Jazz Green : Artist Journal

Posts tagged ‘influences’

question and answer

September 24th, 2009

an email interview from 2008… written in my usual lazy lower-caps style i’m afraid

When did you first become interested in art and why?
in a school report at around 7-8 years old my year teacher praised my drawings and said how they had impressed the other children in the class. i’m not sure i saw it then as art, just a natural activity, but my mother covered all of my bedroom walls with my drawings. i formally became interested in art or in being an artist at around 14-15 when i studied it for ‘o’ level.

Who are your main influences?
i like elements of abstract expressionism, the process of painting as the message, also elements of arte povera and art brut, also the work of the british artist richard long. i’ve never felt brave enough to use text or words in my work but poetry and prose are just as visual to me. whilst at art school i first saw the work of the boyle family and they were quite a big influence in terms of materials and techniques.

How would you describe your style?
at the moment – fluid, evocative, contemplative – difficult to pinpoint, quite a tough question.

Who is your favourite artist?
i don’t think i have an absolute favourite – you admire different artists for different reasons – i feel an affinity with artists such as pollock and rothko in their search for spiritual meaning and purpose, going beyond the need to depict concrete things but towards the more psychoanalytical. i like turner and monet too (as do most painters!)… more recently, i’ve begun to really admire the work of edward hopper - they are understated and yet very powerful, atmospheric, the stories or narratives unfold slowly – he had the most incredible skill in using the effects of light and the absence of things to tell a story, and the images, although representational, have very abstract qualities in their composition and use of colour. i like art that compels me to just stare and it reveals its meaning over a period of time.

Is anyone else in your family interested in or practice art? If so do you think that influenced you?
an old relative was an amateur artist, a couple of other relatives are involved in the arts – one in graphics, the other involved in theatre production. nobody has influenced me directly to pursue art, art was really a vehicle for me to gain confidence in myself. the great thing about art is that it allows you to be opinionated, forthright, passionate about things and no one can knock you for misrepresenting things because its about your interpretation.

What are your favourite subjects to paint?
i like the overlooked details, disregarded things, decaying structures and forms that have a quiet history…. i also like transient things, frost, fog, rain on a window pane, shadows, reflections in puddles, clouds, the sky after heavy rain… these thoughts and memories filter through in the making of my work.

What are your favourite mediums to work in and what mediums do you work in the most?
collage is very therapeutic and also fun, i utilise all of my accidents and paper discards, i like the organic, fluid, layered nature of painting, the do a bit, ponder, do a bit more… it’s a personal journey of discovery. i might incorporate paper, sand, chalk, to build up texture. i’m not a purist with materials, i am always prepared to take a risk.

Do you prefer working on paper or canvas?
my preferred surface to work on would be a hard substance such as plaster or wood as i like sgrafitto, but that makes the finished artwork very heavy. i also like working on or with paper but there’s always the added cost of framing if you want to exhibit them. i prefer to work with more robust materials, the constructed panels become sculptural objects, they don’t require a frame.

How long does it take you to complete a typical piece?
oh months!! i do a bit, then leave them, come back… it seems more authentic to let them develop slowly. it’s perhaps not very disciplined or well planned but the works become more vital to me, i have a strong commitment to their integrity as artworks, i never just embrace the accidental. i always have lots of things on the go and they resolve themselves within different timescales…. i seem to work better this way, rather than outwardly planning what i want to do, having works at different stages kicks off new ideas and approaches.

Tell me about the importance of photography in your art work.
it’s a useful tool for recording things, an aid to my visual memory – i never work directly from photographs, they are just starting points or more often departures – often it’s because the objects or things that i see are transient events and photography serves to record the moment, but the real idea is in my personal thoughts. another aspect of photography which i like is the way in which it forces you to think about subject, composition and colour very quickly… the restriction in using a viewfinder to study things very closely.

When did you start using photography to aid your artwork?
i guess when i got my first digital camera in around 2003 – so not that long ago – i have so many images now it’s quite a headache to keep on top of what to keep and what to erase. i have a habit of taking many photographs of the same scene and then i procrastinate over which is best.

I noticed that your style has adapted over the years from art works such as ‘road/kill’ compared with your ‘works in progress’ in recent years. Is there a particular reason for the changes in style?
no particular reason – space, time, cost of materials, circumstances, the location in which you live/work is always the first point of reference for ideas – actual experiences – i suppose that with the more recent paintings i was seeking something more sculptural, tactile, and more simplified too.

I particularly like ‘mire’. What inspired this piece and does it have a particular meaning behind the painting?
oh yes, mire is about flooding, rain, bogginess, mould, damp, the overwhelming sense of a landscape slowly returning to sludge and slime – a strange ecology – i do follow the news stories such as the increase of algae in rivers posing a threat to aquatic wildlife.

You describe some of your painting to give the impression of pollution, coastal erosion and decay. Are you concerned about the effects of global warming? How do you feel about the current situation regarding pollution and global warming?
yes i am concerned – it seems too many people are concerned with material things, the biggest house, fastest car, the best tv, there’s a sort of selfishness in living today. scientists and experts seem divided on the global warming issue, whether it’s a natural event or manmade… the truth is the landscape, the planet, has altered radically, even in my own lifetime.

What is your idea of ‘good art’?
oh, well – i know what i like! seriously, for me it has to have a particular materiality, something vaguely familar but still has some layers of mystery – something which makes me contemplate, think a lot, makes me connect with something i had forgotten, a memory, an emotion, an awareness of the sense of just being – visceral sums it up. sometimes i get irritated with conceptual art when it’s just a video box on a plinth as the method of portraying the idea is very bland – i won’t knock film as an artform as there are some great arthouse movies and they often make a better job of portraying human emotions (such as tarkovsky) than a ‘video artist’.

Do you have any ideas for future projects?
yes, i have been working on some initial ideas around roads, architecture, scaffolding and maps (again!), in the the sense that nothing is ever finished, things are built, demolished, added to, taken away, new buildings and roads, to create a more efficient and comfortable lifestyle, its getting quite ‘busy’, and very noisy!! let’s slow down a little… all this redevelopment seems at odds with a reuse, recycle culture – shouldn’t we make more use of what we already have?

days of rain

September 2nd, 2009

the creation of a painting, edgescape:meld 2008…

abstract painting - starting with primed canvas
[stretched canvas, with beginnings of surface texture.]

abstract painting - adding washes of colour and creating surface textures
[semi-transparent washes, scrubbed in and dripped, dark blue grey..]

abstract painting - more transparent glazes and thin layers of colour, some removed before fully dry
[lilac and grey..]

abstract painting - adding more colour, blue grey violet
[violet and blue grey, blurred and blended before fully dry..]

abstract painting - muted colours of rain
[more vertical washes and layers in upper half, lower part was scumbled and stippled with a mix of violet, ultramarine and raw umber..]

abstract painting - adding more layers of muted colour
[thinner layers, lilac pink, blue grey, pale green, trying a achieve a more subtle merging]

abstract painting - merging layers
[areas reworked then'burnished' back, to achieve more subtle blurring of layers..]

the painting meld – i now call it meld/rain – was an attempt to explore the merging of atmosphere (the ethereal) and land (the earth), about vision, lucidity, depth of field, the horizon, perceptions of surface and distance..

abstract painting - showing textures
[detail of surface...]

this detail of the painting meld shows the centre section… meld is a comparatively new word in the English language, a merging of the words melt and weld, both a result of the application of heat, both sculptural, but with contrasting outcomes, in common usage since the 1930’s…

meld was completed between the months of January and March 2008 and undoubtedly reflected a certain melancholia felt at the time… dull grey light, days of rain and a dark studio room make for slow, sombre paintings.. …

for an exhibition catalogue, i said of this work:

‘meld’ evolved from an investigation into the history of eroded surfaces. Within the textures of patina and decay I saw parallel landscapes, evoking the changing weather and seasons and the effects of natural phenomena such as drought and flood, symbolic of a state of impermanence..

view other paintings in the edgescapes series…

for texture’s sake

August 25th, 2009

i have just put some more small abstract paintings for sale on etsy… i have realised that as a british artist, it is quite difficult to get much exposure on a predominantly american site, but maybe in time it will function like ebay, where you can easily list, browse and buy by country…. i tweaked a few sections, item tags, titles and descriptions to better suit the art for saleit’s a colour thing…

three abstract paintings on paper - gold brown turquoise

rich brown autumn hues - works on paper - three small abstracts
[click to view more small abstract works on paper on etsy]

the above are listed as triptychs, selected for their close colour harmonies, some autumnal landscape hues,.. around a quarter of this abstract series have found new homes, i have some listed on etsy, some framed, some unframed, a couple in a gallery, three vibrant ones are in a shop window (more on that soon), and i still have about twenty that need to be digitally scanned (better at close-up detail)..

i hate composing adequately succinct descriptions for my work, but new visitors to your art are helped by getting an insight into your inspirations as an artist… so i penned this today… (the ongoing inspiration behind the small colour works on paper, aka chromatids)..

These small paintings on paper are essences or distillations of rural landscapes, condensed colour experiments influenced by my visual experiences as an artist. I find colour inspiration in the environmental and elemental, from naturally eroded surfaces to discarded objects – often at the coast, inspired by beachcombing finds, the effects of sea erosion, water traces, strata, striations, from eroding cliffs to the shoreline – to the salt-encrusted patinas on boats or weathered facades at the harbour and quay side. Farm buildings, old barns and sheds, the slow appearance of decay in manmade and natural structures, the silent history contained in objects exposed to the elements, the intricate beauty in rust on metal, lichen on bark, moss on stone, water algae – and the more structured, geometric patterns of arable fields, farm tracks, fences or hedgerows on the horizon are also pictorial influences.

one thing that has made me giggle on etsy, but mustn’t laugh really, it’s serious, aside from the not to scale artist’s impressions of artwork in stylish virtual interiors, is the worthy COA or Certificate of Authenticity.. could someone pretend to be me and be selling some of my paintings? if so, get in touch, i’d like some of your business acumen… i think a personal handwritten note of thanks is much nicer and a little less formal proof.. it also has a signature..

the farmscapes are developing slowly, as i will wait for the cooler hues of autumn and winter to pervade my colouristic senses.. at present they look bereft of true colour – dark olive green, slate grey, ashen blue, taupe.. in truth, i lack the space to work on all ten at once, so it is a game of shuffle, hang up, put away, find again, which leads to a little reorganisation each time, and then i lose focus, lose the cohesion of the series..

so, in the meantime, i have been playing again with texture and torn paper, experiments on a small scale… i can’t seem to shake off the rustic, weathered and textured aspect to my artwork, and greatly enjoy the medium of collage, and want to revisit the spatial, scuptural elements of using layers, partially hidden, casting faint shadows, abstracts in low relief..

textures in mixed media - torn paper, ink, acrylic
[monoprint, frottage, acrylics and chalk on torn paper... with exra crumple]

torn paper textures -ink acrylic on paper
[another one, this time backlit by sunlight, semi-transluscent]

abstract painting - adding more colour
[another one,with lime green textured underlay]..

as i am process driven, i like to work with materials and techniques that in turn feed the visual outcome – i want encrustation, i want texture, layers, naturally derived colours, i want it to allude to something environmental or elemental in nature, but also existing completely within its own construction, with its own narrative, that requires time to unfold.. this is where my parallel interest in photography merges.. as an artist, i develop a close relationship with the textural qualties of materials, what i can do.. a painter has to takes risks, to push the process, it’s the primary obsession, the overall concept or idea is just that, an idea that you can’t plan objectively, clarify in words, theorise upon as a starting point, it needs to be explored and ultimately understood through the materials, the old adage, the medium is the message, not just texture, just for the sake of it.. one could always use the real thing, found objects, create assemblages and combines, but the individuality of the artist is somehow denied, often buried beneath the artwork’s fabric construction.. paint, like clay or charcoal, is a more elastic medium, it imparts a unique quality each time, the individual imprint of one artist at work…

p.s. i have disabled the comments feature (i may need to remove it completely) as my site was targeted by a pernicious spam bot, splattering its pseudo-medical potency supplies adverts, ten or twenty times in quick succession…