Monday, May 30, 2011

flowers, foliage

So I almost completely white-washed the shark.  Couldn't stand it anymore.  Left some bits behind, but who knows, wouldn't be surprised if I obscured them, too.  As I told Rachel on the phone today (discussing upcoming Mag Hags II stuff), I'm covering up at least 70% of the work I'm doing these days.  Layers.  


Crappy pic of the diptych in progress: top half flowers, bottom half foliage/ex-shark.  Foliage and flowers: I love you, I need you.  Told Rachel I was working on a big diptych.  She said she hadn't heard that word in a while. Diptych.  Diptych.  Diptych.  This one's huge.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Shark Attack

OK, this is like 90% done.  Throw in a couple swimmers, some more blood, a couple beach balls, and I'll be golden.  What I called "ugly bastard" in the last post is now, for obvious reasons, "Shark Attack."  I can't believe I even hesitated to glue the shark down.  

  
Still totally chaotic, but perhaps the shark excuses the chaos?

Monday, May 16, 2011

Ugly Bastard

Rain, chronic rain.  I seem to be remiss this morning.  Last night, I was anti-social.  Went upstairs to my attic studio and set down the ground work (on half inch plywood) of this new piece.  Had been going through old work, bad old work, earlier in the day—been carrying a box of it around with me for too long—and found some really terrible but really large marker drawings and pen doodles.  I pulled out the ones I wanted and laid them on my bed.  Round nine p.m. I took them upstairs and started gluing them down to make this ugly bastard:

 
This morning, in the half-light of my room, I squinted at it on and off for about ten minutes.  Squinting allowed me to see only its main shapes, blurred the mess of details, told me where I need more contrast, more white, more black.  The main shapes are in.  It could go in any direction and probably will.  I post it now because it looks like a turd now.  But I am one hundred percent certain that it will clean up beautifully.  Mark my words.  Watch for the conclusion.  Give me about ten days and I'll make her shine. 

Sunday, May 15, 2011

technique book

At some point I started naming the different collage techniques I've learned, invented, used.  For example, one of them is The Haircut.  This is when you trim someone's hair or head so that it deliberately looks ridiculous, cool, wrong.  Another technique is The Deliberate Reversal.  This is when, for instance, you cut out a crab, a lamp, a bed, and then, deliberately flip the image over and use whatever happens to be on the backside of the page.  I don't often use this move, though I do use a version of it for which I don't currently have a name.  Finally, for this post at least, there is The Pop-Up.  This is when, for instance, you take your X-Acto knife and trim along the crest of a hill, for instance, though it could be anything, and slide another image into that cut so that the image you slid in there appears to be Popping Up from behind the hill.  


I used a cousin of The Haircut, The Rough Trim, in this collage.  Notice the bathing dude in the bottom left-hand corner.  Notice how rougly I trimmed around him.  Anyway, I want to compile all the different techniques/moves and couple each one with an example of the move, and make a book out of it.  For what reason?  Dunno.

Monday, May 9, 2011

phase three

This one has been a real wrestling match: Monday I'm on top, Tuesday Collage is on top.  Wednesday I'm on top; Thursday Collage is on top.  It's like unsure humping between dogs.  Which dog will successfully mount the other dog?  Collage or boy?  Except here there are about 100 dogs and none of them are all that coordinated.  Still, sometimes an upper hand does get taken.  Here's me, lounging at the end of a session, thinking I was on top.


It's good to end a session feeling like a successful dog/artist.  Much better than leaving the studio with that bent head feeling.  The collage studio (at least mine) can be a mind boggling place, what with all the scraps everywhere and all the impossible ideas swirling around, some of which are actually on the collage and others of which are possibly slated to be on it.  Basically, this work can really exhaust a guy.  


So this is almost done.  For the one or two of you who are following my humping progress, this is the last phase that will appear on this blog.  From here on out it's just me and this collage.  A couple days more work and it'll be done.  It has to be.  I'm done with it.

Saturday, May 7, 2011

phase two

This one got away from me.  My first round of gluing images down, I started making bold moves, strong compositional moves, moves that were not in the plan because plans change when you encounter the material.  Images from a magazine are not like paint, they're not plastic, you cannot stretch them or make them bigger, you can only make them smaller.  Long story short, when two hundred scraps are sitting in front of you, sometimes unexpected combinations reveal themselves...and you go with it.  So I made some unplanned moves, moves I didn't really understand, and decided I could deal with the problems they created later.  


At this point it was quite chaotic, so I continued to block out the "noisier" areas.  (No pic available.)  Even so, I am starting to realize that this collage will always be chaotic, that chaotic is what this one is, and that to undo that would essentially require me to completely re-cover all the work I've already done.  Oh well.  Back to the drawing board. 

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

phase one

Today is the first day of my new life.  I have been waiting nine months to work on this collage.  The desktop collage (previous post) was a warm-up for this one.  Right now I am methodically going through all of my National Geographic magazines, selecting potential images, my thoughts slowly warming up.


So, looking at this mess, and reflecting on the desktop collage, I realized that this piece will need a "sturdy" composition, some systematic architecture, some organized sub-structure to lend some control to a surface that will ultimately be chaotic.  The solution I am leaning toward is small squares, perhaps three inch squares.  Each of them, then will be its own composition within the larger composition.  So goes my thinking at this point anyway...