Jazz Green : fine artist. Artist journal, a blog, musings on art, an artist's perspective.

21/07/08 Art for sale
16/07/08 Of snakes and ladders
13/07/08 My life, in colour
06/07/08 Homes and Interiors
22/06/08 Go see, go elephants!
07/06/08 Shades of grey
01/06/08 Manmade in Britain
30/05/08 A modern post artist
18/05/08 No oil painting
10/05/08 One green bottle
05/05/08 Art for Elephants!
30/04/08 Rule of three
27/04/08 Found sculptures
26/04/08 This week I...
24/04/08 28 Days Later...
23/03/08 Of a deviant nature
22/03/08 Easy on the eyes
12/03/08 Seeing sense
25/02/08 About-face, about books
02/02/08 Green light, grey matter
12/01/08 A philosophy of decay
08/09/07 Castles made of sand
30/08/07 So much beauty in the world
29/08/07 Cross-eyed and cross words
28/08/07 Sublime Decay
22/08/07 Visual Distillations
19/08/07 Mishaps and misunderstandings
22/07/07 Art for offices
20/07/07 Smoke and mirrors
08/07/07 Notes to self
18/06/07 Variants on a theme
09/06/07 Solitude and other brief encounters
13/09/06 Vivid impressions
26/07/06 Perception, memory, insight
22/06/06 Curiouser and curiouser!
13/06/06 A show of colour
22/05/06 Passing Places - Part Two
05/04/06 Passing Places
27/03/06 Lost and Found
25/02/06 Outwardly, inwardly
22/01/06 Frugal Measures
22/12/05 Through a lens darkly
19/12/05 Dear Artist
06/12/05 A bird's eye view
01/12/05 Beware of banality
26/11/05 For seasons and reasons
23/11/05 It's been a busy week
19/11/05 A short walk to freedom
17/11/05 Strains, gains and automobiles
16/11/05 Welcome

 

Jazz's Journal
Mon, 27 Mar 2006
Lost and Found.
I received an email from another artist and my (edited) reply encapsulates the theme of this journal entry:
Never throw anything away! File away your experiments and don't look at them for a few weeks - with a fresh eye you will find a future use for them. I keep all my colour/texture experiments...We all get "stuck" sometimes. I think I'm stuck too - i keep reverting to horizontals (which is a direct influence of the very flat open landscape here) but also i feel if I add other compositional elements it will become too busy and perhaps too decorative. My latest large work 'mud slide' is so overbearingly depressing to me now since it was created during a bleak period, but if I add to or rework it will lose its metaphorical origin...I recently took a train trip and took some slow exposures out of the window - they nearly all have dark, monochrome, blurred, horizontal bandings!...I have also been out observing and photographing dead or bare trees...their dark, skeletal structures against the sky or horizon...I should be out there drawing but it has been so bitterly cold (we Brits love bemoaning the changeable weather!). A way back into drawing for me was doing enlarged works of sections of very small objects. With the extra space there is the opportunity to experiment more with mark-making and materials - and just enjoy the freedom. I have collected over a hundred pebbles with holes in them but I have yet to draw one of them - maybe I should right now! Henry Moore famously collected flint and old bones churned up in the ploughed fields around his home and then bound them with string - he had these on shelves in his studio...this is what i mean by a 'concrete sketchbook' - a multi-dimensional sketchbook, an ongoing source of inspiration and ideas. I have a wonderful piece of flint which always makes me think of Moore's work. I also have around 15 vaguely heart-shaped potatoes, pebbles and rocks but feel I could never translate them into an artwork - they're merely quirks of nature which I find interesting. There is a famous house in Cambridge called Kettles Yard, in which the old Tate gallery director lived - left untouched since his death - a museum in which the works of Ben Nicholson et al hang alongside the simple arrangement of two feathers in a jar or a circle of beach pebbles on a table - truly inspiring...often these humble little arrangements of objects that we create and live with are also artworks and perhaps cannot be improved upon, drawing or otherwise...the current 'skin' paintings are very slow to progress - i add another layer every few days...I envisage them suspending them in a mid space - affected by ambient or directional light...an experiment which may or may not work - but I have the pressure of a show in June in which people will want to see new work. Spring has been very slow to emerge here and I think it has slowed my work down...and so I must knuckle down and resolve all the ongoing pieces...view "stuck" as an alternative term for review and revise...what is it we are trying to say? I was once asked "Why make art", to which I replied "to answer the question" - it is this question of 'why' we must constantly review (for ourselves), not only the visual outcomes...

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