So, the real new experiment is having some technical difficulties making it's way onto my computer (yes, the performance). In the meantime, the second chair is in construction stages.
This is T.A.'s grandmother's dining room chair. This is not really the reason I chose this chair, although it does fit nicely within the faux/actual histories of furniture in period rooms. I liked the general shape of the chair and I hope to do something particularly interesting with the woven seat (maybe woven paper doesn't sound that interesting, but it will look cool). It is much more rectilinear than the Windsor chair with a neat shaped back.
This photograph shows the paper I prepared to construct the chair. I wanted to simulate a woodgrain pattern and really just had fun swishing large brushes saturated with sumi ink around on a huge piece of paper. It was nice to paint something (extreme sarcasm). I tried to get a variety of marks that look like fine wood grain in varying shades. I have since cut this paper up and came up with...
After a mocking suggestion from Matt that I begin with the legs of the chair, I realized that this was perfectly logical. I also realized that my first attempt to build a stable, free standing object out of paper starting at the top was indicative of my lack of experience building tri-dimensionally. This lack of experience should have prompted some sort of logical voice in my head that perhaps three dimensions are one too many for me to handle, but it didn't. In fact, it was emotionally fulfilling to see my first chair slide slowly groundwards as my new legs with claw feet stood upright by themselves. Hooray for trial and error!
I think the ink looks really great. It is more fun to work with, trying to match up the dark and lights and make them fade or end abruptly. The balls that the claw feet are grasping are particularly nice; all dark paper and the claws themselves are light. The effects of the inked paper help simulate shadow and texture, but also allude to drawing and thus to painting. This is really exciting. This paper is not gessoed like the first chair's paper and is more manageable to work with and also allows for more finesse. The feathered brush marks are really effective in some areas and the the pooling and dripping ink looks great too. I would like to play with more texture next time, perhaps more carefully faux-painted. I also want to look out for chairs that have details such as the claw feet that sculpturally translate in this process (this won't happen until I'm back in Provincetown). I was thinking that I would like to borrow furniture from Ptown FAWC personalities. The first person I have in mind is this wonderful artist, Pat, who has a great collection of stuff and is someone I would like to get to know better. I would especially like to borrow something from Salvatore, one of my favorite FAWCers.
I am looking forward to bringing this newfound part of my studio practice back to Provincetown with me. It will be nice to have something to work on that is so different from painting (I can stay clean and I won't have to change my clothes!). I am interested to makes some more paintings of singular objects and see how these interact with the chairs. I've tried to do drawing and painting simultaneously and it never really worked for me, but these are so different that I am optimistic.
I probably won't get to post again until I have left Vermont. I can't wait to share parts of the performance Matt recorded for me. It was nerve-racking, but ultimately successful. Soon!
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Saturday, September 13, 2008
"Much Anticipated Initial Post Delayed by Travel and Film Schedule!"
What a terrible excuse!
The Seven Below Arts Initiative outside of Burlington, Vermont has been the perfect grounds for sowing the seeds of this project. It wasn't until I arrived that I realized how inappropriate the studios were for painting. Beautiful hand-planed wooden floors and one hundred year old timber framed and exposed wooden walls should not fall victim to paint spills. (It was also a little too dark in the room to see what colors I was mixing.)
After a failed experiment, which "self-destructed" before it could be documented, in a new approach to make paintings, I realized that this was the perfect opportunity to try some radical things that moved away from painting.
The last round of applications (January of this year) got me thinking about creating my own period rooms instead of simply painting rooms I have visited. What a wonderful opportunity to use the enormous roll of Lenox100 paper I bought while still making large charcoal drawings in school! So glad I've been lugging it around with me everywhere...
Anyway, here are the results:
This is the full chair. Jimi disagreed with me; he thought it was a success. What a positive guy!
This ain't no trick photography either. This thing is wonky.
This is the chair, from my eye level. Yes, I'm leering:
And some blurry detail shots:
What Craft!
What did I learn from doing this?
Sometimes, I need a break from painting. I really enjoyed working with my hands in this different way. It reminded me a lot of Foundation year at school in terms of the materials. It was also great to make something in such a repetitive way. There was the idea and the execution. Two steps (sort of). It seemed a lot more "pure" than any of the paintings I made in Providence this summer. I was trying to intellectualize too much with the paint. While I don't think that this chair is a total success, it feels fresh and open.
I wonder how I would install a room full of furniture made similarly and also how the paper furniture would interact with my paintings. I think the chair relates best to the paintings I have made of singular objects, such as the door painted on a door or the painting of the mirror with the ornate frame (which now hangs in New Hyde Park, Long Island in the reception area of a New York Life Insurance Company Office).
I don't know how interested I am in inventing new rooms and furniture as I felt like I used to be. The shitty paper copy of the Windsor chair in my studio fits more in the context of adoration and desire. The premise, I think, is that I appreciated the Windsor chair so much that I couldn't help but make a copy of it for myself. I couldn't afford to buy one and I don't have the skills to make an actual copy, so this is the best I could do. I t is also a tribute to the chair. It also obviously talks about the simulation of period rooms and the artisan's role in making them, i.e. remaking an object from a photograph of the original room that no longer exists and placing it amongst original objects from the room.
What else did I take away from this experience? I did get this wonderful scar from my glue gun- perfect donut shape. Image to come soon...
The Seven Below Arts Initiative outside of Burlington, Vermont has been the perfect grounds for sowing the seeds of this project. It wasn't until I arrived that I realized how inappropriate the studios were for painting. Beautiful hand-planed wooden floors and one hundred year old timber framed and exposed wooden walls should not fall victim to paint spills. (It was also a little too dark in the room to see what colors I was mixing.)
After a failed experiment, which "self-destructed" before it could be documented, in a new approach to make paintings, I realized that this was the perfect opportunity to try some radical things that moved away from painting.
The last round of applications (January of this year) got me thinking about creating my own period rooms instead of simply painting rooms I have visited. What a wonderful opportunity to use the enormous roll of Lenox100 paper I bought while still making large charcoal drawings in school! So glad I've been lugging it around with me everywhere...
Anyway, here are the results:
This is the full chair. Jimi disagreed with me; he thought it was a success. What a positive guy!
This ain't no trick photography either. This thing is wonky.
This is the chair, from my eye level. Yes, I'm leering:
And some blurry detail shots:
What Craft!
What did I learn from doing this?
Sometimes, I need a break from painting. I really enjoyed working with my hands in this different way. It reminded me a lot of Foundation year at school in terms of the materials. It was also great to make something in such a repetitive way. There was the idea and the execution. Two steps (sort of). It seemed a lot more "pure" than any of the paintings I made in Providence this summer. I was trying to intellectualize too much with the paint. While I don't think that this chair is a total success, it feels fresh and open.
I wonder how I would install a room full of furniture made similarly and also how the paper furniture would interact with my paintings. I think the chair relates best to the paintings I have made of singular objects, such as the door painted on a door or the painting of the mirror with the ornate frame (which now hangs in New Hyde Park, Long Island in the reception area of a New York Life Insurance Company Office).
I don't know how interested I am in inventing new rooms and furniture as I felt like I used to be. The shitty paper copy of the Windsor chair in my studio fits more in the context of adoration and desire. The premise, I think, is that I appreciated the Windsor chair so much that I couldn't help but make a copy of it for myself. I couldn't afford to buy one and I don't have the skills to make an actual copy, so this is the best I could do. I t is also a tribute to the chair. It also obviously talks about the simulation of period rooms and the artisan's role in making them, i.e. remaking an object from a photograph of the original room that no longer exists and placing it amongst original objects from the room.
What else did I take away from this experience? I did get this wonderful scar from my glue gun- perfect donut shape. Image to come soon...
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