This was where it all began. Sketchbooks 1,2,3 and 4 are A5 exercise books similar to those used in school. As soon as I saw them they needed to be filled with scrawlings and scribblings about my life and the joy of the mundane. I guess this was a slippery slope as now I can't stop documenting...everything!
(I'm not convinced the floral quilt added to the overall look of the photograph but you get the idea.)
Negative space has always been an important part of my work. I feel that you can reveal a lot about something by the information you actually miss out and I like to think of my work continuing over the edge of the pages and on to a life of it's own somewhere. Sketchbooks 5,6,7 and 8 took on a slightly different format and explored this negative space further.
For your information...I broke the mould when creating sketchbook 7 and even used felt tips! I remember the joy of being young and getting a brand, spanking new packet of felt tips and being desperate to open them and colour over pages and pages of paper. Felt tips were always banned in school when I was young so I guess it's just the rebel in me that wants to use them now. I also think they're great tools because of their rubbish-ness. As you know by now I'm quite inspired by the everyday and this includes everyday tools, such as biros and felt tips. It makes me want to draw with them right now just writing about it! Oh, and tipp ex, don't forget tipp ex!
The natural thing for me to do was to take my drawings in to computer packages and work over the top of them. This is something I would ask my students to do. I like the slick look of computer generated imagery but it really wouldn't work with my imperfect drawing style so I thought about creating lines directly over the lines I had drawn so the computer generated versions would still feel slightly imperfect and flat. This is where sketchbooks 9 and 10 came in.
My plan is still to document the objects that I fill my house with and then redraw them using Illustrator like the above image. I have always imaged there being 3 large scale pieces (maybe A1?) filled with such drawings as a back drop for my exhibition. I've done it again haven't I! I've already grouped them in to threes...safety in numbers! I like the idea of these pieces having various degrees of negative space, similarly to the sketchbooks I have previously mentioned.
Sketchbook 11 is a whole different story. As I also teach Photography and collect old cameras I wanted to be able to explore this aspect of my life without simply drawing them. I am particularly interested in old cameras that use film or polaroids and so what better way to document my life and surroundings than by photographing them. As I am interested in the mundane and the ordinary I wanted my images to be exploring the beauty in these. I must confess that sketchbook 11 is an ongoing project and is likely to remain so for a long time.
I think I have come in to my element in sketchbooks 12, 13 and 14. These sketchbooks are A6 in size and have opened up a whole new world to me. They are small enough to take everywhere...and I have. I cannot imagine working in a sketchbook of any other size, in fact the thought repulses me! I have had some trouble finding suitable sketchbooks but my quest continues and I shall only use A6 sketchbooks from now on. I have no idea why but the size is absolutely perfect.
I even feel happy just writing about these sketchbooks!
So, this is where I'm up to. Half way through sketchbook 14, already with thoughts of sketchbook 15. It has been very useful for me to recap in this way. There seems to be a theme to all these sketchbooks when I thought they were actually random. There I go again, trying to find patterns. I guess patterns and groups are a way of organising my life. If I categorise and organise then all is well and I can handle life! No problems at all!
No comments:
Post a Comment