Jazz Green : Artist Journal

Search results for ‘colour values’

some thoughts on the wider significance of the lichens… it seems quite simple – they signify life amongst the decay, a sign of gentle renewal, the circle of life, the quiet resilience of nature, all the more poignant when experienced within the context of a graveyard, existing on the very surface that marks and memorialises a death (as previously seen in these photographs – on looking and lichen, december 2009, and more recently the lichen drawings) – but that wouldn’t fully justify making art or paintings sourced from lichens, as the photographs might convey these ideas quite adequately, in the right context… it would seem there is a challenge inherent in objectifying the powers of nature within art – and artists have been doing this for some time…

it was quite difficult to focus on the quiet matter of some painting over the weekend due to the cacophony of resident noise, (i need not go into the finer details of the myriad power tools in usage, dear reader, except to say that the particular occurence of some petrol-powered hedge-trimming at 7.30am was not music to my sensitive ears)… so, my best painterly intentions went a bit awry… what did i create instead??


some alien biscuits or are they mutant cornflakes? some tentative lichen-ness experiments, which could do with being a little more crusty


i attached one to the painting canvas…


shown here with the artist’s hand, to give an idea of scale…


just looking, through the lichen-ness…

this idea, of creating fragments to use in work goes back a little… in my mixed media collages of the 1990’s i re-created little bits of stone, rust, metal, etc, which were then assembled into the work – many people believed i had found these fragments – i had not, they were entirely faux… here’s an example from early 1997. you can see some of this older work on my collage page

i remember vividly making these little fragments. i had a very small studio in a lean-to shed. in the winter i used a parrafin stove to keep it warm, and i suspended a metal oven tray just above the stove on which to dry out the fragments, i used handmade paper and would use sweepings from the concrete floor to create more random texture – probably a mix of brick dust, mortar, sawdust, dirt…

speaking of artifice, here’s a tiny detail of my painting algae, a work that precedes the current fungal fascinations… but is also relevant to mention in that it will be included in a new exhibition…

i am really pleased to have been invited to exhibit three of my large edgescape paintings (algae, corros and rost) with a new gallery in the fine city of norwich, art1821. they will be shown in an exhibition that has been planned in collaboration with the sainsbury centre for visual arts, focusing on japanese art and the environment. the exhibition at art1821 is called rebirth, to coincide with the sainsbury centre’s unearthed exhibition… (many thanks go to BM for helping me get my paintings to the gallery)…

the art1821 gallery has a charming ambience with its low ceilings and irregular, cobbled, whitewashed walls, situated in one of the city’s oldest ‘listed’ buildings in the heart of tombland, the medieval quarter of the city… in a curious way, these historical features seem to complement the showing of modern art (i saw some margaret mellis assemblage works on the wall), in the way that the sainsbury centre’s minimalist open-plan aesthetic, of the transparent, inside-outside architectural design (not much changed since the 70’s), brings a fresh-eyed perspective to a substantial collection of old world artefacts… (for those that do not know, the scva building was designed by sir norman foster) … i would really like to visit the unearthed exhibition…

i had just enough time to also quickly see the norfolk contemporary art show at the forum – did i mention that i have some work in this exhibition? whilst there i discovered that there is also a series of lunchtime artist talks (but i just missed one) and also a number of ‘artists-talking’ videos on permanent playback during the exhibition – i enjoyed watching a couple of these short video talks before i had to dash back… i am not involved in this, so anybody desiring to find out a little more about my art and inspiration may find something of interest in this very blog.

i have also just added a couple of new webpages to this website, of which this earnest ‘artist journal’ is just a small (but ever-evolving and expanding) section of it…  there is now a new page devoted to the recent/ongoing intaglio collagraph prints on canvas. here are four of them currently on exhibition in the aforementioned norfolk contemporary art…


norfolk contemporary art 2010

my work is displayed between an intriguing mixed-media assemblage by andy cairns – an artist who was also in the salthouse exhibition last year, and whose work is mentioned in my little bloglet devoted to the salthouse 09 art exhibition – and, a rather small but perfectly formed gunn painting… i would like to see this year’s salthouse exhbition, landmark 10, but travelling is a bit problematic at the moment (with a knackered, soon-to-be decommissioned iron horse…)…

i have been thinking about a collective title for these small intaglio works on canvas, briefly considered i-cons (or eye-cons) and then decided upon eikons (from the greek, a symbolic or representational object) – it was still a suitably concise-sounding word – an icon now also refers to little square computer symbols or visual shortcuts – but the variant, archaic ei spelling also suggested a reference to the electronic internet… with so many con-nections, i was suitably con-verted…

everything is so e, i or ii these days, isn’t it… do you have an e-car yet? i once made a birthday card with a comical u-pod, using an apple-style umlaut, with party like it’s 1978 as the tagline, appropriating an image from a knitting pattern that i found in a charity shop, of a chap modelling an itchy-looking sweater with a (now) very retro, 1970’s sony cassette player – oh, how w-e laughed about the u-pod!!  but i-digress, i-had better just keep to the art (but it was quite artistic, in an ‘i made this just ‘4u’ sort of way)…

so, in the small (ei-kon) works i inverted the process of idea/source to object/meaning by employing various processes and methods to determine a unique ‘identity’ for the work… they began as humble, small-scale textural experiments for printmaking purposes, drawing upon the visual signs of decay in agricultural outbuildings and the local environment – but then some analysis of colour and associated words, and their real-world connections or counterparts, led, inevitably, to the concept of pursuing some virtual travelling, an activity which gave rise to the titles, and thus gave the work a new, more global resonance and identity… those diy paint colour charts were just the start of it…

what’s in a title, a name? is it vital or important, is it meaningful, revealing, persuasive, or just a means of differentiation?  within the context of (or absence of) subjective art titles one might also mention martin creed again, or mark rothko even, but i am just seeing a lot gushing red stuff, so let’s not go there today…

i really liked pursuing the open-ended nature of this sideline activity, that i would, in a vaguely lynchian way, create works that followed a more convoluted, non-linear course; the end became their beginning. it was also a deliberate move away from a series of strictly numbered works… the virtual travels also inspired the idea of starting a faux sketchbook… in that, if anyone cared to contemplate upon it, that the vast network of the internet is not just a window to truth & knowledge, but is equally a platform for some deliberate artifice & creative reinvention of one’s identity and sense of place in the world…

random fact alert! i actually graduated in the presence of the great david lynch! he was awarded an honorary degree by the RCA


a lichen drawing in a sketchbook, june 2010

i have also created a new webpage to show some of my recent lichen-esque drawings

i really would like to pursue the idea of doing some larger versions of these – where does one get rolls of good drawing paper, and perhaps, more importantly, is it very expensive?? i probably have one too many ideological plates spinning (or they are just wobbling and are likely to shatter in a very messy, greek fashion) – the eroded circles/discs, the cubed/3d prints, the lichens and their various transformations, the green mould prints, dissolved image transfers, small etchings, virtual travel sketches…

now, i am even contemplating  growing fake lichens in my spare time…


Congo 2010, mixed media collagraph on paper on canvas, 5″ x 5″ x 1.5″

‘Congo’ is another tiny work, but I like the idea that it could or should be held – as a small fragment, a precious offering or a reductionist icon. In minimalist terms, the central grey stripe could symbolise the path of a forest clearing. Trees, stripped bark or even dirt tracks are echoed in the texture and grain of the surface. This small canvas is one of a new series based on colour values and visual associations or narratives… partly geographical, partly cultural… inspired by the prospect of virtual travels around the planet…


[detail of Congo]

This photograph shows a scene of intensive deforestation in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

This pillaging of one of the world’s natural resources is central to the current debate on climate change. The impact is seen firsthand at an ecological level – disrupting the natural biodiversity of life. Then, as the landscape is permanently altered it is left exposed to changing weather systems, winds creating soil erosion, periods of drought to flooding – never mind the ozone.

If only trees could talk…

The British artist, Angela Palmer, recently installed a series of vast tree roots and stumps in London’s Traflagar Square, to highlight the issues surrounding deforestation. According to the artist’s own website she ‘made several field trips to a commercially logged primary rainforest in Ghana’ – surely a footprint or two of dirty carbon traces there? The selected trees (all of which were apparently naturally felled due to adverse weather) were painstakingly shipped to the UK for the art installation. The exhibit was later transferred to Copehagen to coincide with the Earth Summit in December 2009. Oh, the tragic irony of this monumental statement on climate change… You can read more about the Ghost Forest project here…

In 2009, another british artist, Tania Kovats, created a ceiling installation out of a 17m high wafer-thin section of a 200 year old oak tree for London’s Natural History Museum, in honour of Charles Darwin’s 200th birthday and as a homage to his tree of life drawing – a now significant doodle mapping out this ideas on the origins of life. The oak tree was carefully selected (then very much alive) from sustainable woodlands on Longleat Estate (they planted 200 new sapling trees to replace it – that’ll be another two hundred years). You can watch a video of Tania Kovat’s Tree here. I quite like Kovat’s moving meadow artwork (a meadow on a barge) but salami slicing a healthy tree to adorn a ceiling in honour of Darwin’s idea seemed a little extravagant…

Yet another British artist, Anya Gallaccio, has created installations out of uprooted and felled trees that are relocated and reconstructed within the gallery space. She only works with trees (and their attendant surgeons) that are due for the final chop – often indigeonous species such as oak and chestnut. Gallaccio’s exhibit for the 2003 Turner Prize (in my opinion, one of the better years) included life-size bronze casts of trees adorned with slowly rotting fruits. Gallaccio’s works transcend their organic materality and process, to signify the essential temporality of all living (and dead) things. In a interview in ArtForum magazine in 2008 she said: I’m interested in basic, rather banal stuff, like how big trees are and how we relate to them physically. [...] I’m a little bit terrified and overwhelmed by nature. My curiosity is more morbid than celebratory’.

If only walls could talk…

And lastly… of the recent Turner Prize 2010 shortlist announcement… I chuckled when I heard sound artist Susan Philipsz (when interviewed about her Turner Prize nomination) exclaim, : ‘I couldn’t believe my ears’. I doubt it will win the hearts of the people; it’s a public exhibition and there won’t be much to look at in a white space… My money’s on De La Cruz; I like the irony… Read brief profiles of the four nominated Turner Prize 2010 artists here

I have been quietly working on more small, intaglio print canvases (if that is not a oxymoron in artistic terms)… Here are some artfully stacked up in the studio…

I have had four of these small canvases accepted for a show in the summer (NCA 2010) – quietly chuffed as I thought at first it would be a risk to submit some lightweight works rather than a large canvas or two, but out of 596 submissions they’ve selected just 69 works for the final exhibition…

I now have to work on my artist statement for the illustrated catalogue… So firstly, what are these little things, how are they made…? Below shows one intaglio print as it is collaged onto the canvas…

They first look like this one, below (printed on hahnemule paper)… I think I will keep this one as a conventional flat print… but the others begin their transition into a more 3D object…

some more prints… decidedly green and grey…

Why prints and not paintings? It has something to do with the initial fabrication of the matrix (and the resulting multiples) which can be subtly transformed each time – altering by sanding, incising, cutting and pasting – so no two prints are the same… and a smooth sheet of paper is infinitely mouldable, thereby the altered print becomes a tactile object… I have been jotting down a few words to explore further my idea of virtual world travels inspired by selected colours (read more about my colour values here)… in turn creating a faux allusion or object, a fragment, symbol, souvenir, memento, remnant, an abstract relic or impression of a location.. I have another twelve or so destinations to explore this week…

I sometimes feel I am just talking to a brick wall… but nature sees every crevice as a potential growing opportunity… yep, I probably do need to get out more…

photo of drain pipe and brick wall with plant growing half way up
[buddleia, brick wall and drainpipe]

photo of with apple tree
[apple tree in city building lot]

As an addendum, I recalled today the time that I sold off the majority of my possessions (the usual bric-a-brac – vintage clothes, lots of kitsch, retro stuff, even two director’s chairs and a fake palm tree) at a Brighton car boot sale, in order to buy a car. I kept back one one thing, Da Vinci’s ‘Mona Lisa’ as a jigsaw puzzle (it was a feat to complete and was suitably framed). It was a trashy souvenir of sorts, a personal reminder of student digs and student days… but very different to the holiday souvenir, one that is manufactured in duplicate to fulfil a desire to take something unique home… most of those also end up at the memorial service to forgotten holidays, the car boot sale…

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The website of British Fine Artist Jazz Green MA RCA. Abstract landscape paintings, fine art photography. All images and text copyright the artist.