There is a cheese knife from south Africa on it and the book came from a used bookstore in the Southwest.
This small drawing took most of the day. In the past I might have stopped when it was freer and created the mood without pinning everything down. Perhaps I will return to that approach. Tomorrow when the sun comes up I will look again at the right of the jam jar lid.
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!
Thursday, February 22, 2018
NO need to go far for inspiration
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View from Front Garden, pastel on paper, 14 x 15 |
I've been reading more of the Jason Gaiger book, thinking about how we read the marks on the page and whether denotation comes first. I suspect everyone can recognise that cold wintery sky.
Now maybe I will make those monotypes!
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