Monday, April 28, 2014

phase 3 redux - develop thoughtful algorithms


All 14 together!
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:30Klosterneuburg.JPG

Finished all 14 angels and demons! I'm planning to display them vertically, but arranged this way for the photograph, they remind me a little of the Klosterneuburg Altar (which I studied but have never seen in person ...yet ;)).
File:Verduner Altar.jpg
Klosterneuburg altar by Nicholas
of Verdun, ca. 1180







Of course, true to form, once I finished all 14, I decided that they needed just a little something more...another layer of internal framing? So I carved 2 new blocks of ornament for the corners and printed them in gold ink on gray paper...


 Now, seeing the photo, I think that the paper is about 3/4 too wide (oy.)



\with my index finger both for scale and to help the camera focus - 
I added highlights in the eyes using the tip of a needle dipped in ink - fun times
I bound the two books I've been working on 
as a student in a pop-up book class at the 
Columbia County Art School!
 (Now what to fill them with...)

But it wasn't all angels and demons this week. Over the weekend, I went to Zea Mays Printmaking studio in Florence, MA for a workshop with Nancy Diessner on photopolymer printmaking!  

Thinking about algorithms - bookmaking and printmaking are both algorithm (a repeated series of steps with several options structured as "if-thens".) 


Throw back to mini #27 - from the Power in Precision Project
When I made this, I used digital prints for the 
cityscape and figure, but wasn't satisfied with the image 
quality of those areas...2 years later, I think I may have 
finally solved that issue, haha. 
Coincidentally, I made this the week the tiny press came
into my life :)
Photopolymer printing is a process I've been wanting to learn more about as a way of translating some of my digital photographs into a more manual process. 

I'm going to have to think some more about this, because on the one hand, it's complex and requires specialized materials and equipment (so there are lots of stages along the way where I could make costly mistakes - eep). On the other hand, it produced the results I was looking for... (so, to be honest, I've already decided that it's for me and am thinking through the logistics of how to make it work ;).)

photopolymer prints based on my photographs :)
I think my love of Chuck Close
is coming  through in this photopolymer print
I'll have time to think about it because it will take me some time to work through what I have - I pulled as many prints as I could (dozens in a single day - I can be efficient when I want to be ;)). Not all of them can be finished pieces, but, thinking of my work like beloved pets, the piece that aren't "show quality," will find happy homes as the starting points for collages.

Like the creepy instance of finding the Greek
coin that matched my work in the Met a few
weeks ago,
there were aedicules that match almost exactly
the angel and demon's houses everywhere in the
 building including in the stained glass.

In para-art news, I went to "Troy Night Out," in nearby Troy, NY. I was an artist resident at the Contemporary Artist Center in Troy in Summer 2012 and I like the area and enjoy visiting. Little did I know - there's a Tiffany church, St. Paul's in downtown Troy! Almost the entire interior is Tiffany (windows, lights, stencils, architectural ornament!) Seeing it, I had one of those "I'm so excited I might faint" moments.

this is a picture from wikipedia,
mine didn't do it justice:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Paul's_Episcopal_Church_(Troy,_New_York)





Monday, April 21, 2014

phase 3 redux - develop thoughtful algorithms

The algorithm I worked on this week: the most efficient project is a completed one, haha. Joking (sort of), but seriously, I kept trying to figure out how to make the inverse of last weeks block of a kneeling figure. I know there are probably lots of ways to do it, but I just couldn't decide on one. I ended up redrawing the figure (mirror imaged) onto a new block. Maybe there really is no such thing as an "efficient" gothic-style, multi-block, collaged, polyptych (hahaha).
I finished 3 more of these to reach the total of 7
Front - my favorite one so far
Back - I mounted them to black cardstock
and in my quest to eliminate the glue -
the columns have tabs which side through slits
and then the top is connected by a brad.
The hanging loop will go around the brad


I also cut an inverse of the previous block and a new wing. printed, drew on, cut and assembled the 7
figures that will flank a central image on the opposite side.
I also worked more on the giant tarot card, reusing the body and feet from Spes.
the black is acid-free tape - It's like playing with a giant paper doll

still working on the hands and objects, but it's coming along


still no neck...
And there was gardening :)!

Earlier in this week - snow :(
Before (though after removing a dead shrub)
After -  brick bed, mulch and plants - herb garden!

Monday, April 14, 2014

Phase 3 redux - develop thoughtful algorithms

Quarter not included - Thank you  George Washington for providing a sense of scale ;)
nerd alert: I'm especially proud of the drapery - my own hybrid style of muldenfaltenstil and hairpin  
New art lovelies...

following the algorithm, this week's check list:
- plan blocks (tracery, figure, wing)
- carve blocks (without accidentally stabbing self if possible)printed 
- individualize with white ink and color pencil and black ink and color pencil
- cut out
- assemble
- photograph
- upload/digitally format

two thumbs up! 

(May come back with more text later, but for now - a walk, day job work, show application (fingers crossed), and (hopefully!) some nap time? :))








Monday, April 7, 2014

Phase 3 redux - develop thoughtful algorithms 2

arting...
Still stuck on this representation of Philosophy from
Boethius Consolation of Philosophy
http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts
/record.asp?MSID=8419&CollID=8&NStart=4338
Its starting to seep into other things I see,
like this bust at the Met last week
If you can't beat them...

I incorporated the crown print I just finished to make a fusion of "Sophia"
and the tarot card "Papessa/ high priestess"
(which plays a role in an audio book I just finished
 "The Night Circus" by Erin Morgenstern - recommend :)) 
approximately life-sized + 10% with my fingers for scale
it will have a flame (spiritual knowledge)
and a book (worldly knowledge),
getting the elements to interact through light and shadow
is a challenge

I made a special trip to the store for this paper.
Even though it's too small for the whole sleeve,
it's the exact right color...
drapery of the sleeves

This was my work station  -
the level of mess is directly proportional to the amount of fun I had :)
(It was awesome! There is still room in the class for any local
readers who want to join in the fun.)
class 1 - paste paper - look what I made :)
swirly stripes, visual yum!
In other art news, I'm taking a course on book making with artist and Rauschenberg Fellow Beth Thielen at the Art School of Columbia County.  The class focuses on several things I've been wanting to learn more about - paper making, binding, and
boxes.

I've been thinking that a book is a type of algorithm - it provides a familiar blueprint for viewing. I'm enjoying making relief prints, but want to take another step to provide a "built-in context" for them...

Monday, March 31, 2014

phase 3 - develop thoughtful algorithims

The idea of trying to make a giant installation is a little overwhelming right now, so I'm trying to break it down into smaller pieces and treat the process as an algorithm. (Step 1: clean up and put away/remove anything unnecessary from the studio. Step 2: make a sketch. Step 3: evaluate whether additional research/skills/materials may be needed (gather). Step 4. start with a part for which there is has a high probability of success.)


Voila! My latest block, 12 x 18." I was being hard on myself for posting a little later than usual because this took a few hours longer than I thought...but then I thought, wait - much more surprising than it taking longer than expected is that I managed to carve it in a week at all, haha ;)

The owl is part of a larger plan for a tree with all different birds perching in it inspired by an illustration from the Nuremberg Chronicle (excerpts published by Dover  are available in paperback on Amazon.) I love this so much that I want to make a life size version as a wall-mounted collage (Mmmmmmm)




The owl is on the lower left, eating another bird - I'll be skipping the avian cannibalism in my version ;)

Oy.
 In other art-related news, I went to my favorite place, the Met for some research and discovered something uncanny. I've been thinking about medallic engraving, since studying with the American Numismatic Association in Colorado last summer (with great thanks going out to the Gilroy and Lillian P. Roberts Foundation!) 

I'm looking forward to returning this summer for the second part of the fellowship and want to practice on a small scale at home before then. Because it's been on my mind lately, in the museum I was drawn to a case of Ancient Greek coins donated by the American Numismatic Society. I don't remember ever looking at this case before, but inside was this:

Compare to one of my mini reliefs from 2012:

Weird no? I tried to rationalize it - the ANA hosts a books sale, and the only book I purchased was one with lots of pictures on Ancient Greek coins. I thought - well, maybe I saw a similar coin in the book...but then I checked the date on the print - October 2012 - 6 months before I applied for the fellowship to study coin engraving. What makes it stranger is that it wasn't the only coin in the case to relate to a tiny print - there was also a pegasus, a winged figure, an owl... It was pretty uncanny, like I've been copying the coins in the case for years without realizing it??
Every time I go to the Met, I see more wings

Monday, March 24, 2014

phase 3 redux - don't be afraid of a big project, but try to go about it the smart way

finished carving and printed the crown! I'm so happy with how it turned out :)
It's been a busy art week :). Early in the week I went on a visit to the studio of Ed Rice in South Carolina. I love visiting other artist's studios and hearing about their work! This visit was especially fortuituous. Ed recently completed a large series 50 paintings of Fort Frederica, in which he set the iconography and composition while changing other variables (scale, color, material, support). The paintings are at the same time similar and unique, and the tension between the collective and individual is something that interests me.

This week also marked the beginning of spring. I feel like my mind is like a projector going from "standby mode" (winter), into "warm up" (spring), to be followed by "on" (summer), and cool down (fall).

Spring figure drawing has also started up.
15 minute
20 minute








Philosophia (personification of philosophy) - Albrecht Durer
Philosophy by Albrecht Durer, 1502













It was almost exactly a year ago that I went to VCCA and made the first giant collage Lacrimae Rerum, which paved the way for The Forest of And, And, AndEros et Thanatosand Spes

A year ago, I didn't know that I'd have the opportunity to learn engraving in Colorado with the American Numismatic Association and in Massachusetts at Zea Mays with Barry Moser.

When I ask the question: "what do I want to make most," I have the beginnings of an idea. It's something much bigger than my work space, so I won't be able to see it until its installed (surprise!), and I may need some additional technical skills. 

Which brings me to phase 3 redux - don't be afraid of a big project, but try to go about it the smart way. Before I jump in, I'm researching and trying to come up with a game plan to address/refine things that have come up from making the other big collages

I've been mulling over Durer research for months. One piece that I can't get over is The Triumphal Arch of Maximillian I, 1515. It's gigantic, almost 12 feet tall, and made from 192 separate blocks - Amazing! I heart Durer.

He wasn't alone on this. The architect, Jörg Kölderer designed the overall appearance and structure. Durer drew the scenes with the help of assistants, and master printer,
Related pieces are at the Beinecke Library at Yale
and the Morgan Library in New York
I particularly like the Visconti-Sforza Tarot Decks
Hieronymus Andreae carved and printed the blocks.

Other things on my mind: tarot cards, tapestries, and Byzantine icons.









Heroes Tapestry, ca. 1400–1410
South Netherlandish
Wool warp, wool wefts; 168 x 250 in.
Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY:
 https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/32.130.3b,47.101.1
Icon with Christ, the Virgin and the twelve Great Feasts and Saints,
The Byzantine and Christian Museum:
http://www.byzantinemuseum.gr/en/collections/icons/?bxm=2402
memories of  my student work - faux-stained glass, 2009 
From my own archives, I've been reminiscing about this piece that I made in 2009 while I was in school. I think of it as "faux stained glass." It's 6 translucent pieces, about 45 x 45," and it covered the window of my studio apartment. The materials were picked up at the local stationers for probably less that 2 fancy cups of coffee - sharpie and acetate stuck to plastic with electrical tape. Now, I think it's really funny - because how obsessed with stained glass does a person have to be to decide that this is the best solution to the problem: "my window looks into a building"? hahaha. Not coincidentally, the figure in the center bottom row is based on a Durer.

Possible reasons this is on mental refrain? (A "things I like" list):
-it's a conglomeration of pieces made up of more pieces
-it has a limited color scheme which helps unify it
-there are lots of intricate patterns as well as areas of flat color for visual relief
-it has translucent layers with drawing on both sides of the material
-it shows things I like (a bird and plant, figure, unicorn, patterns)
-it became part of the architectural structure of the room
-it has both detailed elements and an overall design so that it works up close up and far away.

I haven't quite figured out how to put all these elements together, but I feel like I'm getting closer. I like the idea of building a massive multi-part architectural installation, but I feel like I need to be strategic so I can make, pack, move, and assemble (and then store) everything by myself. And there's a timeline...

Hmmmm...