One of the tasks I set myself whilst we were in Scotland was to participate in an online course. I am never sure how much art I will get to make; how hard or how easy it will be to do so, so as an insurance policy I set the time aside to do a course with Sally Tyrie through Fibre Arts Take Two called Visual Narratives - Print, Paint, Stitch.
I will be doing this course for much longer than our time here, but it has been so good. I really struggled at first as I couldn't get into the groove, I saw a lot of people on the course diving in and doing amazing things and was feeling somewhat out of my depth, and I realised I was in a remote locality with little or no access to all the materials required and only a dinky little travel printer! But I gradually sorted my head out and worked out how to make it work.
Working within constraints.
The calligraphic layering I played with here was part of the course.
I really enjoy working with the idea of place and chose as my starting point the fishing net drying poles and the fishing sheds in the village. I have photographed those poles so many times, in so many moods and thought they would offer me somewhere to begin.
One of the main ideas in the course is to not make a direct translation of a place, but rather to try and abstract it, and move away from the obvious, creating a sense of place, hinting at the essence of it, without being able to say - oh look, that's an Armadale fishing net drying pole kind of thing.
And so I began. I have taken and used sooooooo many photos! And learned a lot of techniques of modifying and editing.
And printing in black and white on fine tissuey papers was a thing. And the printer was not fond of the light paper! Altho as ever, the mistake became interesting, with the judder of the paper the image broke up a bit.
All in all I have printed and created a lot of papers for use in collages.
Starting small in my journal.
I wanted to try some 'real' work on a small scale - everything I work with here is small - and chose some luggage tags as a starting point.
I am not great at this collage thing. My brain keeps interfering with itself and I find it hard to let go and just respond to materials. I also find it hard to rip things up or cut them and so I have had to work at that.
thank for walking us through your thoughts and actions ... how such a small bit made such a big difference
ReplyDeletethe instructors and course offerings are quite amazing ... I'm tempted, but frozen with hmmm, not fear exactly ... but some kindred feeling of reluctance ... I will wait and watch and wonder as you work your way through (ha, quite a bit of alliteration that)
My sense is that the courses are rich. They are really professionally put together and filmed, and whilst each tutor will no doubt have their quirks, the ability to watch, pause, take notes, replay and push through to see what happens next is really good. I also think that there is great depth here if you can sit with the discomfort and push through. Would highly recommend. The course FaceBook group is a wealth of information, sharing and art in the making - an absolute honour to observe. If you start with the Friday Feature Artist series, you might find a kindred spirit whose course you would like to do! Enjoy the pondering...xF
DeleteI enrolled at the first offering so have been working my way through it for some time now. My work has been set aside for long periods because of life's other needs but I do love the slow pace I'm taking, constantly reflecting on what I'm thinking, the results from various trials and ways of combining things. The FATT is brilliant and well-laid out but for me the real value comes with the doing, the time and effort put in. I've learned and discovered so much about what i want to do, what appeals etc. and haven't yet done a collagraph or photolitho as I'm still working with photos and collage, drawing inspiration from them, gathering ideas to try - my plan is to spend the winter months on those modules. As you say though, the beauty is in taking your time...
ReplyDeleteSo happy to read this! I find the slow absorption, practice, application and testing really useful. DI didn't head to photo litho as I had no access to a laser printer in Scotland, and its not even easy to get access here, but I will give it a go at some point. I like that you can skip through the ones that won't work for you and continue on. The course has given me so much confidence to work with images, which has previously been hard for me. Really excellent value I think - keep enjoying!
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