Showing posts with label cyanotypes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cyanotypes. Show all posts

Tuesday, 9 May 2023

Seeing Dark Things : Chemical Photography/Images from the darkroom.

 Concept of a 'Filtow'


A filtered radiance emanating from a vessel not an object interrupting a beam of light.


Seeing Dark Things.


Roy Sorensen.










The thing contained is not the thing contained.


The spherical intersection space was also crafted in curved thin wood layers.


Steven Holl.




The Representation of Deep Time.


The Mutability of Colour Relationships.




Unleashed Colour World.


Manifestations of Unhindered Radiance.


Albers, yellow square.


Monrian, square of yellow in its field of white. 






For both Mondrian and Winifred Nicholson, colour concentrates light and transforms the world.




Flowers were sparks of light.


I used flowers as chalices of light to make my own pictures.




My Cibachrome darkroom has been as much a domestic space as the Alber's basement and Winifred Nicholson's farmhouse kitchen. They are places where ideas about the emotional range of a yellow square can exist as naturally as reflections and shadows cast by the sun and moon.




In this new colour world of mine, the circle became nature, and the square became thought.


 


The circle and square together embody what I think of as human nature.


Dark Room, Garry Fabian Miller.







Generating an Aura.


Fusing and Pulsating Pigment.






Pinhole Photography 


Photo Tin/Medium.


Cromer.




Raveningham.


Site Cyanotypes/Drawings/Intermediaries


Spatial Collages Reconfigured  

Friday, 31 March 2023

A Sensation of Looking/Manifesting Seeing

 Outpost 310323


A Sensation of Looking/Manifesting Seeing



Matters of Concern/Fact.

Drawing/Contingency/Sensing/Seeing

Drawing away from descriptive depictions that illustrate preconceptions/aesthetics.


Julian Stair.

Quietus. 2012.

The Vessel.

Death and The Human Body.


There is an alchemy to making ceramics. We take an inert material, fashion it, dry it and expose it to heat and flame. The practice of cremation, of exposing the body to fire, going through an alchemical change, echoes and parallels the process of firing.

Julian Stair.


The materials he works, lead and clay are dense, both physically and emotionally. But Stair's use of these materials is not representational. These objects do not depict or illustrate, instead they enact and embody.


Stair's achievement in this cyclical exhibition is to have expressed both the universality and the specificity of death, each as an aspect of the other.


The great hand-thrown jars that stand at the heart of the exhibition exemplify this doubleness. Though completely abstract, they exist at the scale of the body. They invite a tactile response, visitors might stroke the ridges circumscribing the jars or tap them, or even give them a gentle hug.

Glenn Adamson.



Life drawing on the psychology of  nakedness and the human body in contemporary art.

Life-Class/Anatomy/Pathology.






The practical and theoretical problems of the confrontation with the human form.

Georg Eisler.


Herbert Boeckl.

His nudes speak a physical language, interpreting life and death in terms of human bodies, of functioning muscle and bone and the tactile aspects of flesh, and the knowledge of what lies beneath/behind it. 


Alfred Hrdlicka. 

A Group. 1973.


Proximity does not read as intimacy, the entangled naked bodies convey a sense of insecurity.


The Posed/Nakedness/Social Scrutiny.


The Life-Class.

Isabel Bradshaw/Michael Grimshaw


Drawings/Sculpted lines that bring sensations onto the surface of the paper.

Lines of Movement/Vectors

Lines of Static Forms/Boundaries


Mark-making, rendering the spatialities of the human form.

Form-Movement

Mass-Volume

Skin-Surface






Line is only the visual interpretation of an extremity of a volume. Mark-making on a drawing becomes a conduit for a sensation of seeing others.


The concept of anthropomorphism is central to the identity of pottery. We use bodily terms such as a neck, shoulder, hip and foot to describe the constituent parts of a pot. And the very nature of the vessel as a container, a holder of things, is analogous to the idea of the body as physical container for the soul or spirit.

Julian Stair.



Sunday, 3 July 2022

Intermedia : Articulating Sensory Thought. Yard and Metre Event

 Cyanotype Project/Poetry Reading : Winchester College




Shroud

Richard Stillman

Yard and Metre Event, Winchester


As the marks resonated, did they sound true? 

Could we tolerate margins of error or latitude? 

Is there strength in that built by blue ink?

It is hard to see without certainty.


Why have they flown, gathered, shrouded? 

Is the date significant? A memorial?

Or is it white noise reverberating, 

striking parallels, refusing focus, insisting?


The shape of the cross is still distinct

but opening out, refusing definition,

never quite caught as an intention, 

pinned on dimensions it wants to refuse.





Cyanotype from a site drawing, Space for Peace, Winchester Cathedral 2011.

When objects or atmospheres collide energy is transferred, a new force may be created. And, as forensic scientists can attest, when objects touch they exchange traces, each leaves something of itself with the other.

This is why artists enjoy collaborating. Working with another artist can give a jolt of inspiration, a spark of creative thinking, a surge of new skill, the stimulus for a new work. And the experience will leave its mark in some way on each individual’s practice.

The specific ‘collision’ may also result in a work which has its own integrity, which does not belong’ to either party and where their particular contributions merge indistinguishably - in effect fusion takes place.

This is the thinking behind 10 days | Creative Collisions and for The Yard artists  and Hyde Writers it was the ideal excuse to come together, to let the shockwaves flow and see what new possibilities emerged. As with all the best creative practice, in science or in art, this has been an experiment, it involved risk, trust and open minds. Whether or not the outcomes are fully resolved they will be filled with potential - and with potency.

Stephen Boyce


The Hyde Writers

The writers  revelled in a close engagement with artists  and their work. Rather than respond to emailed images, the writers could immerse themselves in the artist’s world. Writers  could examine the artist’s  studio space, watch the artist working and feel with their own hands  the materials  in use. They  could smell the turpentine, feel clay under their nails  and trail their fingers  over the rippling textures of paintings. Some writers took artists’ work home, so that they could live with the work. Naturally some artists provided a response to the writer’s work and the non-verbal feedback was unusual and exciting.

Writers  faced a dilemma over which aspect of an artist to focus  on. Some writers  found inspiration in the personality of an artist and others were entranced by a part of the artist’s  process. The art itself, of course provided a rich source of creativity. Writers  found that the artists’ studios  and individual objects  within them were inspiring. A fractured shell of a first world war helmet might suggest several stories. Writers  could see familiar techniques, such as  collage being used by  the artists, but they  could also understand the strange dictatorship imposed by  physical materials. The materials  are often tricky  things  that impose their own rules  and can bring uncontrollability  into a process.

It was  an experience that changed the writers. For ever afterwards a small part of us will be noticing the world from a different viewpoint, such as  that of a painter or a sculptor.

Hugh Greasley

The Hyde Writers are a group of poets, novelists, script and short story writers  who meet every  first and third Monday  in the Hyde Tavern, Winchester.

Founded in 2007, the group aims to produce high quality, challenging writing across a diverse range of genres.

The group acts as a workshop to facilitate the development of an individual writer’s works through rigorous yet supportive critical comment

Our members  include prize winning novelists  and short story  writers, published poets and broadcasters, as well as young writers developing their craft.





The Yard Artists

When the studio management group discussed how to represent The Yard in 10 days Creative Collisions, we could not have possibly  envisaged the quality  and ambition of the project. Several months  later, following a successful proposal, speed dating event and BBQ, two thriving creative communities  in Winchester have collaborated, partnering artist with writer, and produced twenty  six  ‘creative collisions’ of new and innovative work. These projects  have been prepared for an evening of projection, performance and poetry  at Winchester College.

As  a collective, Yard and Metre fuses  traditional with contemporary, the analytical with the intuitive, the tangible with the abstract, in a collision of observation and enquiry. The breadth of subject and concept, as well as  the standard of work  produced, is  testament to the dedication and enthusiasm of those participating in the project.

Thanks  to  Beatrix  Kovacs,  this  beautifully  designed  publication  documents  the  collaboration  between The Yard artists and Hyde Writers and pays tribute to the significance of the event.

Jane Price

The Yard is a working studio environment in Wharf Hill, Winchester, established in 2007 by a group of local artists with the assistance of Winchester City Council. It provides affordable studio space within a vibrant, supportive community for up to twenty five artists and aims to promote contemporary fine art in the Winchester district





Cyanotype from a site drawing, Space for Peace, Winchester Cathedral 2011.

Thursday, 2 June 2022

Between Art and Architecture : Studio Processes

 











https://www.flickr.com/photos/russellmoreton/

Outpost 310522


Painting is a visual experience. People can write about historical or philosophical points they want to get across using certain examples of painting, maybe work that they think might be similar.

They could make a point in so doing, but it usually has very little to do with the painting itself. 

I do something with the paint, but I'm not painting a picture of anything.

I'm not manipulating the paint into an illusion of something other than what the paint does.

I make a painting.


Robert Ryman on the Origins of His Art.

David Carrier,Robert Ryman. 1997


Ferini Gallery


Prussian Blue

Material Immediacy

Matter and Mutability 

Strange visual spatialities

A space of time and the capacitance between things

Cyanotype postcards of phenomena

Botanical, Astronomical,




Flesh of the film

Subjectivity in forsaken spaces


Robert Ryman


USED paint, Suzanne P. Hudson. 2009


About the 'how' of the material.

Exploration on the nature of paint.


Primer

Painting

Support

Edge

Wall


Edward Thomas


Eno, vessel on a milk white sea

The clay produces an abstracted division of space, letting the material find ones boundary.


studioUS artwork submission

Listing for exhibition at PRIMEYARC, Market Gates, Great Yarmouth.


Studio 3.16 Spatial Apparatus


This large mobile pinhole camera has been used to inquire into the nature of photography and the intermingling of movements and things. The apparatus is used within my art practice which is centred around making, interior design and teaching.


Key Words, temporal agency, spatialities, environs, art practice, apparatus, photography,


Sunday, 19 September 2021

Studio Workings/Hidden Orderings : Making from Scattered Attention/Undifferentiation.

OUTPOST STUDIOS 3.16

Cooper's 'Objects' of thinking are not objects, but that which goes beyond objects. It is not the objects that resist meaning (as we have seen they are full of meaning) but what goes beyond objects.

Peripheral Vision

Relationality

The act of relating is analysed as a constitutive feature of human agency. Relating is viewed as a continuous work of connecting and disconnecting in a fluctuating network of existential events.

Robert Cooper





































The Hidden Order of Art. Anton Ehrewzwey



Anglian Potters
Members Profile

Studied Ceramics at Epsom School of Art and Design from 81-84. Worked in a number of studios including Grayshott Pottery and Dexterity Crafts. Working methods include thrown/altered/slab built forms, kilns generally self constructed, experimental and portable. Previous work has been slab built architectural forms fired at stoneware temperatures. Recent pots are hand thrown, low fired Raku with delicate fragile rims. Own practice explores interests in Architecture/Lighting and thinking with the vessel as a contemplative/activist form. Interested in the sculptural qualities of the vessel/pot to explore making/material. Informed by contemporary arts, sculpture and architecture. Teaching experience in Fine Art and Ceramics.