Showing posts with label Anselm Kiefer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anselm Kiefer. Show all posts

Thursday, 3 May 2018

Book: Painting the Novel with Ashley Hanson


It's   6 weeks  since the excellent  course at Creek Creative  'Painting the Novel'  with  Ashley Hanson  but with  the upheaval involved with  preparing for decoration and refurbishment of our bedroom , I haven't had the  energy to give  the attention to  writing it deserves. Sleeping on a mattress on the floor for the last 3 weeks hasn't helped  but  nearly there, the bed arrives later today! 

The novel I  chose to work from was 'Remarkable Creatures'  by Tracy Chevalier, based on the discovery of fossils by Mary Anning and Elizabeth Philpott in the cliffs of Lyme Regis. The title describes not only the fossilised animals they found but the women themselves, scientists way ahead of their time.   While rooted in fact , what made it special was it  was written in the first person  and described how Mary in particular felt about what she found  and her ways of looking.
' Pattern stands out when everything else is a jumble' I recognise from my botanical survey days, when you notice something is different.  

There are several quotes about lightning (  Mary was struck by lightning as a child)  and about eyes and teeth - those embedded in the rocks and 'having the eye' , finding differences and pattern.
"It was so obvious in the cliff with its forest of teeth and saucer eye"

"I opened my eyes and it feels like they haven't been shut since'"
'"That is why I am a hunter; to feel that bolt of lightning and that difference, every day"
"You can't be inside their eye, you have to look your own way. Two people can look over the same rocks and see different things" 

For my research, besides the drawings I did at the Natural History Museum of the actual specimens that Mary Anning collected, I found photos online  of the  cliffs  at Lyme Regis  and combined  images of the creatures and the rocks in Photoshop  changing the opacity of the layers  so that the fossils  were' hidden' in the cliff surfaces and used tracing paper overlays.







Thinking about how I might interpret the rocks in a painting I did a few collages as I had found this. such a useful process for simplification/ abstraction in ' Contemporary Painting Studio' 

We were asked to bring two same-size canvases to work on ( this giving the option to secure two canvases together in a book-format) . I prepared 2 pairs  (  canvas  sizes  60 x 45  and 40 x 30)  with newspaper  collage on one of each pair , painted with a neutral grey.  


On the morning of the first day Ashley gave a long but interesting introduction to the portrayal of the 'novel' in painting  starting with interpretations  of  the bible, Shakespeare (Chagall) Don Quixote ( Daumier ) , fairy tales ( Paula Rego) and particularly Anselm Kiefer's work exploring German mythology and the holocaust  in the poems of Paul Celan . 

Ashley then showed us in some detail his  own series of works based on The New York Trilogy by Paul Auster. .His blogposts  showing photos of work as it evolves are fascinating (many of  these are based on grids and maps of Manhattan)and it was great to see the final pieces in the flesh and appreciate the textures and layers 



There were 12 of us in the class, some local, some had travelled some distance  and we were based in the 'Performance Space' at Creek Creative -  well lit but cold despite heaters being full on, I dashed home at lunchtime to  put on some thermals!  Suitably warmed up I was ready to make a start! 

Using a palette knife and acrylic paint mixed with gloss gel for transparency I enjoyed painting the 'teeth' and used  a credit card for the rock structures. I obliterated the 'saucer eye' early on as it was in the wrong place



I then turned to the second canvas to work with another idea from my research - a plesiosaur paddle combined with the colours of a geological map of Lyme Regis. 

I'd got this far when it was my turn to have Ashley look at my work. He was very insightful, picking up on the ideas I wanted to represent and the quality  and variety of my mark making. Having 2 canvases  gives options for a variety of combinations  - we tried them all and the one below  was the  one with  most potential but after much discussion we both agreed that the 'plesiosaur' canvas wasn't working. 



There was just time to start obliterating !  This was the  state of progress at the end of day 1 . Working on 2 canvases at once reminded me of ' Reading a Paint surface' class  where you start responding to the paintings themselves. 


Day 2 :  I spent most of the morning working on the 'teeth' canvas, turning it  round and looking at it from different angles, painting slowly  to add the textures and layer of rock but leaving my initial marks intact. 

The second canvas  still wasn't working  and discussions  with Ashley focused on some examples from his introduction based on calligraphic paintings from China and Japan : sections from poems that were related but  carried out in a different style /scale   and the work of Liu Dan focusing on the details in rocks.  He suggested I work using a different style of brush marks as a contrast to the use of palette knife/ credit card 

 Returning to my drawings  and photos from the NHM  and thinking about the section of the book where Mary is buried in  a landslip ,  I painted over the canvas with a dark blue grey ( representing the blue lias rocks)  and  painted the 'croc' in white and yellow ochre glazes.
"The landslip had caused a churning up of rocks caught in an ooze of blue-grey clay. My eyes flicked over the stones and came to rest on a familiar shape ; a ring of overlapping bony scales the size of my fist. A croc's eye , it was like it was staring straight at me" 

The finished  pair of paintings 




While my larger paintings were drying or I was deciding  what to  do next, I worked on the smaller pair of canvases. I'd  sketched out  some ideas based on a   photo of Lyme Regis which combined close up of rocks with a more distant  view, offering the opportunity to work on each canvas in a different way : palette knife on RH, looser brushmarks on LH . I carried over some of the marks from one  canvas to the other so that they worked together and physically joined the 2 canvases together with metal plates. It creates a different feel to just working on one canvas. 


We finished clearing up mid afternoon on the second day to  have an extended  critique session. Each painting was placed on a white wall in turn  for review and comment  , the artist explaining briefly the book they'd chosen and  what themes they'd explored. During the 2 days it was fascinating to see how radically some paintings had changed (particularly 'Riddle of the Sands ' by Penny Watts which was huge , every time I looked it was different). Hazel's book was Moby Dick  and  we'd met up a few  weeks before to discuss our ideas. It was interesting to see how her work developed ( and how she used the side of the canvas as well as the surface) .  


While I'm still not sure whether either set of canvases  work as finished paintings, I enjoyed using a restrictive palette and exploring different strategies and mark-making with constructive guidance from Ashley.  My favourite sections  were  those painted first and last over the 2 days , I like the immediacy and distinctive marks of the brush ( above) and palette knife ( below). 'Freedom in Painting' indeed!  I've already booked for 'Black and White' in September. 












Monday, 6 February 2017

A Day Out in Bermondsey

 On Friday  I met up with my friend Sue  ( who I haven't seen for months)  in Bermondsey. It's not an area I've visited for a very long time, the focus for the visit was the exhibition at the White Cube of Anselm Kiefer, but there's  lots of interest in the area including  this  delightful community sculpture 'The Shared'  that Sue spotted down an alley!
 'Walhalla' was the theme and the title of much of the work in this Anselm Kiefer  exhibition and  so much lead was used that you had to read a health and safety notice  about it's toxicity  before you entered!  I'd thought the work in the exhibition at the RA in 2014 was monumental but  this was of an even larger magnitude.  
Although thought-provoking I didn't particularly like the lead beds (and walls!) and other installations  but loved the paintings: the scale, the colours, most of all the incredible textures and surfaces achieved with variety of unusual media used.

 The huge 'books' of photographs with  clay  were wonderful .
 The close up (below) of this painting  give an idea of  how layers are curled back from the surface.

 Interesting unusual composition with the darkest areas at the top.
 The use of luminous colours  (especially the blue) and the sheen of shellac   gave a lift to these paintings ( which are huge!)
 Sue and I had a discussion about how on earth he made  such huge pieces and how  large his studio could be - the answer is apparently 200 acres!

  After a delicious long lunch at the Fashion and Textile Museum, we    visited the London Glassblowing   gallery. This spectacular, sculptural piece ( with its' shadows)  by Jochen Ott  was my favourite  but   difficult  to choose  amongst so much gorgeous work!
 Finished up at the Eames gallery  where I'd noticed on my way past  there was  an exhibition on 'Discovering Samuel Palmer' whose work I've long admired ( the exhibition at the British Museum  was exceptional)   It turned out to be even more interesting  as  his prints formed the basis of  varied interpretations by  a range of contemporary printmakers, rather a contrast in scale to the Anselm Kiefer up the road!

Saturday, 6 December 2014

Artworks as triggers of memory

 
A day off work  to finally get to see the Anselm Kiefer exhibition at the Royal Academy ( fitting in a few more exhibitions at National Gallery and National Portrait Gallery for good measure). Amazing, monumental and thought provoking. After starting with a display of books, the 'Attic' paintings are powerful  and I love how the wood grain effects are continued throughout his work - the woodblock prints used in the  'forest' of the last room (below) were fantastic. 
The materials he uses are diverse : straw, mud, sunflowers and seeds   and they have meaning for him. The way he uses lead is fascinating - I particularly liked the books 'under the linden '  and large pieces studded with diamonds were just magical in how they caught the light.
The pieces that I spent most time with were in room 5: ' sands from the urns' (below) based on the clay brick ziggurats of Mesopotamia. Hand -pressed mud was used for  clay tablets and bricks and he is quoted as perceiving " a secret connection between writing and building"  wondering whether bricks , like tablet, could hold memories of people , of events, of time.
I was reminded of our visit to Syria  almost exactly ten years ago,   visiting Ugarit , Dura Europas and Mari , in awe of being somewhere where the ancient past is tangible  and hugely saddened by  what's happening there now .  
 
 Ugarit
 Euphrates

Mari
 
Ziggurats of Pastries in Hama
 
After  treating myself to a delicious lunch at Savoir Faire, I headed off to  the National Gallery  to see the 2  very different seascape inspired displays.   I've long admired the dramatic  paintings of  Maggi Hambling  but I was rather disappointed with these 'Walls of Water' .  Lots of lively marks and use of paint but   for me  all pattern and lacking in content and composition.  Her  monotypes on this theme  like they might be more interesting
 
 
 
Whereas the paintings by Peder Balke  were far more inspiring especially the smaller sketches. I liked how often the waves were suggested quite simply  - it looked like he might have used a painting knife in a similar way as  demonstrated by Susan Gray on my Slapton painting courses.  

On my way home I popped into the National Portrait Gallery  next door to see the Grayson Perry exhibit ' Who are you' .
You could hardly get near his  'self portrait'  City of Days  for people staring intently and giggling. Complex, funny and profound,  like the Reith lectures and  'Tomb of the The Unknown Artist'.
The 'comfort blanket' a tapestry  in the shape of a bank note   was witty but the most powerful pieces were the ceramics  displayed among the Gallery's collections

I spent a lot of time in front of the  beautiful  yet disturbing 'Memory jar', representing memories torn into shards through Alzheimers.