Jazz Green : Artist Journal

Posts tagged ‘winter’

in nine equal parts, shown in a random order (some surface incidents) – it takes a perfectionist to appreciate the small imperfections…

these nine ‘parts’ together comprise one of my series of small edgescapes. i found or unearthed four edgescape panels in a semi-completed, near redundant state (luckily not consigned to the trash) and this particular painting on panel will be on show at the Harleston Gallery, Norfolk, from 18th June to 11 July 2011, along with some more of my paintings… i am most honoured to be exhibiting as a ‘guest artist‘ in HWAT 2011…

abstract painting, winter weathered textures - frost ice, stone, white, light blue - edgescape 29 by jazz green artist

both the wood & the hardboard used to construct this series of paintings on panel was scavenged from a skip. i am quite handy with a mitre saw… i once found some small pieces of wood in the middle of the road, in the street where i live… well, if the trucks wouldn’t travel so darn fast…

i bought some acrylic paints and they have lasted me years – so i am obviously quite frugal with colour… my favourite colour (absolutely) is grey because there are so many hues…

blue abstract painting  - wall erosion decay, winter - edgescape 26 by jazz green artist

perhaps there is a trace of puritanism in my aesthetic, eschewing joy or extravagance in my process, i am mindful and serious, the less said the more done . i often work in silence, but true silence is a rare thing, even in the country…

solitude (i think) makes for better paintings – i call upon rembrandt and goya as some good examples…

abstract painting decay eroded surface textures, blue ash grey - edgescape 26 by jazz green artist

i incorporate materials derived from my environment in my paintings – soil from the garden, ash from the fire grate, tiny seeds or crushed eggshells. i carefully prepare and store these materials in jars – i like a semblance of order in my workspace…. i like working with texture simply because it engages the senses beyond looking… there is a memory embedded in the surface…

anyone who visited my open studio in 2008 might remember seeing these panels and wonder why it took me so long…

my paintings evolve from a process of loss & sometimes failure, since i seem to erase or eradicate most of what i paint – i deliberately lose sight of the thing in order to find it again… incidental flaws can be beautiful in their own way…

i am sad about some things but hopeful about others… if i can create art when i am doubtful then then there is always the possibility of making something better…

blue textured abstract painting, weathered eroded textures, winter - edgescape 26 by jazz green artist

i have never felt confident enough to go completely abstract in technique or process, say in the manner of gerhard richter or robert ryman, although i believe that the paintings i have created are objects in themselves with their own separate, distinct identity & reality, perhaps like human beings who assert their individuality but still desire to ‘fit in’ somehow with the rest of the world…

perhaps i am just asserting their right to be different…

abstract painting surface erosion, decay winter - edgescape 26 by jazz green artist

i am not sure that i am really a painter in the conventional sense – i do not make pictures and any resemblance to a known reality is often a coincidence… i take photographs to help me remember, but i fear that if i look at them for too long or work directly from them there will be a kind of pseudo realism creeping in (one can always tell)…i tried this with drawing and they became very scientific…

my work is perhaps just a type of visual intervention in the course of an implicit understanding, a quiet conveyance or translation of sorts, between what exists out there and what most sticks in the mind, connected to the immediate, known environment..

abstract winter painting, textured, weathered surface - edgescape 26 by jazz green artist

my art seems to be driven by the small reminders of life and death, that nothing remains constant, how things fracture, break down, disappear – i am aware of mortality and the transience of life on earth…

i am happy being older (and hopefully wiser) but it bothers me that i can’t see things as sharply as i once did – perhaps this will turn out to be a good thing (for a painter)… and i always seem to have dirty fingernails…

blue textured, eroded surface abstract painting, winter - edgescape 26 by jazz green artist

it still rankles with me that i didn’t get a painting accepted into a regional exhibition, in their words they were: looking for recent works by artists who particularly engage with habitat, the environment, and both the natural and the man-made world in their process… it is always food for thought… sensitvity creates its own veneer or patina over time, an outer crust of self-protection…

abstract textured painting on panel, ice blue surface - edgescape 26 blue, by jazz green artist

i have been thinking more about water and clouds and how they represent flux, fluidity, distance and a certain kind of unobtainable otherness… my world is not static, flat and contained but i seem to have have made it look so… we need air to breathe and we are (i think) about 90% water, so these elements are omnipresent in our being

abstract painting dark blue eroded texture - edgescape 26 by jazz green artist

i am reminded by seeing the work of more senior artists that i must have at least thirty more years of painting ahead of me to get it right (this is many more years than i have been painting so this is a positive thing).

today they announced that parts of east anglia are officially in drought, that wildlife is at risk and that farmers must be more prudent in using water on their crops. today it rained just as i remembered it (and i have been putting water out for the birds).

all images & text © jazz green 2011

last chance to see: Six Abstract Painters, Halesworth Gallery, Steeple End, Opp. St Mary’s Church, Halesworth, Suffolk, IP19 8LL

28 May to 15 June 2011

open daily, Monday-Saturday 11am to 5pm, Sundays 2pm – 5pm

on now: Reunion Refresh @ Reunion Gallery, 5 Feb – 22 Oct 2011

next up: HWAT exhibition 2011, Harleston Gallery, 18 June to 11 July 2011

nature studies

March 8th, 2011

i went back to the local wildlife fen last week and completed these two quick nature studies plein air… as perceived/recorded, limited by time, size and materials… a good artist friend had given me a small sketch pad of watercolour paper; it seemed churlish not to use it… these two studies are in watercolour and watercolour pencil…

local wetland fen - sketch in watercolour, acrylic, pencil

i thought it would be interesting to photograph the studies in situ, but in order to get both the drawing/painting and the ‘real’ landscape in the frame, the wide angle lens made the subject appear much further away than my own perception of it.. it seemed interesting too, in a phenomenological sense, to offer with one image, both the before and after, the past (as i first saw it), the present (as it appears now) and the future (in the objectiveness of such a material study)… and the apparent act of free will or intention in mark-making and gesture and yet controlled by the circumstances in which they are derived…

local nature fen - sketch in watercolour, acrylic and pencil

i guess that if i really pushed myself i could do more studies like this and perhaps get better at them, but this was not the day to pursue that, as it turned out…

it was the early morning shock of seeing a thin film of ice on the inside of the windows that prompted a couple of snowy walkabouts this week… for some exercise, some fresh air, to warm up, an excuse perhaps to think more about and reconnect with this rural landscape…

suffolk snow landscape painting - sketchbook

a hill and some snow, acrylic on paper, 8″ x 12″

i carried with me a sketchbook (or three!) but, for a change, i took some small tubes of acrylic and a few offcuts of card. why on earth go out sketching in this inclement weather? well, the intention was to go for a bracing walk and the opportunity to do some outdoor sketching seemed like a good idea at the time… i just needed some white, brown, blue, a little yellow ochre… (you can view last week’s before the snow winter field sketches here)…

these three small sketches are about 5″ x 16″

suffolk snow landscape field - sketchbook

suffolk snow sketches - sketchbook

suffolk snow fields horizon - sketchbook

[click to view larger]

i discovered a new footpath which i had not seen signposted before, perhaps because all the surrounding vegetation that would have concealed it had died back. some farmers, it seems, don’t like to draw attention to the public rights of way that circumnavigate their fields. this particular footpath began at the roadside – it was a quick scramble up a steepish, stepped incline through a small thicket of elder, hawthorn, briar, bramble and the like, which soon thinned out onto a small footbridge across a ditch, which opened into the corner of a large field – regimental stalks of harvested maize pricking through the blanket of snow..

suffolk field snow landscape sketch

winter field with stubble, 8′ x 22″

i walked a narrow path between the hedgerow and the broken lines of sown crops, minding the occasional black hole which indicated a rabbit burrow. in the snow i could see the pitter-patter pattern of animal footprints, probably a dog i thought but i could see no human companion footprints -  were they the trail of a hare, a fox or muntjacs perhaps? the hedgerow seemed to have shaken off most of the recent snowfall and so it exhibited an interesting patchwork of textures and colours when viewed against the snow – from the sepia hues of damp, dead wood to the musty grey-black of dead nettles, small patches of fading green to grey, the auburn brown of tall docks, shades of bronze and tarnished copper on the edges of leaves, the prickly hawthorn branches dotted with red berries…

suffolk snow field hedgerow - sketchbook

field and hedgerow, acrylic on paper, 8″ x 12″

the line of the hedgerow led slowly uphill, then turned an abrupt corner at an oak tree – and hereabouts, sheltered from the chilled midday air with a scattered carpet of acorn husks underfoot, it afforded a clear view of valley ahead. smooth white fields, lightly traced out by their boundary hedgerows, sloped gently to the south and east, a distant cluster of trees merged into a mist of many layered greys. to the north the field’s straight crop lines seemed to converge at a point near the flat horizon, with only the faintest delineation of trees to suggest where the land ended and the sky began…

snow winter field sketch painting - sketchbook

winter field, acrylic on paper, 8″ x 12″

some people assume that suffolk is, in the main, quite a flat county, but this is because the most travelled routes follow more even ground. walk a little off the beaten track and the vistas become much more undulating and expansive – made even more appealing to the senses when there is snow on the ground. all seems for a short while quite serene, quite still. snow softens the sounds and disguises the blemishes, it sculpts, smoothes and redefines, drawing out the best features of a seemingly natural geography…

perhaps on reflection it was not such a good idea to use acrylics as they did not dry properly in the ice cold air. to stop the sketchbook pages from sticking together i sandwiched them with maize leaves, powdery bark and even clumps of snowy soil, all of which had added some interesting textural effects by the time i had headed back. something of real substance to work with, so i applied more white acrylic here and there, the remains of soil and the blurry smears of paint became the tangible traces of walking. i rather like that they turned out this way, incomplete and unrefined, within each rough gesture or mark is a brief thought or memory that relates to the experience – exhibiting the very spirit of a brisk walk in the wintry, white landscape…

these two sketches are 8′ x 22″, on black card – it is (or was) a photograph album…

field snow landscape sketch

suffolk fields snow - sketchbook

[click to view larger]

so, these small studies have really become remembered landscapes, they no longer exist, the snow has now vanished, but we have been warned that the snow will return…

i often remind myself that i have become something of a cave painter – i see things (discarded, redundant or dead things, mostly!) and then i retreat to the studio cave to make art out of the experience. sketching in the landscape seems to be a means to re-engage but also to step back a little, to take in the wider view…

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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.