As with yesterday’s prompt; favourite book; I can’t pick just one that I prefer, however, tools do not have to cost a lot of money. I tend to work with different mediums; acrylic, oil, collage, ink, charcoal, pastel, pencil and previously I have done a lot of printmaking, sewing and textile design. I don’t tend to stick to just one material or one tool. I will hold my hands up and say I’m also the most indecisive person I know!
As an artist who enjoys working in the landscape, I often use found materials as my tools such as twigs and pine ‘leaves’. These give loose scratchy marks when working with ink; a more organic looking line if you want a less controlled finish to a piece.
Tying a piece of charcoal to a long stick is an alternative way to sketch with less control.
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I knew I would enjoy this prompt when I saw it; I have many art books, exhibition catalogues, creative magazines, tattoo magazines, other informative books and novels. Photographing my bookcase made me realise the shelves are starting to bow, I’m not surprised. I love buying books. As a dyslexic person, I enjoy dipping in and out of art books or just reading a few pages in bed rather than sitting down and reading for a long time which I find hard to do in my noisy house anyway. For this prompt, it was too difficult to pick just one book. Some books I bought at university, some I bought for work research, some were left outside by my neighbours during lockdown; many of us made free boxes of books and puzzles, some books were gifts and some aren’t mine! I do know I need more storage. There is a bookshop by Tate Modern I highly recommend called Marcus Campbell Art Books stocking rare and second hand art books. My choice for this is Art and Artefact: The Museum as Medium
I bought this book to help with writing my dissertation; ‘An investigation into how museology has evolved, allowing artists to disrupt the narrative of the museum and the consequential engagement of the audience'. This book is full of artists who have used the museum to inform their work, site their work, history around the display, highly recommended. I work in a museum, however, the dream would be to work with collections in a big London museum. Kurt Jackson Place and Sketchbooks 2003 – 2004 I discovered Sketchbooks 2003 – 2004 at college and was at the starting point for my love of working with the landscape. I loved the way Kurt captured the Cornish landscape before I was a painter but the book was out of print. Eventually, I found a second-hand copy and ordered it. When the book arrived, I discovered the book had belonged to a local library, made its way to Scotland for a while and then back home to Cornwall to me. It is signed too! I bought Place after seeing the exhibition at the Royal Cornwall Museum, Truro. The idea behind the work resonated with how I used the landscape in my practice; painting landscapes where we have a connection, nostalgia and a sense of identity. Jeremy Gardiner I discovered Jeremy's work at University. This book contained art based around Cornwall as well as other places. I was creating landscapes on broken pieces of wood and layering media as part of the process. Although Jeremy worked with different materials on board, I was fascinated by the results of his abstract layered landscapes. Peter Lanyon At work, I spend many hours admiring the Lanyon paintings. They contain so much information and hidden messages and motifs in their compositions even though Lanyon’s style and approach changed over time. I have many Lanyon books; I bought this book, now out of print, whilst working on Out West. Catherine Hyde, The Hare and The Moon I’m not sure when I discovered Catherine’s work but I had this book bought for me a year ago, I knew I had to have it when I spotted it whilst Christmas shopping. The style of work is a little more illustrative than my usual inspirations. The connections to the seasons and how the land can change piques my interest, especially as I am fascinated with pagan traditions and ancient lands and nature which Catherine captures beautifully. Robert Macfarlane, Underland I have read Roberts books The Old ways and Landmarks so when I saw this as a new release, I immediately reserved it at my local library. However, I was borrower number 60+ in the queue to read it and as I’m not a fast reader I couldn’t get through it before it was someone else’s turn to enjoy it. I requested the book for Christmas so I can enjoy it at my own pace. For a long time, my interest has been what grows and lives near the surface. I have owned and borrowed books on archaeology and evolution (I love Time Team and history documentaries). Now I’m interested in exploring what is underneath and allowing that to take a new dimension within my work. Did you know the term 'shelfie' is a thing now? My rainbow Shelfies: I have to say that most of the work in my studio is a work in progress; I’m terrible for not finishing work and starting something new. I also have many notebooks and sketchbooks of ideas stretching back several years with pages dotted with mini post-it-notes here and there to say this would make a good blog post or piece of work. Occasionally I go through them, knowing I thought something was a great idea however, a lot of the time I don’t remember what inspired me; I have a terrible memory. I have a couple of large canvases I started at my Krowji studio that I will probably paint over. This particular painting of a blossom tree I shared on Instagram stories with a poll; should keep it or not? Most people said yes. I could fill out the tree blossom but I decided I don't want to keep it. It’s a big piece that I can no longer store. If I’m not feeling the love, then it’s time to move on.
If you want it, you have to make it happen Pretty obvious, right? However, I’m really good at talking myself out of a situation because I have what I now recognise as imposter syndrome and I’m good at procrastinating. I know I’m good at procrastinating because when I got my latest phone and checked the digital wellbeing app it came with, I realised how much time I spent on my phone. All those hours I could have done something productive like sort my studio, started that piece of work that’s been stewing as an idea for ages, contacted a gallery, applied for something etc. I’ll never get that time back. My imposter syndrome generally manifests as anxiety telling myself that I’m rubbish so why bother; it’s has reduced me to tears on many occasions. If I listened to myself though I would’ve missed out on the experiences I’ve had. When I went back to college it was the first thing I was doing for myself for years, I’d been a stay at home parent and struggled with post-natal depression, I had little confidence left however I knew I wanted to do something creative. Art had always been a hobby. When I walked into the class, I thought that I didn’t belong there. I stuck it out and studied for four years achieving my Ba Hons degree. It was such a difficult four years; my children were still very young, juggling study with home stuff was really hard and stressful, I snapped and said several times I was quitting. I knew I’d regret it if I did quit and upon graduating I went straight into a paid creative job and won a residency in an art studio. Those opportunities wouldn’t have happened if I hadn’t been determined to finish. There have also been many times where I have had the opportunity to show work that I felt really unsure about; again imposter syndrome tells me nobody would be interested. It always means a lot to me when someone says they like it, they have a connection to it, some have said that ‘they just had to have it’ and of course I feel on top of the world for a while. I usually go to London to be a part of an exhibition or see a show and I’ve nearly talked myself out of it a few times. I can guarantee once I’m there, I don’t want to come back yet, because there’s so much to see and do! Let’s hope this virus goes away soon so we can all jump at the opportunity to travel and socialise again! I have decided to start the new year by joining in with the 21 day art challenge set by Tara Leaver over on Instagram; you can sign up via Tara’s website or screenshot the prompts and get going. Most people are doing the challenge by posting photos to their Instagram page however, I decided to do it as blog posts and sharing links on my Instagram. I haven’t joined in an art challenge before but I had several reasons to join:
So the first prompt of the challenge is called A Favourite Painting. I’ve probably considered myself a painter since my last year at university; around 6 years ago when studying for my Ba Hons. It doesn’t feel that long ago but that’s a lot of paintings in that time! I find that whenever I’m working on a piece of work, whether in my sketchbook, on the table or at the easel, I will leave it on display for a while. It’s like leaving it to breathe; even if it’s already dry I’ll keep looking at it from various angles. Whatever I’m working on becomes the favourite; I’ll keep giving it attention, tweaking the composition, wondering whether I can call it finished and share it on my Instagram and Pinterest pages. However, if I’m creating a body of work I will lay out all of the pieces and pick a couple of favourites and some that I think don’t work now but could become something else by cropping or working over the surface again. One painting that will remain a firm favourite of mine is one that I no longer possess; I sold the painting at the private view of its showing and I’m really happy that someone now has it on display in their home than it being stacked with others in my studio. The painting is called Towards Zennor and is the canvas I exhibited at Tate Modern in 2019 (you can read about it here) it is mixed media on stretched canvas. This painting isn’t a favourite because it was exhibited and sold in London but because of the experience of creating it. Towards Zennor is one of many pieces made as part of a mentoring project I did with landscape artist Liz Hough; a colleague from when I worked at St Ives School of Painting. We drove just out of St Ives town to do some sketching up on the hills whilst following the journey artist Peter Lanyon made. The grey clouds were looming, it was biting wind and it felt like a race against time to do as much as I could before we had to run back to the car. We sketched in various spots between St Ives and Zennor and once I was back in the studio I started picking through all the pieces to see which pieces stood out to be worked from. This particular composition was created several times; the original in my sketchbook, the canvas, a mixed media on wood piece (also sold) and a piece on paper. All worked from the same sketches made onsite but all are different because of the creative process used for each, not all of them were intended to be finished pieces but its common to have several pieces as studies or prep work. |
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