Tuesday, October 11, 2011

JACK DAVIDSON

Hey! mister sky, oil on canvas, 116 x 73 cm, 2011




What are you working on in your studio right now?

At the moment I’ve just finished preparing for a show at Pulliam Gallery in Portland, Oregon, which opens on the 2nd of November. I always find these moments difficult. After working with the show in mind for the last couple of months I find the rupture and the emptiness of the studio challenging. The options are to do nothing until I come back from the trip, or to start something so it’s waiting for me when I get back. The first choice often means simply delaying getting back into the swing of things, and the second means the work I started before I left can sometimes get sacrificed on my return.




Can you describe your working routine?

First thing I do in the morning is make coffee and take it through to the studio. I potter about, read the paper, and look at what I did the previous day. It’s that moment - which we probably all share - when things either look better or worse than I thought they were when I switched out the light the day before; when I can resume the dialogue under a different light and from a fresh point of view. Then I go for a swim, run errands, cook lunch, interact with the world. I live on Spanish time so my working afternoon in the studio is from around 4pm until 9pm. That’s when I paint.






of elephants & hares-home, dry-run installation



Can you describe your studio space and how, if at all, that affects your work?

Lately my studio tends to expand and contract. I always have two connecting rooms in our apartment, one for working and the other for storage and clean-up. However my partner and I also run out of the apartment a sporadic project space called JiM Contemporani. When there’s not a show up, which is most of the time, I move into some of the space used for that. This allows me room to paint and work on paper at the same time, to be able to move the paintings around to see them in a different environment, and to photograph work easily.

For many years I was a night painter so the issue of natural light was never even entertained. At one time in the early 90’s I shared a studio in the old meat-packing district in New York which had previously been used as a giant, walk-in refrigerator for sides of beef and so obviously had no windows at all. Nowadays I’m very privileged. I’m on the fifth floor with a balcony which gives onto one of the main streets in Barcelona. My painting room is about 4 x 5 meters with 3.25 metre ceilings.

I’ve had much bigger spaces and also much smaller ones. I’ve done small work in the big ones and big work in the small ones. I’ve lived in my studio and I’ve had my studio separate from where I live. What I’ve never thought important was to find and fit out the perfect studio before I could work. For me the container has always been of less importance than the content.





I was in love with the place, oil on canvas, 81 x 100 cm, 2011




Tell me about your process, where things begin, how they evolve etc.

When pushed to describe what I do I call myself an abstract painter, but it’s a tag I’m fairly ambivalent about. Everything I do comes from some external source. I’ll jot down a note to myself or take a bad photograph with my mobile phone just to remind me of what I saw. It can be an object, or a play of light, or a colour combination. That then is the basis of the painting. In terms of drawing and composition I really don’t change things much after that, in matters of colour a lot can happen.

I used to work in series but the series would dry up and I would have to find something else, and eventually it felt forced and false. And it was slow, and I’m a slow worker to begin with. About sixteen years ago I was finally able to move away from the series, and started making paintings which each had their own internal logic and autonomy. But I was still inventing the painting at the surface and I found that an incredibly painful way to work, and it was discouraging too. Also, I could no longer sustain belief in the notion of everything coming from the inside. The next step from there, and I’m not altogether sure how or when it came about, was to start using outside input. In the same way that I often use song lyrics as titles, using images I see around me kind of lets me off the hook. I may choose them, but ultimately I’m not responsible for them.






studio



What are you having the most trouble resolving?

I don’t like my work to be painterly, which doesn’t mean that I deny one of the basic characteristics of the medium. I just don’t find interesting a painting made from a series of painterly gestures which ergo signify an abstract painting. Moreover, I have very little facility for paint. I don’t have this huge bag of painterly tricks that I can draw from. As I said earlier, the composition of the image doesn’t change much from the beginning so I don’t get all those layers of paint, and wipe-outs, and palimpsests. So the problem for me is not letting the work end up too graphic, because I don’t want it to be that either. It’s a thin line. I have to just let the paint be paint, which sounds simplistic and stupid, but I find it hard.




Do you experiment with different materials a lot or do you prefer to work within certain parameters?

I certainly used to, and often such experiments would be dictated by economic reasons. When I first moved to New York in the mid 80’s and was working as an art- mover, for a while I painted on old wrapping blankets. I also used industrial materials such as enamel paint or deck varnish. I’ve painted on wood panels. I used raw powdered pigment for a while, lumpily suspended in an oil medium. I used to mix gesso and liquid pigment in a blender to achieve a coloured ground where the colour really went deep into the surface. I twice tried to switch to acrylics. But I’ve always gone back to oil paint on canvas or linen. I like the give of the fabric. And I love the smell of the paint - since the first day I walked into art school. On paper I’ve worked for the last five years or so almost exclusively with gouache.





Thirsty´s calling, oil on linen, 65 x 54 cm, 2011



What does the future hold for this work?

That I go into the studio tomorrow and do something. I suffered a lot from bad discipline in the past and it took me a long time to figure out that if I wasn’t in the studio doing the work it certainly wasn’t going to do itself.




Is there anything else you would like to add?
Thanks for asking me to participate in this. It’s always good to have to sit down and think about what I actually do, and why, and it’s been fun too. Also I’d like to say that while everything I’ve said is true today, happily, tomorrow it could all be different.





 

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

ANTHONY WHITE

Fugitive, oil on linen, 51 x 51cm, 2010



 
What are you working on in your studio right now?

I´m working on a large commission for a filmmaker from New York. The painting has taken about six months and there are many many layers. The painting is 100x 150cms and weighs around 40 kgs at the moment. It is really annoying but at the moment I feel like developing the surface and physicality of paint as much as possible. They are sort of turning into dense relief sort of paintings.



Can you describe your working routine?

My work routine starts like this: I work on the painting first, that has the least amount to lose. I make huge amounts of changes trying to find the right relationship between colour and power of gesture. I scrape off large areas of paint on the floor if it’s not working and I keep these scrapings often applying them to other works. This generally takes 4-5hours.
I clean up a bit from the previous day. Sometimes this turns into procrastination as well, so you have to watch yourself. I sit down and think about things and write in a stream of consciousness style about where the work is, and then I get back into it. I often work on 15 paintings at once and recently alternating between works on paper tacked to the wall. After this I’m stretching canvases, and cleaning up and paperwork editing images in photoshop etc.










Can you describe your studio space and how, if at all, that affects your work?
I guess the bigger the space the longer for the creative process of where I make a mess and then create work, then clean up…make work…There seems to be a cycle.I like bigger spaces as it lets me be able to leave all the work hanging on the wall. I detest easels I like to see the work as flat as possible against the wall. Sometimes I will also let the work migrate to the floor and work above it.




Reproduction, oil/collage on handmade paper, 80 x 60 cm, 2011




Tell me about your process, where things begin, how they evolve etc.

My process annoys me. I want to be rational and logical and measurable and certain about things. But the way I am, I work in many different directions at once. Which means lots of mess and lots of things unfinished. I jump between drawings collage and painting to gain insight into each different working method.
When a piece isn’t working then I turn it to the wall and work on something else. I think the moment you enter the studio you see the work with “fresh eyes” and you are able to discern clearly the changes that need to be made. I need to not see a work for some time to be able to resolve the work











What are you having the most trouble resolving?

When is enough enough? Its hard to edit your work and be ruthless in the edit of the image. I mean to be as concise as possible  it is quite difficult.



Do you experiment with different materials a lot or do you prefer to work within certain parameters?

At the moment I’m trying to set parameters in every aspect because my process is really spontaneous. Quite often Ill find myself taking home things off the street, I think objects speak to you at certain times and we as artists have an obligation to listen to that. But we also need to be project driven and not all over the place sort of avoiding what I was meant to be doing. So I would I work better with parameters but sometimes I think you need to bend/break the parameters as well.






Regime, oil on linen, 150 x 120cm, 2011




What does the future hold for this work?

I think I haven’t really found whether I’m an abstractionist or more representationally inclined. I’m think the work feels like its on track but not at it’s final destination. In fact I’m not sure if it ever really gets to a final destination, but at the moment I’m content with the progress of the work



Is there anything else you would like to add?

Yes just an unashamed plug…. It's with great pleasure I invite you to the opening night of Scratching the Surfacat Iain Dawson Gallery. The show opens on the 6th of October.I will be in Sydney for the opening.The works in this exhibition were made on residency at The Leipzig International Art Programme, Germany.




Friday, September 30, 2011

JULIE TORRES

The ghost in you, acrylic on paper, 9 x 12", 2011




What are you working on in your studio right now?

At the moment I'm interested in making large, interconnecting paintings that consist of many small pieces, like a puzzle. It forces me to think about each separate piece in different ways- how they work individually, how they fit together, what they bring to the whole work. I'd like to get up to a hundred 9x12 sheets-- The furthest I've gotten is 55 sheets.




Can you describe your working routine?

I have a full-time job, so my strategy is to paint every waking minute on Saturdays and Sundays. Since time is limited, I embrace techniques that immediately alter my thinking- such as Live Painting and Marathon Painting. Throwing myself into an exposed, vulnerable state is very intense and also wonderful. It helps break down my walls, remove me from routine, and free me up to work loosely. I find that I'm inspired and energized by the uncertainty and discomfort that come with painting for very long periods, or in strange places- like out on the sidewalk.







work in progress




Can you describe your studio space and how, if at all, that affects your work?

I have a one-bedroom apartment in Williamsburg, and I use my living room as my studio. It's great! I have plenty of light and space, and I can just wake up and start. It allows me to be very free, spontaneous, and extremely focused at the same time. I tend to paint for long stretches- between 8 and 12 hours. I love the immediacy and proximity, and I think it helps to keep my work fresh. I never have to push myself out of the door, I can just squirrel away in my studio! Laziness works for me!






12 hour painting marathon with Austin Thomas
read full artice on Two Coats of paint




Tell me about your process, where things begin, how they evolve etc.

These days I mostly work on the floor, with acrylic on paper. I make a huge mess and try not to edit anything I do as I do it. If I have a good idea, I usually don't know about it till after it's done and on the paper. After a full day, I look back over everything and usually I can find a few good ones in there. Sometimes not. I eventually paint over the bad ones. I love working on paper because it allows me to burn through tons of paintings and follow my impulses. I love to be fast, loose, open and reckless. Painting is the only place I know how do that.

 



 

Rocks, acrylic on paper, 18 x 24", 2011


Stones, acrylic on paper, 18 x 24", 2011



What are you having the most trouble resolving?

I'm in a pretty decent groove right now- making work, exploring new ideas, seeing lots of shows and hustling my tuchus off! My main issue is trying to find time for my personal life somewhere between being an artist and making a living. I'm having a very selfish period of my life right now and it's kind of awesome. I just wish it wasn't quite SO selfish.




Do you experiment with different materials a lot or do you prefer to work within certain parameters?

I like to use materials I know I can trust. Sometimes painting feels like running across a tightrope. If I know the tightrope is reliable, I can really move.













What does the future hold for this work?

I'm very excited to expand upon marathon art-making, and I've organized a group of my favorite artists to do just that in the upcoming event, 48 HRS. Several of us will stay in a Williamsburg gallery for a full 48 hours- creating new work, sleeping over in the space- and opening the show up to the public for the final 12 hours. Here are the details! 48 HRS, Opening Sunday, October 23, 12 noon to midnight, Camel Art Space, 722 Metropolitan Avenue at Graham Avenue, 2nd Floor. www.camelartspace.com




Is there anything else you would like to add?

Thank you, Valerie, for including me on your wonderful site! I refer to it often for a burst of inspiration, and to see 'what's going on' out there. I also want to thank artist Geddes Levenson for introducing me to 12-hour painting marathons, and the brilliant Austin Thomas who inspires me nearly every day.



Morphed acrylic on paper, 12 x 18", 2011







Sunday, September 25, 2011

SEAMUS GREEN

We two pods, oil on canvas on board, 30 x 30 cm, 2011



What are you working on in your studio right now?

I make small oil paintings on a scale of 30 cm x 30 cm, canvas on board. I’ve been making paintings on this scale for the last year and a half and do so because I really enjoy the challenge of limited space to work with. I make paintings that attempt to deal with the way we perceive and make associations to ambiguous imagery. I guess I try to replicate that moment when you can’t quite recognise something so you begin to imagine what it might be. I hope the paintings balance playfully between representation and abstraction remaining open for the viewer to make of them what they will.    








Can you describe your working routine?

I have just graduated from University so I am in a transitional period between leaving something very familiar and entering a new way of working. Before I was used to getting up first thing, getting to the studio at College for 9 and then just painting throughout the day until about half 5 for five or six days a week. Now I have to juggle between job hours etc, so I wouldn’t say I have a routine as such, I am getting in the studio about 4 days a week but this can be at various times. This flexibility I now have to have is really interesting because it has further fueled my passion to get back in the studio and makes the whole experience of setting myself up mentally to enter the space really exciting. At the same time it can be agony because losing the luxury of painting full time at College now means I’ve become obsessive about getting in to the studio, especially if the paintings are not going well then I really get unbearable to be around until I can actively try and sort things out in the studio.

When I do get to the space now I am usually so itching to get back and have overly thought about what the next move should be I just walk in and start painting without even looking around… then I have to spend the rest of the time there trying to work out what on earth I have done in this mad moment of energy! I am really impatient, however I paint quite patiently which usually means I will build and build, mark by mark very slowly until I get completely sick of the whole thing and go and do something drastic. I love the whole process of emotions going up and down when I’m painting, it all seems so ridiculous when I think that we can put ourselves through such a self indulgent activity for all the stress and sleepless nights just for a few moments of pure happiness when it all goes well…but when it does go well it’s all worth it.






Oil pastel drawings




Can you describe your studio space and how, if at all, that affects your work?


I have just moved into a studio space in an old Warehouse at Falmouth Wharves in Cornwall. The space is incredibly inspiring because it is situated on the River Fal with stunning views across the water to the countryside (I sound like an estate agent). The space is on the top floor so all the rafters of the building are part of the studio and we have old sliding wooden doors that can be fully opened in the summer. The space feels very much part of the elements because there is no insulation and only a tin roof so when the wind is going or it is raining you really feel it with all the creeks and gusts of wind. The only down side is that birds sometimes get in and fly around the studio which can be a bit scary… I tell myself it all adds to the character! I think being in that space has brought a more rugged feel to the newer paintings. I’ve had real trouble with being to prim and precious when painting but now I feel the work is becoming rougher maybe more weathered in appearance.






Tell me about your process, where things begin, how they evolve etc.


Starting in a very loose, spontaneous way, the paintings begin very freely where I can play with the material without any constraints. I tend to try lots of different ways of applying or removing the material in the early stages of the process to find new textures or interesting surfaces. This process of playing is very important in giving me a platform to work from and also has its role in shaping the paintings throughout the process of making them. Many of the first layers that I apply remain evident in the finished paintings, usually in contrast to the later more considered and delicate application of the material.

My paintings are made in a strange place between being autonomous and very controlled. I like to have control over the direction of the painting and in a way this can be my biggest enemy because as I said before I become too precious and then find I don’t let the painting take me on a journey I instead try to take it on one, it is a bit of a dilemma for me at the minute. I want to let the paintings evolve autonomously as opposed to over thinking them but I don’t trust my ability to create something worthwhile without taking time to consider every option. The recent paintings evolve over a drawn out period of layering forms to create a kaleidoscopic image. They seem to work best when I can’t work them out myself, so I like them to be quite puzzling with a lot of information of the surface to make them appear purposeful but then that illusion of purpose crumbles when you try to read further into them. I’m really into crime dramas so that sense of red herrings or following a dead end is something I hope to bring to the paintings.   








What are you having the most trouble resolving?

At the minute I am really struggling with the fact that my paintings feel so distant to my own everyday interests and surroundings. They feel like they are in a different place to me if that makes sense? It feels like I have this agenda for the work that I can get my teeth into but now I am beginning to want to feel more connected to the sources that help to build the paintings. At the minute I pull sources from Islamic Architecture or references from paintings history which are really interesting to me but they feel so distant from my everyday living. I love walking in the countryside and spending time in vast natural open spaces but these things don’t feel like they make their way into the paintings, maybe they do but I can’t see it. I find it difficult to get my head around these ideas that I develop that then seem to be arbitrary so I want to start dealing directly with my surroundings by referencing the world that I experience on a daily basis.  




Do you experiment with different materials a lot or do you prefer to work within certain parameters?

I pretty much only make paintings on canvas. Occasionally I will go through bursts of making oil pastel drawings on paper but really I love the long drawn out process of painting, so that keeps me happy. I feel really trapped or uncultured in a way when I see people working in really exciting materials but for me I wouldn’t feel honest to myself if I wasn’t using oil paint. There is nothing quite like painting so when I make anything other than that I feel like I’m skirting round the issue at hand.  






Up in the rafters, oil on canvas on board, 30 x 30 cm, 2011




What does the future hold for this work?

I hope an endless and enriching journey as I keep painting but of course things don’t always work out so I have no idea where it is all heading. I want to continue mulling over ideas and challenges that I have and I hope the work will continue to throw up new ideas and challenges to engage with.   My actual paintings as objects I hope will end up being shown somewhere but that isn’t an issue really, I just feel so privileged to have the time and space to paint at the minute even if it’s only to keep me sane. However as it goes one of them has just been accepted to be shown in The Discerning Eye exhibition in London in November which is fantastic. The whole business of painting is such a long haul of a journey and development comes in little steps. I just want to keep chugging along and not worry too much about the future.   



Is there anything else you would like to add?

I would love to just take this opportunity to thank you Valerie for making the time to do this blog. Having something like this on the internet is such an amazing thing because it makes me feel like there is a community out there as support. It has been such a good experience to reflect on my working practice… sorry if I have just rambled on. I find it really difficult to articulate what I am doing but it is always good to give it a go. 






Light casting, oil on canvas on board, 30 x 30 cm, 2011







Friday, September 23, 2011

PHOEBE MITCHELL

Untitled (opening), oil on board, 51 x 41 cm, 2010




What are you working on in your studio right now?

I'm currently priming 20 fairly small rectangular boards in preparation for new paintings. I'm hugely particular about my priming, building up at least 5 very thin layers of white acrylic gesso, sanding to an incredibly smooth finish in between each coat. Due to recent work commitments this has taken almost 3 weeks, I’m desperate to start painting in a few days time!




Can you describe your working routine?

Once I’ve decided on my primary image (usually a photograph found in a book or online) and have prepared it (enlarging/distorting/fading on the photocopier, collaging or painting onto the printed image) I begin painting on my primed surface immediately. I never map out a picture with pencil or grid it up, preferring to draw with the thinned oils which can easily be wiped away with turps or more paint. My painting process consists of drawing/wiping/drawing/wiping, something which can continue for a matter of weeks. However, when I like whats happening on the board the process can become incredibly quick. A finished painting may only take me a matter of hours to complete but will often be the fiftieth composition to have taken place on that support.








Can you describe your studio space and how, if at all, that affects your work?

My studio space consists of 3 walls, one being completely open and is one of about 20 on a large converted floor of a warehouse in Bermondsey, set up and run by Bow Arts Trust. I've been there for exactly one year and was attracted to the space by the open plan set up which was similar to my college studio space at Central Saint Martins which I’d recently left. Initially I enjoyed seeing what everybody else was up to and the incentive to make lots of new paintings as others would be curious about your work, but I’m hoping to become more experimental in my practice and I think privacy would help during this period. I couldn't afford a space with its own windows so my natural light comes from the opposite studio which isn't ideal so i'm thinking about moving to a more secure space with windows and radiators in the next few months - last winter was unbearable!





Untitled (exotic), oil on board, 36 x 36 cm, 2010




Tell me about your process, where things begin, how they evolve etc.

Inspiration for new paintings tends to evolve from a gallery visit or a new art book - one that compiles lots of contemporary artists. Its the quality of a brush-stroke and the way the paint's been moved around a surface which gets me and sets off a trail of ideas about how I could incorporate such a mark or consistency of paint into my own work. For the past year, the primary subject of my work has been 'the formal garden' which originated from my love of French Rococo paintings. I use the internet, magazines and books from the CSM library (I make fantastic use of my alumni card!) to source both painted and photographic imagery from which to begin a painting, physically and mentally collaging the imagery until I’ve something to get the brush moving and from there, the act of painting takes over.




What are you having the most trouble resolving?

Subject matter. I'm keen to move on from formal gardens and to rein my abstraction in a little but I’m finding this hugely difficult - possibly due to the process of painting being the actual subject of my work. However, if this is the case then any primary image should work as a starting point for a painting to guide the shapes and plains etc. but I want to feel the compulsion to make visual a certain subject, something I haven't felt quite so powerfully since I was obsessed with the female nude before embarking on my foundation at Camberwell College of Arts.










Do you experiment with different materials a lot or do you prefer to work within certain parameters?

I haven't been very experimental with materials since I began painting in thinned oils on acrylic gessoed boards 3 years ago. I'm happy working within these parameters but am keen to experiment with my source imagery, perhaps working from roughly mocked-up 3D models rather than 2D pictures.




What does the future hold for this work?

At the moment, to just keep on painting! I'm hoping the figurative will re-emerge within my work over the coming months and that a story will begin to evolve, made visible by both the subject of my works and the momentum of my painting. I'm also curious to see whether I return to the oval after working within the confines of 4 straight sides...




Untitled (Lawn), oil on board, 58 x 45 cm, 2010