Learning Log P.4 Developing Fen Theme
Learning Log P.4 Developing Fen Theme
This series of paintings began with a lot of thinking about developing my previous work. It was important to me that I took these paintings a bit further in terms of concept, colour, texture and design. I chose to work on a slightly larger scale as I enjoy working bigger and I would also be able to scale up detail within the previous studies.
I spent some time cutting up photocopies of the studies to help analyse the composition of the works and how I could home in on certain details. I then looked more closely at the segments and explored how these could be interpreted using a variety of media. I found using collage and mixed media very helpful as the various textures helped me to interpret the original work in a different way.
Although these are very small I think these are the most successful studies.
In all these works I have brought my studies of black to the ‘canvas’, usually starting with a black background, or introducing it fairly early. I felt that this brought a slightly mysterious and dramatic atmosphere to the work and gave me an opportunity to explore colour in a new way
Painting 1. Red Letter
Although this painting has strong horizontal and vertical lines they are of an organic nature, soft and flowing. Like much of my work there was a lot of sticking down and then pulling off, string, thread and various strips of paper, and of course sticking back down again!
I did this work on Dalerboard, which contributed to the overall softness of the finished work by providing an semi absorbent base. This made it easy to adhere things to but harder to paint on as it didn’t have the rigidity that I like when my board is on the easel.
The binary nature of positive and negative stripes in the field references the bar codes that we use to purchase our goods today. This painting reminds us that the price we pay is not simply monetary.
The plain, unadorned sky is intended to be a foil for the densely patterned land and as a reinforcement of the positive and negative elements in this painting. The white horizontal stripe acts as a point of illumination. I think that perhaps this painting could have simply been a black and white barcode, but I like the soft greens alluding to the stirrings of growth and the visceral red symbolising the blood of the earth. The blues represents water - the essential element for all life.
This painting began with strips of soft tissue overlaid with strips of local news paper. The tissue has been allowed to rub away in certain areas to expose the board or to gather in little strands. Most of the white stripes have been executed using white photocopy paper. This was to create an intensity of light and a random cut or shorn appearance. White threads added scale and soft tones of blue, green and purple were introduced to add colour and depth.
Painting 3. All Cut Up
Within the painting are pictures of local people cut from the newspaper. Some have been treated with a wash and/or outlined. I like the concept of including people who inhabit the area. The development of the land has been to provide these people with jobs and sustenance. It is good to see them looking healthy and happy, as one day they will return to the land in a very literal way to continue the cycle of life. It is appropriate to use a lot of black in the execution of the fen soil; it is so dark and rich. Black is an infinite colour receding forever. This is another reference to the timeless quality of the land. Some sand and local dirt was added in the final stages to add texture to the foreground. White ‘stitching’ was added to highlight the rhythm and structure of the field.
Painting 4. Tangled Web
This painting began as a ‘recycled’ board, which had a thin black wash all over. Strips of brown paper towel were added to create the ‘web’ and a process of layering colour and structure began. The light areas were created by printing from a paper towel as I wanted a fairly solid shape but with a softer texture. The diagonal turquoise lines add drama and visual structure to the painting. They are fractured light and pull everything in to a central point. The stitch lines are again a way of highlighting certain areas and a reference to the applied nature of the painting.
5. Last Stand
After painting so much black I felt in need of a little ‘light’ relief (ha ha). I started with a white undercoat and then the painting was created with the use of strips of newspaper and paper towel. Horizontal juxtaposed against vertical. Within those shapes a pattern of diagonal shadows and highlights were created and soft earthy hues introduced. The thin white lines that dissect the painting represent refracted light, draw your eye around the painting and echo the geometric shapes within the verticals. Although there is much in these paintings that seems random or by chance, these geometric structures allude to the laws of science that all nature must adhere to.
Painting 6. Inside Out, Inside In
In this series of fen fields we have always been outside looking in. In this painting we see the view from within the field’s interior. This painting has a lot of ambiguity. It is difficult to see exactly where some of the stems begin or end, the season, the weather or even the time of day. We can just about see the barred gate in the background, but are we in or out of the field? The black area leading in from the right seems to indicate a slightly sinister presence. Is this fertilisers, genetically modified crops, the impending scythe of the harvest?
I had recently seen Gerhart Richter’s retrospective exhibition and can see some of his influence in this painting – the colourless blurred grey at the top of the painting, bright colour and images that are revealed and yet not revealed
Once again I have used a previous painting. This was a fen view done a few years ago. I had been looking at the complimentary combination of blue sky and orange fields. The painting was cut to size and I began to add strips of heavily textured paper. Most of these initial strips have been pulled away as they were too dominant in the work. All that remains are a few bits of the backing paper and some negative shapes. These have been worked into with black and some colour. Some of the stalks have printing on them and others have had colour bled onto them. A very pale soft grey was smudged into a skyline, just catching the tips of the stalks. This seems to intensify the colours and create a wistful distance.
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