Friday, June 19, 2009
Independent Lines
With All Color Points
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
June 17, 2009
The 'Original Grid Lines', 'Additional Grid Lines', and points in colors #1 and #2 have been mapped. All relevant rules of engagement, up to this point, have been dutifully recorded on the margins. No non-grid lines have yet made an appearance.
Once points in color#1 had been made, the rules had to be recorded; however, since I had been writing in the margins in such a way that my arm would have smudged the wet dots of paint unless I wrote with my arm dangling in mid-air (which would have compromised the integrity of the lettering), I decided to wait for the paint to dry. Today, when I returned to the studio, the rules of color#1 were written first, and then the rules of color#2. After writing the rules, I went to work dotting the points of color #2 when I realized that I had make a silly mistake in my initial observation of the location of points #2. It is better, I have decided, to make the points first; that experience allows me a more intimate understanding of the connection between the grid and the individual points. Also, I might direct my writing in such a way as to be able to avoid the wet painting while I am recording my observations.
Mapping the Grid
Glass Chaos Drawing #2
The First Muse (#17)
Three Surfaces
These are three surfaces that I have rehabilitated (they have now recovered from the shitty art that they once were, though still in danger of relapse-I pray for them), made of Sintra. The plastic surfaces are 4' by 4', or 8 square feet each, and I plan to revisit some of my grid drawings on them. The sanded surface that has resulted from my erasure of previous imagery is buttery soft and much more accepting of pigment and light than the original plastic veneer (why didn't I think of this sooner?!). I would like to work mainly in graphite for its unique color and line, as well as for its endless malleability. I bought three gallons of System Three Mirror Coat resin to seal them, enough for 75 square feet of coverage, or three layers per panel, and am grappling with the proper use of this new technique. My original idea was to utilize layers of resin as I have used glass panels in my 'Chaos Drawings' ( Chaos Drawings #1 and #2 are small hanging pieces of 2 panels each, and 'Introspection Table' has an inlaid Chaos Drawing using 3 panels of glass); however, I am now doubtful that this will work. What I want to somehow emphasize with these pieces is an evident process--to this end, I plan to write the 'rules of artistic engagement' directly on the surfaces, as I used to do with my grid drawings on paper. I feel that displaying these rules within the boundary of the object itself will inspire greater curiosity and consideration of the process.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
An Attempt at Translation
Orientation
Grids, straight lines, navigation points, orientation...
The process of creating artwork is frought with micro-decisions; many of which barely warrant a conscious effort. Experience and education in art only make those decisions more automatic and less remarkable. Grid Drawings attempt to express themselves through process; and they do this by incorporating text that provides a blueprint for their creation. Where lines begin, how they interact with the framework of the grid, how they move and perhaps multiply or come to an end, where and how they are punctuated with color; all of these considerations are noted. Given the many possible variables, and knowing that the artist is the ultimate decision maker, there must be constant vigilance, discipline, and revision when necessary.
I began to make these grid drawings in 2003; this one was made in 2004.
The Studio
To begin, a view of my studio. I work in an old warehouse in Troy; it is rustic, but more importantly, it is very large, with large doors and long walls. After declining to attend graduate school this year, I am revisiting some unfinished works and beginning a new series. In the blogs to come, I will document my process in producing these new pieces, and air some of my thoughts on the work as it unfolds.