Jazz Green : Artist Journal

Posts tagged ‘travelling’

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…

It has been very warm and sunny all this week, with a heatwave forecast for next week. I am finding this quite odd, when contrasted with the knowledge of a volcanic dust plume from an Icelandic volcano drifting grey ash clouds at high altitude above most of Northern Europe. With no incoming or outbound flights in the UK for the last few days the skies have been unusually quiet – just as nature intended. We are grounded, but the weather has been quite lovely… wish you were here

Wanting to take a slightly philosophical stance on nature’s subtle intervention (the best kind of art), I was delighted to read Alain de Botton’s musings on a world without planes… Heathrow, he writes, would become a museum, [and of planes] we would stroke their steel dolphin-like bodies in museums and honour them as symbols of a daunting technical intelligence and a prodigious wealth.

Modern air travel has destroyed any sense of geographical distance, the physical experience of moving through a landscape, or even the metaphysical space and sense of the passage of time that our travelling predecessors would have gained from crossing land and sea… perhaps the exception would be the hot-air balloon…

I was amused by the notion that Botton was the writer-in-residence at London’s Heathrow airport – how could he possibly think clearly with the constant noise of take-offs and landings? Of course, he actually resided elsewhere, it’s just a creative job description..

Clear blue skies or grey clouds ahead… (animated drawings)


[the art of idleness, part one....]

read more about the art of idleness

when the wind blows…

February 13th, 2010

Another abstract in an ongoing series of small mixed media works on canvas…


[Pompeii, collagraph and painting on paper and canvas, 5" x 5"]

Wikimedia led me to this pictorial reference for the above abstract (titled after its original creation) since these works are entirely about colour and texture, yet with a little analysis they link back to another place, another time… in this instance, to the remains of a villa in Pompeii…


Wall frescoes in the house of Lucretius, Pompeii (image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)

The red (Pompeiian red is also a pigment) and grey stripes appear to reference the patterned wall frescoes of the ancient villas, and of the stonework and structure of the interconnected streets and avenues of ancient Pompeii.

Many years ago I visited Pompeii… Although I didn’t realise it then, the ancient relics and the eroded, weathered facades of Italy, Greece and Turkey were to become a creative muse of sorts… I would love to go back to these places, with the benefit of wiser eyes… but I would probably take far too many photographs…

These are from an old photo album (I wonder how many people still compile photographs in albums these days, after the advent of digital photography and online sites such as flickr?). That’s me in the lower left picture, drinking from the water fountain (of youth!)… which prompted another visit to everyone’s favourite photo album Flickr to see how many others had recorded this very same location at Pompeii…

Google Maps has recently visited Pompeii too, so I persevered with Google’s virtual Street View and retraced my steps back to the original site of the water fountain…

Even with these many thoughts of distant travel on my mind, I would like to be homebound for a while… (if only to get on with some more artwork).

I had a horrid drive home from work the other evening, in what at first seemed to be sporadic snowfall – but about two thirds into my homeward journey it turned into a heavy blizzard. The falling snow quickly compacted to a sheet of ice under the weight of the rush hour traffic, as the main road had not been salted or gritted. My journey, which normally takes about an hour, in the end took three and a half hours. The queue of traffic slowed to a near standstill about ten miles from home, as the drivers ahead were finding it increasingly difficult to drive with any degree of control or safety.

The road was becoming near impassable – after two hours slow-driving on the most nervous of tenterhooks I didn’t want to have to drive any more. A couple of miles further on and I decided to abandon any hope of getting home by car and parked my vehicle on a wide bit of the roadside verge. I could see that some cars ahead were sliding on the ice and a large articulated truck had got into difficulty going uphill, stopping any flow of traffic – it was fast becoming an accident zone (and I do blame the council and those who said the snow and ice wouldn’t amount to much). Lots of cars were stuck in a static queue (myself included), occasionally crawling forward feeling the ever-present danger of the inevitable wobble and slide.

After I had parked up, I walked along the snaking line of the (now) stationary vehicles, and, as you do in a crisis, you empathise with their dilemma and then share a little rant about the council not gritting the roads (yet again) – but this time it was serious. Taking a slightly safer snow-underfoot path, I walked the half-mile or so into the nearby town, where a good friend and now saviour (after providing a much-needed cup of piping-hot tea) decided they would take the risk and drive me the last few glacial miles to my door – the drive was quite dicey in places, but arriving home has never felt so good.

I declined the early morning lift to pick up the car on the way to work, and decided I would instead walk the four or so miles back to the roadside verge later in the day. It was very cold but sunny as I set off and much of the snow had already melted – belying the ice-frightmare of the night before. Aside from the hassle of passing traffic (climbing high up onto the verge is always the safest procedure), the walk was quite relaxing – and not entirely without incident. A few minutes into this bracing midday stroll, I passed the small boatyard by one of the nearby lakes and was instantly captivated by the most unusual tinkling sounds coming from beyond the roadside hedgerow. A strong breeze, blowing through the hidden tangle of ropes, wires and chains of the boats’ fixtures and moorings, had made an uintentional but quite magical melody. Click here to listen.. breeze-created sounds from the boatyard


[boatyard]

The same wind that brought in the blinding white flurry of a blizzard the evening before, that forced the wind-chill that plummeted the temperatures to below zero, that created the perilous sheets of ice on the roads, the very next day quietly sang to me when no one else was around…

This weekend is the last chance to see the contemporary art exhibition, Elements: Man and the Environment, at the Forum, Norwich (read more about my work in the Elements exhibition).

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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.