Jazz Green : Artist Journal

Posts tagged ‘painting’

on the lie of the land

September 20th, 2010

paper, crumpled, textures, sampled, or forms, exampled… some arty photographs, in the slow build-up to creating something new… (all in good time; soon enough…)
crumpled paper - sculptural art
this looks like a decaying leaf…

crumpled paper in the studio
as does this…

crumpled paper photographed in the studio
a craggy rockscape or a crevasse…

crumpled paper yet again - experiments in the studio
another rocky, barren landscape, one that looks mildy familiar…

antarctica drawing - sketchbook
from my antarctica sketchbook, june 2010

you can see more of my antarctica sketches here, when, despite that fact it was early june and the start of the summer, i spent some time out in a virtual, cold wilderness…

there are many landscape painters in this region, and it is perhaps no surprise that the east anglian landscape should be interpreted in the main quite realistically, representationally – conveying an appealing impression of ‘being there’ for the viewers, more than the artist’s individual experience. i find it difficult to adequately quantify why some works engage and draw one in and other works fail to – whether success or failure is just down to style and technique – or whether the truth of the matter is – are they being honest or playing along with the lie of the land?

an artist friend asked the other day if i knew of the work of michael porter – no, i didn’t – but on visiting his website i was very surprised to discover that he paints a little like me, or perhaps, i paint a little like him – but there are more figurative elements applied to the shifting, textural grounds of his large canvas paintings. the colours of a autumnal leaf, a river’s surface with its underlying pattern of vegetation, old woodlands, craggy rocks and found pebbles are just some of his visual influences – all interpreted in a very organic and sensory manner… i could see the connection to my very own lichenscapes… i found the visual contrast of a freely-worked surface with very finely worked botanical details quite mesmerising (at least, as seen from the photographs)…

michael porter’s large studio in cornwall… jealous, moi??

For many years I have described what I do as ‘making’ paintings rather than ‘painting’ paintings, even though the materials I use normally conform to those used by traditional artists, What I attempt to do is use the natural characteristics of paint itself as a means of describing nature.  For me, creating a painting is not simply a mechanical process. Like the land itself, it is something you sense – through your feet, your hands and your eyes.

Michael Porter, interviewed by Peta-Jane Field, Art in Cornwall

he puts it very well, what it means to translate an experience into a painting. it becomes something akin to but independent of its source. paint & canvas is the vehicle, the surface is the transmitter, the subject reveals a message, the gaze is the confirmation and response becomes its meaning… it seems somewhat fortuitous to have discovered porter’s work for it has affirmed to me that it is still good to make paintings, to manipulate the material of paint, to use the transformative qualities of paint to create illusions, sensory surfaces, a surface that is alive, that contains depth & intricacy… he also reminds me that one has to look, to experience and then to paint for many years to refine one’s ideas and processes… trust your instinct, be truthful and then just do the work…

there is an interesting discussion going on over at the guardian website regarding the threadneedle art prize – the perennial representational art versus conceptual art debate, good art, bad art, skills, or no skills, etc… no shocks or surprises perhaps, a photo-realist painting by boyd & evans won the top prize and most of the other works look quite ordinary on the threadneedle website, but perhaps you really have to be there…

in the run up to the artworks exhibition, there seemed to have been lots of practical, day-to-day, non-art issues to deal with … but i did grab a peaceful hour or so on a very pebbled beach… some quick sketches in pencil, acrylic and watercolour…

coast sketchbooks - dunwich beach drawings
sketchbooks at the coast…

i think i need to retreat a little (in blogospheric terms) until after the demonstration of ‘painting without brushes’ next week at the artworks exhibition – except that i do, very occasionally, also use traditional paint brushes… and yes, this really is the artist hard at work on those lichenscape paintings

jazz green - artist studio - lichenscape paintings

i am currently exhibiting two new large paintings, lichenscape I & II and a series of small works, aka the mouldscapes, at the 11th annual artworks exhibition at blackthorpe barn, 11 September to 3 October 2010, it’s open daily 10am – 5pm…

until the next time…

artworks, an exhibition

April 8th, 2010

Another farmscape, finished, box-framed and finally sent out into the world… (it’s a poor photograph due to it being hastily taken last night with a flash)…


[Farmscape II, chalk gesso and acrylic on canvas, 60cm x 120cm]

I will be exhibiting some works with the artists’ collective Artworks, at the Wingfield Barns Arts Centre. Artworks is a group of thirty professional artists based in East Anglia – covering the diverse practices of painting, printmaking, sculpture, installation art, ceramics, textiles and glass. The rural setting of the barns is fabulous for contemporary art – and there will also be affordable art for the smallest of budgets, including art cards, small 3D works and mounted drawings, paintings and prints for sale. The exhibition opens this weekend, and it runs from 10th to 25th April 2010, open daily 10am – 5pm.

As a new member of Artworks, I am looking forward to seeing the whole exhibition and meeting the other artists involved. During the exhibition some of the exhibiting artists will be doing art demonstrations – including myself – mine is loosely called building up textures – specifically to working on paper with mixed-media and monoprint techniques.

I trawled through some of my photos to find some images that I felt might explain how the abstract canvas above, farmscape II, came about… (not that I ever work directly from photographs; taking the photographs helps with the memory of a visual experience)…

some recent farm photographs…

Again, I see parallels with the pattern of the wider farmed landscape, which some choose to see as somehow naturalised, of the raw elements…


[norfolk field, winter]


[suffolk field, spring]

R.I.P. Malcolm McLaren

happiness is a warm sun

March 20th, 2010

Today is is the spring equinox, and nearly all this week the sun has been shining, with some record temperatures – mild, balmy, brighter and lighter days – and my little eggbox seedlings are surely pushing their way into the verdant world. Brighter days has helped with the etchings too, as I have been wearing magnifying glasses to draw the plates under a desk lamp…

As I was sifting through the contents of a cupboard for some possible frames and mounts for my new etchings, I came across the last nine of the one hundred paintings that I began in November 2008… I hadn’t scanned these until this week… and I noticed how, with a clean mount, the rustic, elemental nature of these little paintings became at once much more minimalist, dare I say smarter, cooler, that little bit more slick and stylish…


click to view larger version on etsy

However, I’m not a fan of mats or mounts, as I like to see the raw edges… I see these little paintings as small fragments…


[XCIV small abstract painting on paper]

In reality they all look much like these six from behind… I tear the paper to the required size first, then begin the monoprinting (aka monotyping) and painting…


[rear view of small paintings, aka verso]

if any evidence were needed that layer upon layer is added or blotted back, all made by paint-covered hands…

I remember once looking at the Tate’s collection of Rothkos and noticing the rough edges of the canvas, and I wondered what they might look like as abstract paintings from the back, on the verso – he painted in very thin layers onto unprimed canvas that soaked into the fibres (one for the conservators). What about all those notes and amendments to details that we add to our the back of our work? I sometimes add a label to larger works that describes the idea behind the work, title, name and address, web and email, the year, month started and/or completed, or revised… I know some artists who never date their work (or at least obscure it) – in that way their work never looks old to gallery eyes…

Here are the last nine scans of the series: XCII, XCIII, XCIV, XCV, XCVI, XCVII, XCVIII, XCIX and C…

Here’s the full one hundred paintings, I to C, aka chromatids, 2008-2009…


One hundred paintings, I to C, mixed media on paper

You can read the very beginning of the one hundred paintings here…

And finally, back to the printmaking (I seem to have lots of ongoing projects) – I had quite forgotten how long it might take to draw the lichenscape plates, so no finished prints to show today, but here is a sneak preview for avid followers of this blog (three, not counting my good self)…  I took a snapshot of one of the copper plates near the window…


[copper plate etching]

If there is one thing that I have missed over the last couple of weeks, it is drawing in my sketchbook outdoors.. so I will endeavour to get some sketching hours in the next week or two…