Sunday, June 16, 2013

LORNA CRANE

 'Deep Within' A4 work on paper 2013
 
 
 
What are you working on in your studio right now?
 
 
Right now I am working on a series of canvases inspired by the walls of the small Calles of Venice where I walked each day last year. I intend to start some large-scale works on paper responding to the calligraphic remnants of scraffito and graffiti - marking passages of time. I am also continuing my collaboration with San Francisco based artist Carl Heyward. He has challenged me in many ways. It has been a period of intense growth following my involvement with the Knee Jerk Fragmentation Project. The collage based postal exchange of paper fragments and rolled canvas is currently evolving. It excites and challenges me.
 
 
 
Can you describe your working routine?
 
 
I try to get the studio each day  - working each morning and afternoon – life permitting. It is just a short walk down the studio but a big enough distance to have to go to ‘work’ and I like it that way. The routine can vary depending on whether there is a show coming up or not. I like to clear the studio each day creating the appropriate working space - set up materials etc then hit the play button. I can’t work quietly – I need music to work as a background foil with certain albums cycling for each series of works.




 
 
 
 
Can you describe your studio space and how, if at all, that affects your work?
 
 
The studio is a colourbond shed 10 metres x 7 metres. The main working space is a 7m x 7m square with a main viewing wall or working wall. This room has three large wooden kitchen tables that can be arranged to suit what I am working on at the time. I also have a large bench with storage on casters that can be wheeled around with ease. Lighting is a series of tracked spots. The other section is a separate bathroom/storage area and textile area with a desk and sewing machine for my cloth works. It is an ever changing and evolving space. I describe to people that when I walk into my studio I walk into me. It is a space that enables me to experiment and explore with freedom in my own way.





in progress
 
 
 
 
Tell me about your process, where things begin, how they evolve etc.
 
 
Landscape ignites something from deep within me – I do this by immersing myself into a place during longish periods of time – generally in a residential situation. It is all about asking questions on many levels to gather that deeper understanding of a certain place. It’s kind of like sitting with it and listening, looking at the layers, the colours, the textures, the shapes and forms, plus it’s unique sensibility, then letting it distill for a time before it is carried forward into a picture, painting or moving image. Sometimes it can take many visits to a place to truly begin to grasp its’ complexity and layers. I adore making works that have a depth of surface quality and textures with matt and gloss contrasts too that play with the eye. For me it is hard to separate the micro and the macro. This is where my questioning begins.
 
The process starts with a written journal on site and then working on smaller paper works – mostly intuitive in an abstract form usually in black and white and earth tones – mainly ink and pencil and some collage work too – I love the act of identifying certain shapes within that place – so that when I get to the larger works back in the studio the visual language of the place emerges carrying the work forward into the larger works.  For me it is these beginning drawings that hold and carry an integrity – a raw energy that holds a certain truth and authenticity.
 
 


Pacifica I, mixed media on paper,
200mm x 75mm, 2013



What are you having the most trouble resolving?
 
 
Wondering when to stop with a work – the over-working is one of my biggest struggles – there are always parts of the work that I love in its many stages but it this that can actually be holding me back.  When I can totally let go of that push/pull and let the unthinking part really go and just let the paint flow – that’s when I find it becomes more potent/relevant and authentic rather than contrived or derivative.  It’s this adrenalin rush as you take that leap of faith that is so addictive for me. You think you know this but you still get caught up in the pretty bits and for me the cycle goes on and on. It seems like I need to do the pretty bit for ‘dirtying’ it up.
 
 
 
Do you experiment with different materials a lot or do you prefer to work within certain parameters?
 
 
I love using different materials and have to rein myself in quite a bit. I mainly use water-based materials - oils and solvents give me such a headache.  A while ago I was using patina mediums, shellac and bitumen but had to stop for the same reason. Right now it is mainly acrylic and oil sticks as well as ink, oil pastels, pencil and coloured pencils – on both paper and canvas. I constantly use cloth and found papers in the collage technique - creating some interesting textures with over-painting on both canvas and paper. I am enjoying drawing much more and am pushing myself to be more disciplined with it.  Just thinking more about ‘what is a drawing’ is making me question my way of working. It has also seen a return to my roots as a mapmaker – working over disused books, old engineering plans on Mylar and plan paper is informing a new body of work. My Land Map Series and the Pacifica works on paper are evidence of this and are now touring as part of The Drawing Box show.




Land Map III, mixed media on paper, A5, 2013
 
 
 
 
What does the future hold for this work?
 
 
Right now I am enjoying a period of experimentation without a deadline to complete works. The Venice canvas works may sit for a while as I am trying to find representation in a commercial gallery in Sydney or Melbourne. The collaborative works will be shown in Australia and San Francisco during 2015 and venues are being looked into right now.
 
 
 
Is there anything else you would like to add?
 
 
Living in a small rural coastal community near the NSW and Victorian border in Australia away from Museums and Galleries is difficult at times. Just being in touch with so many international artists through places like facebook and other artist networks online has been a life thread for me. And a big thank you to Valerie Brennan for this opportunity to share part of my process in the studio. Social networking has opened many doors over the past few years and continues to nourish me along with many other artists around the world.




Once in a Blue Moon, mixed media on board,
200mm x 75mm, 2013 














Friday, June 7, 2013

JASON STOPA


Low Tide/Flying V, 2013. Oil and spray paint on canvas.
(Joggie Series)


 
 
What are you working on in your studio right now?
 
 
I just finished working on a small group of paintings for a show at John Davis Gallery this June. I make work that hovers between representation and abstraction. Sometimes the scales tilt and it winds up one way or the other. I've been working in 3 series lately. They're titled Joggie, Brooklyn Zoo and Basement Arcade. Joggie was an imaginary friend I had when I was 6 who lived on Jupiter. It's funny looking back, I would be fixated looking out of my window, daydreaming. It's not too far off from what I'm like now (Laughs). These works have a lot of dream-like and cosmic imagery. Brooklyn Zoo is series of paintings that reference growing up on the East Coast in an urban setting. Basketball, hip hop records and food imagery find their way into these paintings. And Basement Arcade is a way to explore patterns via early video game screens. Particularly, when a screen freezes I think it does some strange looking stuff.
 
 
 
Can you describe your working routine?
 
 
I try to work in the studio about 3 or 4 nights a week. When I first get there I try to fool myself into working - sweeping the floor, looking at pictures, eating some food. Before I actually make a painting I'll look at images in photoshop and make studies. It's dawned on me that this is where a lot of the actual "work" goes on. Once I'm ready, I start about 3-4 paintings at once. And it takes about a month or so to finish that for me.
 
 
 
Can you describe your studio space and how, if at all, that affects your work?
 
 
I'm actually moving studios. I'm about to have more space, which I'm really excited about. Small spaces often force you to work small. My current space isn't too big, arranged with supplies in the middle of the room and then works on the surrounding walls. My floors and walls get really messy. Sometimes I write things on the wall so I can remember: what color something should be, what I need from the store or a title.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tell me about your process, where things begin, how they evolve etc.
 
 
It comes from anywhere.  I just pick up on things around me - the feeling of a neighbourhood, places, things or people that mean something to me.  I like to let intuition guide what I'm doing.  Sometimes I'll be watching a movie or I'll read a line in a book that resonates with me on a personal level.  From there I kind of obsess over that thing, whatever it may be.  Then I want to paint.   But, the painting is always something else.  The painting is about describing an abstraction - space, atmosphere and sensation.   
 
 
What are you having the most trouble resolving?
 
 
My work flirts with the decorative and nostalgic. I love patterns and sensual handling of paint.  I'm not afraid of these things or their implications. But, I have a tendency to be attracted to overly sweet ideas/images.  And in a painting, sentimentality is the easiest affect to conjure.  Knowing when a painting is just pretty enough, but not overtly pretty can be tough. 

 
 
 
Nothing But Net, 2013. Oil on canvas.
(Brooklyn Zoo Series)
 
 
 
 
Do you experiment with different materials a lot or do you prefer to work within certain parameters?
 
 
I like to experiment with different mediums.  I paint on canvas.  I use oil, acrylic, spray paint, glitter and enamel.  I like when my surfaces are varied and almost constructed.
 
 
 
What does the future hold for this work?
 
 
This is a tough question.  As a painter, you always want to set up parameters that don't allow you to get bored.  One of the things I'm interested in is contradiction.  It seemed like the first half of the 20th century was about keeping metaphysics in painting - nothingness, mystery, sublime, existentialism etc.  Then the second half came along and threw it out.  I'm interested in creating an ambiguous space in a painting - shallow depth, physicality of texture and a touch and go sense of reality. This allows me to play.  Which is really what I want to do the most.

 
 
 
 
 
Begin, 2013. Oil and spray paint on canvas.
(Basement Arcade Series)
 
 
 

Monday, May 20, 2013

GWENNAN THOMAS

Oil on Ply board 37 x27,5cm 2012
 
 
 


What are you working on in your studio right now?
 
 
At the moment I am working on stretching up some calico and experimenting with different surfaces. I’ve gone from using my usual primer on board which gives an ultra-smooth and relatively shiny surface to paint on, to homemade gesso, and I’m enjoying the transition from super-smooth “ice-skating” style to one that has more absorbency. I’m also working on the logistics of the upcoming Artist of the Day show at Flowers gallery in June so one wall is currently dedicated to works in progress and the other is visual experiments and the how-tos and maybe’s of putting things together.
 
 
 
Can you describe your working routine?

 
 
I’ve been lucky enough to have had a bit of time out in the last year which has meant more studio time and more time to reflect. I tend to be more of a late in late out person so I usually come in early afternoon and leave late at night. Generally I try and make time to meet other artists, visit friends’ and artist’s studios because I learn a lot from these visits and it’s a good way of keeping the thought chewing gum going, as well as batting ideas around.






 





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

 

My studio is nestled between London Bridge and Bermondsey and is semi open plan. There is a really nice sense of community, I think as a result to the space being open and being in close proximity to one’s neighbours. My studio is long and thin which is good for wall space. I am moving out soon though as I feel I’ve reached a point where I need to have a door for a while so it’s exciting times ahead. I am traveling this summer so it will be interesting for me to see how I will negotiate having a more “mobile” studio.



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


Drawing is a really important part of my process and I generally have quite a few primed pieces of paper stuck on the wall where I can either test out new colours or colour-combinations or possibilities for or within paintings, as well as keeping sketchbooks. I tend to make most of my supports and having a large supply of these is important for me to not get too precious. I am quite picky about these as well so I do spend time on making and priming my boards. Once these are made a sort of visual conversation starts between the drawings and the paintings. Some paintings are more immediate, some not and some get annotated on in my sketchbook.





 






What are you having the most trouble resolving?


At the moment I am heading into territories that feel less familiar in terms of changing the surface upon which I work and changing my primer so I am more in an experimental phase. The things that I am scratching my head over are more concerned with how things are shown generally and ways of showing drawings in particular and a work’s relationship to place or space, in the studio and outside of it. Otherwise generally speaking maybe layering, that is the big question that hovers, it’s that argument between something that is to the point first time round and that which is layers of paint, mistakes and perceived errors, a bit like an unruly cake.



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


I tend to focus on different things at particular times. At the moment I feel that there is a shift from a strong focus on colour and form to one that looks at surface more particularly. I saw a film a few months ago called “Blind Beast”. It’s about a blind sculptor who kidnaps a model because he thinks she has the perfect body and he wants to make the ultimate sculpture, a sort of ode to touch. It’s a strange film but it underlined for me the importance of touch particularly at a time when buttons are disappearing and how this is connected to how we learn and remember things.




Oil on Ply Board 18,5 x 23cm 2013
 
 
 
 

What does the future hold for this work?
 

The “Artist of the Day” show at Flowers Gallery in Cork St is on the 24th June. I’m looking forward to working with the space and seeing my work in a different setting. I always think it tends to set it free a bit. After that I am traveling so I have to consider ways in which to have work that travels well.
 
 
 
Is there anything else you would like to add?
 
 
Firstly a big thank you for inviting me on Studio Critical. Secondly just to express how much I appreciate the joys of painting blogs and the online arts community. It’s a great place to share work and ideas and it’s nice to have painting chats with people who live in different parts of the world.


 
 
Oil on board 30 x 20cm 2012
 
 
 
 


Monday, May 13, 2013

SIOBHAN Mc DONALD

'Retreating Glacier.' oil on canvas. 60 cm x 60cm.
Taylor Galleries, 2012
 
 
 
 
What are you working on in your studio right now?
 
 
I'm working on a couple of things: a commission for the New Science Centre at University College Dublin. I’m also working on an exciting collaboration with the international composer,  Susan Stenger and Professor of Geophysics at University College Dublin, Chris Bean on a series of paintings and soundworks synthesizing Monastic seismology practices devised by the Jesuits in Ireland since 400 AD. It represents a new and important evolution in my work and will tie together themes of volcanism through the unifying perspective of deep time. I’m also trying to put together a paper for the Art & Geography Ireland conference at NUI in Galway which I’m presenting later this month.
 
 
 
 


                 The Earth Institute, UCD, 2013. Works in Progress                 


 The Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin. Work in progress. 2011
 
 
 
 
Can you describe your working routine?
 
 
I generally have 3 or 4 paintings on the go at the same time and aim to go to the studio every day. I’m Artist in Residence at the Earth Institute, UCD this year and I really love it. I try to attend some of the lectures in the Geo-science department so there’s never a dull moment.  Most days I end up randomly connecting with the researchers on campus and it’s invigorating to be part of a wider conversation in a place like this where so many disciplines converge.
 
 
 
Can you describe your studio space and how, if at all, that affects your work?
 
 
I've moved quite a bit since 2011 but just settled into this new space. It's a supper building flooded with light and the ceilings are really high so I can view the pieces from all sorts of angles and rooms. The grounds are vastly covered with trees and green space, which is a calming contrast to my studio in the city last year.







The Earth Institute, UCD, 2013.
Left  'Measurement Valley.' Tree resin on graph paper.
Right Seismograph made by the Jesuits, early 1900's.
 Courtesy of The School of Cosmic Physics, DIAS, Dublin.
 
 
 
 
 
Tell me about your process, where things begin, how they evolve.
 
 
I’m interested in Time, Rhythm, different temporalities of nature and new forms of materiality.  I’ve been using smoke lately as I feel we have an innate relationship with certain materials & it’s an intriguing material because it’s one of the first things prehistoric man encountered. The other reason I’m interested in smoke is because its part of an alchemical system produced by the process of one element transforming into another. Lately I’m starting with ideas around the speed and violence of earthquakes and the slow incremental movements of icebergs. While my drawings and sound works are more conceptually based I find painting is much more conducive to the new space. I tend to build up layers of paint at a time and once they dry, I scrape them off until I find a starting point to build upon. Quite often I end up with a blank canvas again exposing the stain or memory of the previous layer. While I may have a vision in mind of certain geological processes for example, I allow the work to shift and change as time evolves.
 
 
 
What are you having the most trouble resolving?
 
 

I guess I’m finding it challenging to find a way into some of the library of ideas I’m collecting right now.  I love that sometimes you can find a something as simple as a line or a gap in a tiny structure that can become the map for a new piece of work.  John Cage used the imperfections of the piece of paper he was working as a starting point.  I’m also trying to find a structure to suggest the transformational processes in nature and lately I’m looking at Morse code and the sounds under ice breaking to try and find a way in. And all the administration stuff involved in exhibition making and applying for residencies & funding drives me crazy! It’s so time consuming and tedious.

 

 

 
 
 
'Sound drawing' Drawing produced using drawing implements
attached to the tips of three branches and sound waves recorded on graph paper.
The Galway Arts Centre, 2012
 
 
 
 
 
 
Do you experiment with different materials a lot or do you prefer to work within certain parameters?
 
 
I started off working almost exclusively in oil & sumi ink but, lately I have opened up my painting practice to embrace drawing, photography, sound and collaborative-based projects. Right now I’m making geological ‘pours’ with a glass blower in the physics department at UCD. And the plan for next month is to experiment with growing crystals in the geology department. I’m also experimenting with the production of a sequence of drawings which revisit my study of Jesuit seismology practices to evoke the patterns generated by the invisible forces of nature.


 
What does the future hold for this work?
 
 
In September I’m joining a team of scientists on an expedition to the Vatnajokull terrain of Iceland to bore into the earth and listen to its rhythm. I’m enjoying this experimental phase and my hope is that the new body of work will get a chance to travel to some interesting spaces around the world.  I’m also working on a book and hope to publish it in early spring 2014.
 
 
Is there anything else you would like to add?
 
 
I’m delighted to be on this blog and would like to say a big thanks for asking me.





 

The Dock 2012 and detail  15 x 4 cm approx.
Graph paper, Oil paint, Sumi Ink and Fire.
A series of paintings made with the process Eninka:
a technique devised by John Cage in the 1980's,
where fire becomes fossilized in the painting’s surface.
 
 
 


 







Thursday, May 9, 2013

VANESSA OTER

Everything is as it should be,
mixed media on canvas,
2010
 
 
 
 
What are you working on in your studio right now?
 

At the moment I am enjoying a large studio space to accommodate a huge series of works I have had on the go for over 2 years. The works are predominantly landscapes that incorporate my interest in recuperation and the "stitch". I bought a house in the depths of country Victoria last year to be able to get as close to the ever changing landscape as possible. It has had a powerful effect on my work and the processes so far. Since I work (sew) on my (dry) painting drop cloths I am able to fold them up and drive to any location and sew. I use various colours and cottons of a diverse texture to almost mimic the textures I see in the rolling hills etc. they have become almost 3 dimensional.
 
 
 
Can you describe your working routine?
 

I have a 5 year old little boy so my work routine has had to become quite scheduled, unlike the freedom of pre motherhood! I usually drop him at school then race home to do any chores etc/shopping...then head to studio to continue on with whatever i "feel" is needed.. i still love to paint so i have a body of traditional landscapes on the go too. My routine all depends on how I feeling towards any particular piece of work. There always a lot of works on the go. They all need their time to sit before i consider them finished. I can sometimes recycle old paintings too...works that have been idle for years even.....I am always observing...everything is a picture these days....
 
 
 
 
 
 

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


My studio is my garage. I converted the entire space for my work after the previous owner of the house didn't put the doors in the right position for any car access so I had a wall built right down the middle with a door for access into both areas, one side is predominantly storage and where I put works to be free of flying paint etc. The other is where the action happens...lights...music.....I love it in there. Since I can do my work anywhere, my "studio" is the place the pieces get resolved and put together I guess. I always feel that if the studio is organised to some extent the work can breathe, I get messy, so sometimes its good to work out in the landscape too, it gives the work a whole fresh perspective.






 
 
 
 


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


This way of working, with the fabric and materials of choice all began when I had trouble fully painting when Luka was born. I decided to use cotton and I have always loved drop cloths and the randomness of the splattered marks etc. After my honours year at RMIT I was very involved with the idea of process itself and the documentation of the processes as art in themselves, as time went on I really wanted to make large-scale works and use paint and get away from constantly photographing. I wanted to create "paintings" without relying on only paint etc. so by using the sewing as a platform to create my own mark…they are evolving as such...I never fully know how they will look as the cotton and the stitches all bring the work into their own and "become" themselves but lately I see the landscape so much as I drive and walk the works are hugely inspired by it.



 
Wild dog valley,
Mixed media mounted on canvas
183 x 160cm
 
 
 
 
What are you having the most trouble resolving?
 
My pure painting landscapes, predominantly the large ones, I feel using stitching helps me to slow everything down and I can see the picture clearer as a piece of work. I don’t see my paintings like I used to, eventually I will chop them in half with an elaborately stitched drop cloth, difficult to explain....I find they eventually resolve with lots of perseverance.
 
 
 
Do you experiment with different materials a lot or do you prefer to work within certain parameters?
 
I have always enjoyed "playing" with various materials. It’s important for the ideas to evolve. Even with my, what I call "traditional" landscapes I base them in oils, but there is always a variety of under painting which consists of pencils, pens, spray paint, crayons, anything to create a history and layers. I am experimenting right now with fabrics and placement, whether I am experimenting enough is always a question artists need to ask themselves.....

 
 
What does the future hold for this work?
 
I am not sure but what to would like to happen is that I get decent gallery appreciation for these enquiries but I see it becoming more sculptural....its a very exciting evolution of work indeed!

 

 
 
Cats don't speak like dogs do,
mixed media on canvas,
153 x 153cm


Monday, April 22, 2013

TREW SCHRIEFER

Untitled, 32"x38" oil, acrylic, spray paint,
graphite, glitter and collage on canvas. 2012
 
 
 
 
What are you working on in your studio right now?
 
 
I was recently in a show at Tracy Williams in New York, so I am still digesting the work from the show. I’m bouncing back and forth between some new ideas and pushing paint around in my studio. Most of my work lately has been smaller 18”x 22” or so, and I’m trying to work a bit larger to see how the work will function for me. Elements of the paintings are beginning to separate and each is gaining a more independent identity. Earlier work was at times very congested and I found myself editing out a lot of the painting. So, I am also currently wrestling with a more visually simplified or minimal painting.
 
 
 


 
 
 
 
 
Can you describe your working routine?
 
 
I am teaching a few classes here and there at a local liberal arts college and picking up other side jobs for money. This work schedule doesn’t allow me a structured block of time for the studio. I try to find big chunks of time when I can go up there and work. I have never been one that can go in the studio for a couple of hours. When I get those big 8-10 hour blocks I usually start pretty early. Make some coffee, turn on some music and sit in my studio for an hour or so. I usually start making some decisions to work on some pieces from past or start something new.
 
 
 
Can you describe your studio space and how, if at all, that affects your work?
 
 
My studio space is located on the second floor of the house. It is considered the third bedroom and I had to put up some temporary walls, because the ceiling angles with the roof making it difficult to stand in certain areas. My studio is very influential on my work and working process. It isn’t necessarily the smallest of rooms but everything is within reaching distance and that is important for me. The information in my work comes from my immediate studio environment.

 
 
 
 



 
 
 
 
Tell me about your process, where things begin, how they evolve etc.
 
 
I usually need to sit in my studio for some time. I have to let my brain kind of clear out. Most paintings start by grabbing something off the studio floor and placing it down on the surface of the canvas. Fragments of old paintings, pictures from magazines, oil paint, and craft art supplies litter my studio floor. This is my environment and these are the starting points for my work. I think of myself as more of an action/reaction painter. I make a lot of intuitive moves in the painting process and then make other decisions in response to them. I get really excited when things go wrong in a painting for me. I like to be challenged in the working process to see where I can take a painting.
 
 
 
What are you having the most trouble resolving?
 
 
I probably have the most trouble trying to complete a painting to my liking. When I think I am making some pretty good decisions about something in the studio, I will make it a few times. Usually that feeling will wear off when I actually sit with the work and I can dismiss it easily. Every now and again I will make something that continues to sit with me whether or not I am in the studio. These moments are the most exciting and probably when I could consider a painting complete.
 
 
 
 
Untitled, 30"x38" oil, acrylic, spray paint,
acrylic grass and collage on canvas. 2013
 
 
 
 
Do you experiment with different materials a lot or do you prefer to work within certain parameters?
 
 
The hierarchy of any material over another is absent in my studio practice. I am drawn to many different materials and what they do when they interact with one another in a painting. I don’t just throw anything into a painting, so I guess I have some rules when working. I still have respect for oil paint as a historical material in relation to the history of painting. But I am also very interested in mark making with different materials and tools. It is in this investigation that I seem to experiment more and more in my studio practice.
 
 
 
What does the future hold for this work?
 
 
I don’t really know yet. I am going to spend more time with this work and make decisions when I am in the studio. I hope to explore some larger works to see how I will react to the scale.
 
 
 
 
Is there anything else you would like to add?
 
 
I would like to thank Valerie and Studio Critical for this great opportunity.
 
 
 
 
Untitled, 18"x 22" oil, acrylic, spray paint,
crayon, graphite and collage on canvas. 2012