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Posts Tagged ‘Paper napkins in collage art’

Waiting for spring. Meanwhile, ideas keep surging through my head. Art concepts are ever stretching.

Since Joe and I no longer need a vehicle, we gave our well-used Honda van to a grandson who is a seminarian at a local theological center, and his wife and two year old daughter—whose name happens to be, believe it or not, Margaret Been.

A garage only has to sit empty (except for all the garden and home maintenance junk lining the walls) for a couple of days before brain seeds sprout. An outdoor room! An outdoor studio for art making and spinning gorgeous fibers into yarn. A place where kindred souls can visit, and neighbors can pause. Ever stretching!

This IS Wisconsin, which means the feasibility of enjoying a garage room is limited to the three summer months (given reasonable summer weather) and a few days at each end of the spectrum (given some surprise weather in spring and fall).

We put a small mock fireplace in the room. The decorative fireplace uses one light bulb to simulate burning logs, and a fan to blow a bit of hot air when desired—mainly for ambience, and not sufficient to handle our weather in a garage. (Indoors maybe!)

But dreams persist. Every day I linger for a few moments in this bit of summer heaven, just dreaming and thinking about family members and friends whom I will invite for art and fiber days.

I have two permanent art-making corners indoors, and I produce in these studios non-stop. Two spinning wheels, plus baskets of merino and silk in a riot of colors whirl constantly in our living room where the resulting skeins of yarn dangle from hooks and surfaces.

Art displays, a table on which to work, an area for storing brushes, paints, papers and additional art tools, another spinning wheel, and a (possible) lifetime supply of additional fibers join me in anticipating warm weather in the garage room.

My art goals are ever stretching as well—including a return to collage art between actual paintings. A few years back, I did a lot of collages from random materials and whatever abstract inspiration blossomed moment by moment.

Collages differ just as every artist is unique. Some are decidedly geometric; some feature words, photos, images of people and buildings, or symbols such as numbers. Others are more organic, kind of like an unkempt garden of color and flowing shapes. Or a messy landscape with tangled trees or turbulent seas. And mountains, plenty of mountains.

The materials are legion: gorgeous Oriental papers—Kozo, Mulberry and Rice Papers, and Japanese Lace; common old cheesecloth, tissue paper, and gauze; aluminum foil; ribbons, greeting cards, pieces of musical scores, and decorative gift wraps; wool fleece, yarn, string, and bits of fabric; seasonal and party napkins—with the backing papers torn off so the napkin design is translucent and delicate; acrylic and gouache paints—metallic and otherwise; dried leaves, flowers, twigs, and herbs; templates and stencils; poems; torn up bits of my paintings that didn’t impress me very much—-yet didn’t warrant the trash bin. Some of my kitty Louie’s fur from his grooming brush—with Louie’s permission of course!

And mediums: molding paste, gloss, matt, sand, glitter gel, gesso, bead gel, crackle gel, YES paste (although anything acrylic such as the above listed mediums plus acrylic paint acts as a glue).

Above is a sample of my collage art from a few years ago. It reminds me of some favorite things, and still hangs in our living room.

And finally, a collage of various paints and textured mediums.

Maybe our new summer garage room will facilitate the creation of more way out art! Meanwhile, Happy Stretching

Margaret L. Been — April 3rd, 2020

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My studio (in our bedroom) contains two work tables:  one for watercolor painting, and another for the messy stuff—acrylic paints and glossing/molding/gluing/preserving media, plus three sets of stacking storage bins containing nearly everything under the sun that one could possibly stick onto a collage.  What a bit of Heaven on earth is that!  🙂

Recently I’ve been hanging out at the messy table.  It is positioned right in front of our big window, facing south and a bit west—with those fantastic summer breezes to modify the present heat wave (which I personally LOVE)!

Yes, it is messy at this table.  I keep trying to remember to put on an old shirt or apron before digging in—but how tempting it is to inadvertently pick up a brush in passing, make a few swipes on a gallery wrapped canvas, and discover that I’ve also created “art” on an otherwise presentable garment.  I’m sure those of you who are acrylic or oil painters can identify with that!  🙂

This week I did the above rendering, and I’m delighted with it.  The circa 1939 girls in the faded photo are me (the little one) and my sister, Ardis (the gorgeous teen ager).  The computer scanned repro doesn’t do justice to this collage.  In “real life” it glows in antique shades of raw umber, burnt sienna, nickel azo gold, metallic copper, and hints of quinacridone magenta.

Over an initial underpainting of those colors, I arranged scraps of beautiful paper napkins in florals matching the tones of the underlying acrylic paint.  (Napkins work beautifully in collages, when the two sheets of white backing are removed.  The result is a delicate patterned effect with the underpainting glowing through.)  

The photo (a print—the original is framed in our living room) is in sepia, so it lends itself to the subdued antique feeling of the piece.  After securing the photo with gel medium, I added the final touches:  “floats” of Japanese lace and a glossy sealer.  Many collage artists prefer a matte sealer for a vintage look—but I always go for the gloss.  

After scanning the finished piece, I ran it through my photo enhancing program for the highlight:  not necessary in the actual collage, but helpful to re-capture its pizzazz on the scanned repro.

For a similarly crafted collage, see http://northernreflections.wordpress.com/  .  That one is a gift to my husband, for our fifty-ninth wedding anniversary—June 20th. 

More fun at the messy table!

Margaret L. Been, ©2012

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The above rendering began as an exercise on watercolor paper.  I was practising the layering of transparent watercolors by overlapping shapes, in this case arches—McDonald’s style, although blue over rose rather than golden arches.

So I was stuck with some arches, wondering where to go next.  I decided to turn the arches into a background by doing more layering.  First I covered the entire sheet with Japanese unryu paper, glued in place with a thin covering of acrylic polymer.  The fibers in the unryu paper created texture.  While the polymer was still wet I added scraps of crinkled, decorative paper napkins, with the white backing papers removed—and covered the entire piece with still more polymer.  More texture!  Finally, selected portions of the painting received a coating of GOLDEN’S Interference®—an acrylic pearlescent paint, available in various color mixtures.  Here I used the green/orange Interference®.

Sometimes I have to gaze at a finished work before giving it a name.  I didn’t gaze long before my mind traveled back to 1967, when I had the joy of visiting San Francisco’s Japanese Tea Garden.  The name “Tea Garden” naturally followed.

Margaret L. Been©2011

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