Jazz Green : Artist Journal

Posts tagged ‘artistic practice’

a show and no telling

October 30th, 2010

i had planned a special trip to the sainsbury centre for the visual arts last week. i was hoping to be inspired by some of the objects on show in the world art collection. i arrived armed with my sketchbooks & drawing materials only to discover that the scva is closed on mondays. most telling perhaps, that my hopes of some visual research were thwarted from the start, so i duly headed back home and completed the ‘work’ homework instead.

between belief and perfection is a station called irony; change here if you have any doubt about your onward journey…

[barbara kruger, london tube map, 2010]

i have been thinking more how to develop my art in different ways (in a vaguely business-headed way), what i want to achieve by this diversion, and how the change might require some creative rehab (or retreat) en route. i have made some headway with my vessels idea. i came to the conclusion that i should not worry about where they are conceptually headed  – too much analysis becomes rather academic – but i pondered on the meaning or idea of the vessel – about containment & openness, flow, movement, transition, metamorphosis. some routine housework duties led to a much-needed declutter of the personal workspace, aka the artist studio. in the subsequent reorganisation i have now misplaced an important notebook but i did unearth these cardboard paint palettes…


[cardboard paint palettes]

i rarely use a paint palette these days; i am more fond of these little glass ramekins for mixing colours in. these are gü chocolate pudding pots, of which, it has been noted, have over the years changed subtly in their design. many gü puddings have been consumed in this household and they are always eaten with the tiniest of spoons so as to savour the chocolate puddingness for a few moments longer than the appetite immediately craves. where chilli is my tonic, chocolate has become my panacea. it seems heaven sent that there is a new raspberry & chilli choc gü just out but where can one buy these sweet delights out in the sticks?


[gü ramekins used as paint pots]

i spent what seemed to be an extraordinary number of hours preparing (first selecting the artwork, then cleaning glass and edges, adding d-rings to frames, labelling and so forth) twelve affordable works of art for the bumper christmas art show at the harleston gallery. forty regional artists will be exhibiting in this art-filled bonanza, which is open from 5th november to christmas eve 2010. the exhibition will be officially opened by the author Ian Collins, who has a new book out entitled Water Marks.

the norfolk contemporary art exhibition is still on but the show comes down on monday… the norfolk contemporary art society presents a selection of key works from artists included in NCA10, at the fabulous rocket house cafe in the seaside resort of cromer – if you are in the area do visit, the food at the rocket house cafe is very good apparently…


[rocket house cafe & museum, cromer beach]

this journal (or blog, if you prefer) will be five years old in a couple of weeks. i believed back at the start, rather earnestly, that this blog would always focus on the art - but the fact that i think about, create and sometimes even show some art means that i sort-of-really-have-to-be in the frame too, most of the time… about this time last year i was sketching in the woods and drawing the sea – whatever became of that little adventure?


the artist estimating the age of an oak tree by the established technique of tree hugging…

about this time last year i also spotted this apple tree growing in the corner of a redundant building plot in the fine city – this image reminds me that good things flourish in the bleakest of environments, even if, in the end, all that remains is just food for the birds…


[an apple tree growing in the city]

i  keep thinking that there is a strange paradox (can a paradox be anything else – familiar, welcome, usual?) in the art of blogging in that the most highly visited blogs are about blogging itself, informational blogs that publish links to other blogs of related information, blogs making money from blogging about making money from blogging, or those ones that tell you what to do or how to do it (in 7 simple steps, 10 top tips or 11 easy ways), on how to become more organised, efficient, popular – a network that is not so much evolving & expanding but cloning its smart offspring in ever more resourceful ways (this is just my humble opinion, as i recall life bti)…

so how exactly does one factor in the time required to create art, between composing artful statements & typing succinct emails, writing an engaging blog post, updating a page on a website, designing a business card or logo, uploading photographs to flickr, checking in on facebook or just tweeting the happenings of the day? all of these activities undoubtedly increase the visibility of the professional artist and it also has some influence on making the art when informed & motivated by an audience (and the awareness of others’ artwork in the process of such an online engagement) – but this well-intentioned information share-athon has become something of a distraction to my own humble, day-to-day existence – there are shelves to dutifully dust (i dont entirely follow the francis bacon aesthetic here)…


[library image]

i only highlight these issues because i attended a business workshop where ‘do you have twitter, facebook or linkedin?’ was mentioned in the discussion. these are vital tools for building a business it seems, so today the business brand ‘jazz green’ felt ever so slightly stuck at the ’shows some promise’ stage – not longer qualifying as an emerging artist but in danger of being a slowly submerging one instead, back into the creative swamp from which i thought i had sucessfully crawled out of. it’s ok, there are many other artists down there, and one day some of them will be prized from the mire and will be found to be perfectly preserved with all works intact.

it occurred to me that what i want most is a happy & contented life, one that is rich with experiences and continually inspires the making of art, creating it in the most original & authentic way i am capable of, for the majority of my time. i have the motivation and incentive to make art but i am not sure i have all the skills needed to turn the making of art into a money-making venture – am i to be a product designer, a manufacturer of goods, a provider of services, none of the above or all three rolled into one?

the answers lay not in the facts of the product or service (it need not be completely unique the workshop facilitator said, citing hairdressing as an example), but where it fits in, who it is aimed at and what makes it different or exclusive. rather than do some self-analysis i instead contemplated why someone should choose an apple over an orange say, if they had been persuaded that eating fruit was a good lifestyle choice. should you rightly balk at the mere suggestion of comparing apples with oranges then you might like to read this entertaining piece of improbable research.


[buy me, i'll change your life, barbara kruger, 2007]

so, i progressed to thinking about the many varieties of apples, which rather complicated the straightforward ‘buy me’ because i’m an apple.  i have nothing against oranges, there’s room for all manner of ovoid fruits in the basket, but bananas are best hung on their own. i then considered the many ways in which apples are available to purchase – from the local greengrocer or farm shop, where you will probably know what orchard they came from and they might even have a leaf stalk still attached suggesting they did indeed once come from a tree – or perhaps more conveniently pre-packed in the supermarket with a few persuasive superlatives such as finest, the best of, etc.

this simple analogy is going wildly off the point but there is, as it happens, a very fine dessert variety of apple called ‘jazz’ but i’ve only ever seen them for sale in waitrose…

i have been fortunate to have sold some big ‘apples’ and a few small ones over the years – but here’s the thing, never to the extent of making a real living – that is, providing a wage or salary that would cover all one’s living expenses such as a mortgage, utilities, household bills, a car – thus the requirement for a supporting ‘day job’. this fact, i think, rings true with many contemporary artists, but not making a viable income from creating art in no way denigrates the professionalism of the art or the artist. i also think that teaching art, doing workshops or residencies (as i have done) or working in arts administration is, in a good way, a vital part of the artist’s work because it continues an engagement or dialogue with art.

i will just have to remind myself that the first major piece of work i ever sold, back in the early nineties, was for £1000, so as not to undersell or undervalue what i do from now on! lots of hard work, the right opportunities and the benefit of time might just get me there one day… an artist friend once said that fifty seemed to be about the age when artists become truly ‘established’ artists, so i have a few years to go yet… in the end, it’s not just about the money, it’s really about the art; i’ll live off that reality check…

the bumper christmas art show, affordable work by forty artists, is at the harleston gallery, norfolk, 5th november to 24 december 2010

re: surfacing, once again

August 20th, 2010

resurfacing, from some dark days spent in the artist’s studio… it has been raining quite a lot lately but today was bright and breezy. august is now always such a washout; it never used to be like this. i have lots of green tomatoes but no chutney jars…  listening to the evening breeze, it could almost be the rushing sound of the sea in the distance…


some paint pots and some paint brushes

some works that are still in progress

actually, i have left these two paintings (the lichenscapes) well alone for the last week, concentrating instead on finishing some smaller pieces…

these are (or will be) mouldscapes


some small paintings drying on a washing line

these are looking quite mouldy but they are not at all mouldy… sometimes deep within this stuff lies a cure, a solution, the answer – it’s mould, but it’s not always bad… i had brief dip into charles darwin’s the formation of vegetable mould 1881, the natural formation of mould as in the breakdown of organic matter (green manure) to produce a friable, fertile soil and earthworms’ vital part in this process… darwin studied worms very closely and deduced they had no true sense of hearing (although they are sensitive to vibrations) – he wrote extensively about his observations & many experiments, but without (obviously) any intentional humour:

They took not the least notice of the shrill notes from a metal whistle, which was repeatedly sounded near them; nor did they of the deepest and loudest tones of a bassoon. They were indifferent to shouts, if care was taken that the breath did not strike them. When placed on a table close to the keys of a piano, which was played as loudly as possible, they remained perfectly quiet.

[from the formation of vegetable mould, 1881]

it does conjure up quite a comical scene – and i presume it was darwin loudly playing the bassoon…

so, back to the mouldscapes – perhaps i should work on dreaming up more lyrical titles for these? someone once wrote in an exhibition visitors’ book that my work was refreshing in that it explained its source without recourse to the written word… although i do go some way (here at least) to explain the things that fascinate me and the parallel desire to make work (for want of a better word) about them; the processes and ideas merge to the point that neither can exist without the other.. i figure (or fear) i’ll forever be consumed by the processes of decay/change/renewal because it is a big subject to explore and each time one thinks one can do it better or differently… my ideas seem quite focused but i think (or procrastinate!) about working in different media, a different format or scale… when i look back at some of my student work i can see that the sculptural elements have also persisted but have never quite progressed into 3d…

i also made a fresh batch of handmade paper this past week… i was quite taken by the ordered but irregular, deckled edges as i stacked up the dried sheets, and the 3d form they constructed, creating a strata of sorts, a layering of a different kind (3d again, take note)…


a neat ‘n’ tidy stack of handmade, deckled papers

i also pursued some sketching, more ideas around the irregularity of forms and surface imperfections were/are still on my mind… can the indefinable wabi sabi aesthetic ever be deliberately crafted?


some sketchbook drawings

i am still working through these ideas for creating a series of vessel-like forms – that is, i am quite clear about my intentions and reasons for doing so but have yet to construct them and i have not answered the repeated call for action on the matter… something for a future post no doubt, when the lichen/mould paintings are truly done & finished, and after the artworks group exhibition opens to the public in september – the current lichen/mould paintings will form the main body of new work for this show, but i will also submit some smaller pieces for the exhibition’s shop… watch this space…

i framed this intaglio collagraph print in preparation for a new exhibition opening at the harleston gallery next week (i have put in two other collagraph prints for the gallery’s browser)… the broad theme of this group exhibition is the allotments and i considered that this collagraph, as the composition evolved out of looking at the surface structures of old sheds & barns, just might fit the allotted criteria – although, having visited the local allotments just once (on the second occasion they were locked up) i did not see any ramshackle, old tin sheds, it was all rather neat and tidy…


an old tin shed, intaglio collagraph, 2010

the exhibition at the harleston gallery is called ‘breaking ground‘ and it will open on thursday 26th august, the private view is 6.30pm-8.30pm. the exhibition continues to 25th september 2010. if you are local to or perhaps just passing through the delightful, waveney valley, please drop in to see the exhibition – and, one could also partake in a nice pot of tea and some lovely cake from the gallery cafe…

i also applied to a professional artist mentoring scheme; my application was considered but i was not selected for the programme – i may write about that process in a future post, but the first thought that came to mind was must try harder. perhaps all i need to re-invigorate my work  and/or recontextualize my practice is an all-expenses-paid trip to the venice biennale – i would become more critically engaged with the ‘issues’ in contemporary art/painting – and i would also, probably, still be deeply enamoured by the distressed architecture, those old, crumbling facades with their outward appearance of a slow and very elegant decay…

no matter, i will continue to reflect on and write about art and painting, even if some of the creative musings don’t (yet) make it into finished artwork, they have been registered as having some potential at least, and myself the artist and my art will continue to exist, out here in the back of beyond…

regular readers might notice that i have a facebook badge thingamy–>

i have just set myself up a little fan page, which pretty much just redistributes what appears here – the account for a page is very limited, which is perhaps a very good thing… and now it seems that i have three fans, so thank you! but if i get twenty fans i then facebook lets me personalise the page’s url!

i thought that having a professional ‘page’ was maybe the thing to do, the way to go, another platform for promoting the art, but now i am not so sure – i always have nagging doubts about these things… this week i heard on the radio that in the future people might need to create entirely new identities (as if some people haven’t already been doing this) for their own security, such is the vast amount of personal information that has already been distributed or shared online… you/we/i have all been warned… so, i will try out fb’s pages until september and then evaluate its true worth… all i ever planned to do was to have a nice artist portfolio website and this artist journal has become a naturally inclusive part of it, occasional musings and thoughts from the artist’s studio… and i have also been wondering, what will supercede the supersonic twitter, for soon enough something else will..?

last chance to seerebirth at the Art 1821 gallery – the exhibition runs until 8 september 2010…

next exhibitionbreaking ground at the harleston gallery, 28 august to 25 september 2010…

coming up: the 11th annual artworks exhibition at blackthorpe barns, 11 September to 3 October 2010

How to be a contemporary artist

September 30th, 2008

Before you make or do any art, you must think alot about stuff… and perhaps read books by notable philosophers such as Baudrillard, Nietzsche, Wittgenstein, Bataille, Heidegger, Foucault… These writers will change your view of the world. It will not be enough to say I am inspired by… or want to encapsulate so-and-so quality… It is much more academic to explore themes such as human communication, personal identity, gender, society, religion, culture, mathematics, technology, science and nature, the planet, the universe. Your perceived or intended audience is always paramount – to whom are you communicating and why? You will need to challenge accepted notions or perceptions of seemingly ordinary happenings or objects for it to be received as high art. For instance, to create art within an architectural space, you could reinvent or redefine it using non-traditional media, such as video projections, suspended objects, sound waves, anything which distorts reality and brings into question the relevance of past, present or future events.

Artworks which are time-based either through a series of moving images or which are performance-related or re-enacted (preferably through a willing public engagement) are good visitor attractors. Deconstructing, recycling or re-siting found objects is also a good idea as the physical, tactile quality of materials reflect a sense of the history or perspective you wish to convey. Light, sound, transparency or complete invisibility of actual materials project ideas of fragility, stillness or transience and can draw attention to the space or surrounding structures. Solid objects act as deliberate obstructions or interventions within the space, instigating a critical debate between the viewer, the artist’s intentions and the concrete artwork, a core principle in site-specific, installation art. Absurd juxtaposition, kitsch, horror and vulgarity should be used with utmost care; if it’s not Duchampian, Koonsish, or made by a couple, then it’s quite likely to be seen as art for art’s sake, whilst masquerading as risque, thought-provoking art.

A supporting artist statement for your work acts as press release, editorial and exhibition review material for the (sometimes lazy) art media, so use communicative, dynamic words such as: subvert, intervene, integrate, challenge, alter, extend, locate, dislocation, critical, conceptual, unauthorised, contrast, boundaries, thematic, systems, enquiry. Highlighting historical references or prior events are very good for contextualising your ideas and authenticating the overall purpose of the work. The use of graphical maps, charts, linked events, repetitive processes or controlled systems of making, taxonomies, collections or categorisations are all very good methods to give a deeper sense of narrative (and meaning) within the artworks. You could also refer to the work of other respected artists, key thinkers or makers, but only back this up with a selected quote if it acts as the starting point or departure for your own work – you do not want to be narrowly defined by their work, unless appropriation is a key part of your practice.

Your current method or approach to your work defines your artistic practice, and so always begin artist’s statements by saying this body/collection/series of work questions assumptions, highlights differences, challenges preconceptions, etc. Other words to convey an element of astute professionalism in your work include: engagement, debate, transfer, examine, authorship, ownership, relationship, establishment, globalisation, issues, cultural, quasi, methodology, schema, phenomenological. Paid projects are sometimes referred to as artist commissions, whether for permanent public display or a private gallery space. Unpaid or unfunded series of works could be process or concept-based and this can usefully be referred to as thematic research and development, so include it in your resume for any future artist funding proposals, international art competitions, conventions, symposia, events or exhibition submissions.

So, to summarise; identify an interesting context, location or event in which to develop or produce your artwork – this could be in response to a call for interest in a public art commission, a themed show or an application to a major funding organisation such as the Arts Council. Research the history and culture of the place. Find and make connections between that and your own history or experiences. Perhaps combine ready-made or unconventional materials in your proposed artwork to convey a particular perspective or message – this need not be the answer or resolution of an idea; in fact art is much more tantalising to its audience when it subtly questions or contains some deliberate ambiguity.

It may be important to build a network of associated technical specialists in which to call upon to make the actual artwork – after all, you not are a qualified cinematographer, electrician, architect or engineer (yet). Acknowledge that the artwork will have to be validated by some form of public response or engagement. Perhaps make it with lots of miniscule moving parts or construct it incredibly large in scale and site it somewhere quite desolate but open to the public and media, as anything that fits snugly in an A4 envelope or the back of a volvo estate will only be seen as sold-out commercial art, of little interest to serious commentators, critics or curators of art. Lastly, if you can do all of the above within a practice-based PhD, then you’re really cooking on creative gas!

P.s. Of course, this has been a gentle mickey-take or satire on the making of contemporary art, but much of it actually holds true. Artists should not be just defined by their chosen method of work (so, an artist likes to use paint, the vehicle of painting is vacuous without a purpose), the reason to make work is what defines and shapes artists, who we are and how we see things, agents of change perhaps not, but artists should seek to continually explore ideas both within and beyond the immediate context in which they live and work – materials or processes are chosen as the most appropriate concrete, visual language in which to realise the original intentions…

This thesis is still a work in progress, I am still learning….