Sunday 24 March 2013

THE IDEA AS DRIVER


Following experiments with banding, lines, grids and colour (See Blog :Contrasts and Bands- 11th March/ Monochrome Discipline) I have become concerned with the' idea as driver ' using an idea or memory as the basis for a work. Attempt to put together recent work using  grids, lines, colour and space on a larger scale to express an overarching idea.

Long been interested in 'the seasons', their character and visible expression. The challenge is to develop a language which utilises the the power of 'lines' or bands and colour to express my feelings on Autumn (sounds corny but if Twombly can base a work on the Four Seasons why can't I have a go at one!)

Developing the expression 

  • Seen as essentially horizontal banding- a time of dying down, layering, leaves falling upon leaves, gradual build-up of layers
  • Early memories of light coming through leaves,with brilliant glimpses of sky
  • Quality of light, coldness yet warmth of colour.


The execution

  • Again working on 'natural' canvas sealed with PVA

  • underpainting of lemon yellow 
  • follow with layers of cadmium yellow, cadmium yellow deep hue, cadmium orange, cadmium deep red, purple, deep purple



Acrylic on canvas (2000 x 1400mm)

Attempt to introduce light cerulean blue to top third of canvas which will break colour harmony and introduce a degree of tension, but hopefully help to balance the weight of warm colours as they are layered into the lower part of the canvas.

Blue zones taped and underpainted with white, prior to overpaintng, to maximise impact.




Observations:
  • OK with the introduction of blue which has done largely what I had hoped
  • Interestingly the overall colour does not seem as warm as I expected/hoped (suppose Lemon yellow underpainitng is inherently cool)
  • Like scale of canvas - imapct quite good, much larger and it is difficult to control the washes/banding
  • On discussion with Virginia she was reminded of carpets/rugs which often incorporated landscape based motifs
  • Interested to hear comments from others


MONOCHROME DISCIPLINE

Viewing Rebecca Salter's work (See Research) it is evident that working in monochrome can lead to subtlety and intimacy' Her six years in Japan must have passed on something of their feeling for texture.
After my work on Contrasts and Bands (Blog: March 11th) which sought to utilise colour exploiting a dark background, resolve to limit palette and experiment with grids and spatial properties of differing intensities of paint.





Acrylic on canvas (1430x 940mm)

Ground sealed with PVA and then coat of Payne's grey applied with roller giving interesting 'active' backround without brushmarks.

Grid applied in two intensities one with considerable dillution, the other with thick white 'straight from the tube' .

Placing of 'grid lines' also adds to spatial ambiguity.

Verdict
Reasonably happy with result in that it acheives a certain spatial interest and responds to the scale of the canvas. It perhaps illustrates the importance of 'knowing when to stop' as I believe that further work would not ncessarily have brought further improvement. It will be important to re-evlauate in a few weeks time to see if this judgement holds!


Monday 11 March 2013

CONTRASTS AND BANDS

Work by Marta Marce and Anselme Reyle (See Research) have shown a possible way of handling bands of colour/stripes using contrast to highlight colour frequencies / relationships:




First stage painting above. 
Sequence  of applying paint important - base wash of Payne's Grey applied by rolller. Banded areas then masked and painted out in white prior to adding colour- slight white edge at transition important in achieving crisp banding.

Seek to develop with further panels and two semi-translucent 'overlay' stripes.
Following discussion with Lothar try a light pink wash  (see below)





Verdict : probably a step too far - prefer previous version. Howver technical aspects of banding improved with less bleeding.

Thursday 7 March 2013

IS LESS MORE?

Discussion with Peter Wolland re current work - see below (approx 2m square, acrylic on raw canvas primed with PVA) Still exploring 'grids ans washes'





Expressed interest in colour as well as 'pictorial space' but finding difficulties and almost felt need to remove all colour and start again- felt that original 'taped up 'canvas, prior to painting which is very mute almost monochrome was more succssful than the finished work (see below)                                                  





Banding achieved using differing thicknessses of masking tape and 75mm black plastic flooring tape                                                                                    

Wide ranging discussion with PW covering issues from Abstract Expressionism and the various approaches to expressing 'pictorial space'





 
Agreed to concentrate on three issues:
  • What can be got rid of (simplification)
  • Colour
  • Mark making - again simplification and removal of overt brushwork


Limitation of form and colour (1)

               Elongated format ( 1500x600mm)

               Raw canvas primed with PVA
                                        
               Yellow ochre based colour, darker at base,
                lightening towards the top

               Concept from Upland walls



                     








 


Success?  

Discussion with Lothar- severe vertical format probably too much against the landscape  feel of the work.The painting might work better at a larger scale with a more subtle gradation of tone/colour. Still feels like a significant stride in the right direction.               


Limitation of form and colour (2)

Second painting works with limited form- stripes/bands and a tight colour palette
(see below). Paint applied by roller with fine brush for stripes.


                                                                                

Conceived originally in landscape format with major, ochre area at the top. However,it works better in vertical format, Major areas of ochre and lovat green have subtle changes of tone within them (not readily appreciable on the blog) - uniform stripes work quite well as a foil/contrast. Reasonably satisfied with the restricted palette and sense of pictorial space acheived.