Monday, November 26, 2012

Playing with Plastic - Jessica Beels


I work with a wide range of media.  Recently I have been trying to reuse materials in an effort to reduce the bulk of my own garbage as well as to give new life to things often overlooked.     

I have also been trying to make more two-dimensional pieces – adding more flexibility to a mostly 3D repertoire that usually requires pedestals for display – thereby expanding where and how I can show my work.   

painted plastic bags

So, for the past three years, I have been playing with fusing cut-up plastic bags into translucent pictures. I sometimes paint the flat bags with metallic acrylic paints, so that the final, layered surface contains transparent elements, colorful swatches, and reflective accents.  

fused layers (detail from Can't See the Forest for the Trees)

One of the first pieces I made with this technique was called "Can't See the Forest for the Trees," which is now part of the collection of the Union of Concerned Scientists and on view in their lobby in downtown DC. 
Can't See the Forest for the Trees

My most recent foray has included small (about 6" x 6") botanical studies. These are the first two of a series I am working on this winter:



Waterlily    

And a black-eyed susan:

Black-eyed Susan

These images don’t quite feel fully realized, but with a few more layers I think they could be quite intriguing.  I also plan to mount the pieces about 1/2" above the surface of the white board (shown here resting right on top of the surface) in order to add colored shadows (cast by the translucent portions) to the mix of layers.

Monday, November 19, 2012

New Direction - Ann Liddle

Last time I wrote, I was trying to figure out what to do for my featured artist show at the Workhouse Arts Center in Lorton, VA in December.  I had de-stuffed the crocheted bodies I made years ago and thought I'd work with them.  But inspiration was not forthcoming.  I decided on a new direction - stripes.

I was interested in trying spray paint on canvas and then working with that as cloth.  I sprayed 11 yards of canvas, each a different color.  Then I worked out stripe designs on paper with colored pencil, cut the canvas, sewed the stripes.  This resulted in rectangular striped pieces each about 22" x 30".  I then cut each piece up and reassembled it in very different ways.  (I worked these out on paper as well before cutting.)  Sometimes, I added striped inserts.  I wish I would have taken pictures of the rectangular version before I cut them up.  But I didn't so all I have are the final results.  Here they are.  The show is called Stripes Reinterpreted.


Forest Stream.



Morning 



 Nightfall



On Balance



Fall



Rock Face



Spring