Jazz Green : Artist Journal

Posts tagged ‘large paintings’

the lichen-ness continues, though not that much further on in the process

lichenscape I (a working title) has suffered some surface erosion, in the manner of the real elements – i am not scared. many years ago a tutor at art college said that that one had to push the image-making to the point of almost losing it, right to the critical edge as it were, and then resurrect it – it would then embody some of the passion, tenacity and spirit of its making. this method of working is not for every artist; it is risk-laden and sometimes stressful, but ultimately liberating. for myself, the secret history of the surface, the discreet (or discrete) signs of erasure or slow accumulation of layered matter over time is at the core of what i do. it also denies the sterile nature of cool, perfectly-rendered abstract paintings. i have a rough plan, a road map, an agenda even, but i will take the necessary diversions to fully explore the territory of my own making.

just what is it that makes artists such as twombly, kiefer and hodgkin so different, so appealing? (to quote richard hamilton’s work entirely out of context) – answer – they lay bare the messy truthfulness of the painting process. i was reminded too of the two works of sequeiros and reigl in the tate modern – there is some evidence of denudation or guano here, not entirely out of place within the environmental context of lichens…

a very close-up detail of eroded surface textures…

my interest in surfaces continues even within the documentary process – i discover more found paintings. of course these are just reframings but they exhibit the same concerns and qualities that i seek within my abstract photography.

a few years ago i applied for a grant to support a found paintings project. i wanted to re-present my small paintings as found, or ‘reframed’ in the conceptual sense as large abstract photographs – which, i thought at the time, would question the authenticity of the photograph (its source) and the creation (or reproduction) of a painting. in short, i would create the paintings, but would disseminate the photographed, found surfaces as the final artwork, images that i had re-authorised through my own photography…

i made a brief reference to this idea in this blog post from february 2006 and earlier in december 2005 i wrote a little about my feelings on the rejection letter. yes, they politely declined my request for funding my research & development. it was, on reflection, probably a fair decision. the idea was just that, one in perennial incubation, it was not clearly mapped out how i would do it and why – but, now there are the means to create large prints and canvases on demand, which makes the idea still a possibility, albeit a costly one; it’s always a matter of time and money (of which i have little)…

and so, progressing on to lichenscape II

which i contemplated and scrutinised quite closely today… here are a couple of close-up images of the surface textures…

i hadn’t, during the process of painting, referred directly to my photographs for compositional elements, but looking at them now i can see that i am edging closer to an impression of a colony of lichens…

but i wasn’t sure about the scale, the number, the shapes, the placement – it just looked a little busy, too cluttered… so, with a little jiggery-pokery i quickly manipulated the photograph to edit out a few elements of the painting… such a simple idea… here is the result…

then a quick play with a little digital effecting… a simple inversion and i uncovered some fungal mould spores, or is it bacteria, some rogue pathogenic cells, a deadly virus..? who knows what it is, but i’m not scared…

this reminds me of the dissolved, blind landscape photographs and the digital image transfers that i experimented with a while back – needless to say, those particular ideas are in cryonic suspension while the lichens take hold…

some ‘in-progress’ images of a new painting… the warm, dry weather has helped speed things up…


[6.30pm, wednesday]

and, much earlier (or how this painting came into being)…


i had previously primed and subtly textured the surface in a pale grey – i daubed on the violet-brown to approximate a mottled appearance, which i would later cover with some thin white… i changed my mind about the overall scale of the image… i wanted to ‘zoom’ in more…


some patchy, scrubbed yellowy-grey white, which dried quite unevenly – but that’s ok – i didn’t want it to be too even – with stains, residues, traces, the pentimenti of the previous layers.


more thin layers (or scrubby glazes) in a violet-grey-brown…

with a suitably eroded surface, i allowed a small colony of supersize crustose lichens to find their position quite naturally, based on the uneveness of the surface – there will be more. lichens are actually a fungus which combine with algae (as a nutrient) to grow. i quite liked the look of the painting’s surface before the first (dark) additions of lichen-ness, but it was just a surface, the illusion of a stone slab or a weathered wall – aesthetically very pleasing (to my eyes) but i couldn’t justify it as a proper painting – perhaps i should have been a set painter.


anyhow, work continues on a second painting (no first stages captured on camera) – this one is much darker, with some khaki green and grey-brown… here’s a detail of the surface textures…

as i type, the preliminary circles of lichen are drying on this canvas, and, i hope, to a suitably crusty finish… but there again, i might just have made a fine mess of it

i would like to start a third painting of lichen-encrusted surfaces but i have no more stretchers of this size… and no money to buy any…

i have no art-historical reference or precedent for these paintings (other than my own photographs – the found paintings) but i do have the sustaining concept of always looking at things close-up, magnified, a childhood fascination with the world in macro, seeing the biodiversity of life, secret discoveries, detritus, fragments and all that…

anyhow, some of the striped paintings, the farmscapes, still need resolving, when i get the time. i have become quite locked into painting stripes and striations of late – i can see the obvious visual influences – but the found paintings, in the colonies of lichens, in their unassuming beauty and naturalness (and perhaps the drawings too) have loosened up my way of working, which is good. i realise that i am quite a good constructor of things. i relish the process and i can see how it will turn out. i feel confident and in control – i know what i want to achieve and why. this is some achievement, in an otherwise quite difficult week…

on artworks and deckchairs

April 18th, 2010

Passed by the Artworks exhibition at Wingfield Barns Arts Centre this weekend – this is firstly a shameless plug for my own work (it’s my blog after all)… but the rural setting is fabulous – nature quietly intertwined within the traces of agriculture. I like to think that my work, Farmscape II looks quite at home here…


[Farmscape II, 2010, mixed media on canvas, 60cm x 120cm]


[a detail of surface textures]


[another detail of surface textures]

Found out I had sold a couple of small paintings which was food for the soul.

There is an interesting fund-raising exhibition of art on deckchairs in the adjacent barn… some really good ones (such as Dave Mckee’s, the creator and illustrator of Mr Benn) and one or two perhaps not so good ones (technically speaking), but all will be auctioned off to raise money for the St Elizabeth Hospice… My favourite was the one created by the artist Tony Casement, all sand-encrusted with little seagull footprints, a deckchair that would be least coveted by the sun-lover, in the social etiquette (or war) of deckchair and sun-lounger acquisition.  Very pleased to see that three Artworks artists have customised deckchairs in this exhibition too: Eleonora Knowland, Elaine Nason and Janet French

I wished I had stopped longer to observe and take some photographs of the old barns’ structures but I had to get back to deliver my canvas to the HWAT  Art exhibition, which opens on monday… you can read more about that particular painting, Edgescape: Fenn, here…

The Artworks‘ Spring exhibition is currently showing at the Wingfield Barns Arts Centre until 25th April 2010, open daily 10am – 5pm.

HWAT Showcase Exhibition of Art and Mini-works will be on at the Harleston Gallery from 19th April to 30th April 2010.

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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.