Tag: Marabeth Quin

  • Inspired by online courses

    I recently completed a course by Marabeth Quinn on mixed media collage and intuitive landscape. I’m continuing to use the practice exercise she taught, and find it helpful for focusing in on what I love. Some of my work from the last few days is below.

    That set of 24 small pieces on paper inspired me to grab a medium sized wooden panel I’d worked on as part of a series, that didn’t fit with the rest in the end, and rework it. It probably isn’t finished yet, but I’m sitting with it for a few days to see how it feels. Below shows before and after.

  • Small concertina

    Small concertina

    Over the weekend I’ve been working on a small handmade concertina journal, with just 4 pages each side. It’s not finished yet, but my work is clearly less controlled thanks to the Marabeth Quin course I’ve been doing.

    I’ve used paint, ink, collage, NeoColour II and pencil. It’s dying overnight and I’ll keep working on it tomorrow after work.

  • Mark making & Cy Twombly

    I have always loved the work of Cy Twombly, with his expressive gestural mark making and scratchy lines. It’s not what I create, but I love seeing it. Pen Kirk and I were talking about that the other day, that for many artists what we like to view is not the same as what we create. Which is not to say we don’t love what we create! Anyway…

    I’ve been doing a course from Marabeth Quin called Mixed Media Collage and the Intuitive Landscape. I’ve been working on the 4 larger pieces from the second part of the course and I’m struggling to finish them so have put them aside.

    Last night I grabbed an art journal and was playing with layering and mark making … and boom! Suddenly there was a combination of my old mark making, which I’d lost at some point, and a new visual language that’s emerging thanks to the course. I can see hints of Cy Twombly and the Abstract Expressionists and that makes me happy.

  • Scaling up

    Working in a Gordon Harris mixed media sketchbook, I completed the evaluation exercise on the 12 small works. It was interesting to step back and consider favourite elements, what surprised me, what problems I experienced.

    Project 2 in the course is 4 large works, using the same techniques; layers of paint, collage and mark making. I’m using the same three paint colours, plus black and white, and the same range of collage materials.

    I’ve done the first few layers and am finding scaling up tricky. I keep using tiny bits of collage, which worked well on the original small paintings, but look fussy at this scale. I know the key is to just keep going, but I’m also going to make a deliberate effort to work bigger.

    Straight after I took the tape off and separated them.
    A close up of the initial layers.
    A few more layers in.
    Another one, at the same general stage.
  • A love of orange

    A love of orange

    Part of the course I’m doing involves looking, really looking, at what you’re creating. What do you love, what sparks joy? Find the things you love and do more of that.

    I’m onto the second part of the course where, instead of working on 12 small paintings, you work on 4 larger ones. I was sitting at my desk contemplating them and there it was … orange.

    I added some more orange to the works, then made a stack of tissue with varying marks ranging from light to dark shades of orange.

    Then my memory clicked in. When I did my Advanced Diploma of Art & Creativity almost 20 years ago we spent a term investigating colour as a material. I chose orange. I remember going to Gordon Harris Art Supplies and the French Art Shop and buying everything orange they had – ink, paint, crayon, pencil, pen, pastel.

    I commented to my tutor, Peter A, that I wasn’t sleeping well. He asked me what orange stood for. Warmth, autumn, sunsets. Yes, but what else? Fire, danger, warning. Peter laughed and said the reason I wasn’t sleeping was because my brain was in constant alert mode.

    Back to the present. I’m excited to have rediscovered my love of orange, and to see what it does for my landscapes.