Saturday, November 14, 2009

Rock Paper Scissors 3rd Show
3rd Floor Student Gallery McLaurin Hall, Winthrop U, Rock Hill
Opening 11/23 @ 6:30 Show Runs 11/23-12/7



















Kitchen Art - to explore the medium and to create something for this show at the school.  I actually enjoyed the process because I practice'd drawing lines into the encaustic and then trying different methods to create a variety of line.  I love the layers reacting to each other.  I was not so pleased with the scripting of text but I think if I carved rather than wrote the text I may get a better end result.  I am not sure about adding text/typography into my encaustic artwork like I have with my collages....need to think of how to do it

Please come to this show too - in order of priority, would love it if you looked at the first show at the Loading Dock, it runs until 12/7 and is the first of the series of Holocaust work; the drawing at CCDS is fun; this one is just an encaustic sample but fun as well.  CCDS show runs until 12/13 and this one runs until 12/7.  Constructive comments always welcome.

Rock Paper Scissors 2nd Show
Charlotte Country Day School, Charlotte NC
Opening 11/20 @ 3:30 & 6 pm
Show runs 11/29 - 12/13















I framed this and hung this drawing from my graduate drawing class this summer.  It is a type of technique adapted from David Dodge Lewis.  I want to explore this in my drawing.  I hope to do more of this and work with the figure with an instructor, S. Simmons at the school who works with the figure from the inside as well as the outside...

Anyway I thought it was the strongest of the half dozen drawings and I wanted to be able to contribute to the shows though trying to meet this (these) requirement(s).  I have to admit even though I am being driven crazy painting for the shows instead of painting for me...I am enjoying working with the other grad students and we are getting to know each other - and it is outside of being stuffed in our studios - as well as knowing the instructors who are coming to see it.

COME TO THE OPENING!  WE WILL HAVE TWO: 1ST  ON FRIDAY 11/20 @ 3:30 PM & 2ND @ 6 PM - Refreshments will be provided

Rock Paper Scissors 1st Show
Loading Dock (Gallery Up) Rock Hill, SC
Opening 11/12 @ 6 pm
Show runs 11/12 - 12/7

Working steadily - actually like a crazed person - I finished (mostly) the diptych Panim el Panim (Hester Panim & Neirat Panim). I spent three hours on Thursday wiring each of the 18 panels and then another 2.5 hours hanging each panel......  I am happy with how it looks having polished each panel as I hung it.  I think some distance away from it for the next few weeks of the show will help me reevaluate what I need to do to finish it (in addition to completing the edges which I did not have time to do before the show).  I was pleasantly surprised by the commentary I overheard, particularly that viewers were connecting the work to their own memories and experience, though without understanding the label context - they certainly aren't connecting it to my generational memory experience.  It is the first of a long journey and I am not going to get there overnight.....picture of it actually hanging forthcoming (love that word)!

Rock Paper Scissors Show















I haven't been writing for awhile - working, working, working - we MFA grad students have been putting together three shows - the first launched Thursday, we hung the second yesterday, which opens next Friday 11/20, hang the third, 11/21, and it opens Monday 11/23. Posting flyer. Pictures forthcoming and more dialogue.....

1st Encaustic Painting

1st Encaustic Painting
Gesso'd Birch Panels

Lacuna

This is the first beginning steps into encaustic painting.  While waiting for supplies, I set up the grad studio at Winthrop, and built my worktable (my husband was impressed).  It took a couple of weeks for the materials used in encaustic painting (refined beeswax, damar resin, carnuba wax AND controlled heating elements, etc).  While waiting I built my first concept for the painting, nine (9) approx 13x13" birch plywood panels with white pine 1x3"frames.  This picture shows the panels, six (6) of them gesso'd with encaustic gesso and three (3) left plain birch - all of them fused with a double layer of pure beeswax to set the foundation for the painting.

I actually drew the random graphite marks prior to fusing the first layers of beeswax - that's what it looked like below.

Lacuna

Lacuna
Random Marks

Next Step

Next Step
Adding Tone

Next Step

Next Step
Breaking Up the Tone

Cutting in a tone

At this stage, I painted on two coats of encaustic medium w/out pigment and fused them on to the surface of the panels.  I then cut in straight lines which I taped off on one side and then rubbed a blended oil hue (greyish blue-green) into the lines and wiped off, covered with another layer of encaustic medium and fused.

While fusing I began to break up the layers so that I could break up the oil lines and have them float between the layers of clear encaustic paint.  This "tone" gave me a platform to begin to work with the painting concept.

Hester Panim

Here is where I am two weeks later.  I am into the fifth or sixth layer and now I am working back into the surface of the piece. Part of my artistic journey from painterly oil paintings and collages has been obsession with working the surface of the art piece, constructing and deconstructing.  This medium has already given me great joy in its flexibility and versatility in working with the surface as a way to express my narrative.  In addition I am finding that I want to move the surface in and out of three dimensional space which works well with the concept of memory.  


I began to build boxes that I affixed to the panels of wax.  The panels are broken up like memory yet built from a stable shape (equal square panels).  The internal boxes are irregular attached/unattached to the wax memory. They provide me an opportunity to increase the ethereal effect.

Lacuna

Lacuna
Hester Panim