This weekend was First Friday and though we didn't have much in the way of new exhibits, I did get a chance to talk to Amanda Sparks, one of the artists in the Crave exhibit, which opened last month at UT's Downtown Gallery. I wrote about Amanda's exquisite pop-up book in the January First Friday post in which I lamented not being able to meet and talk to her about the work. But as the calendar fell, we were fortunate enough to have the show run through two First Fridays and I spoke with her about the piece, which is unlike anything I've ever seen. Here's an image from one of the pages.
Amanda told me that she learned "on the job" how to build each page by studying children's pop-up books and adapting those construction methods to her more complex and multi-faceted designs. Many of her pages included composites of (I'm guessing here) 50 or more images montaged together. It was quite the thing of beauty and delight and eloquently articulated a version of childhood in which place and possessive attachment took precedent.
And by intuitive association I'd like to add (for personal reasons which have to do with detachment from place) a link to Roni Horn's Library of Water in which the artist thoughtfully considers the geography, climate and culture of Iceland.
Showing posts with label water. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water. Show all posts
Sunday, February 03, 2008
Wednesday, August 08, 2007
Daily Drawings and Water Witches
Here are a few new drawings from last week:
Water Witch Running through Green
pencil, machine stitching and fabric paint on paper
Water Witch Floating
pencil, machine stitching and fabric paint on paper
Water Witch Mirage
pencil, machine stitching and vintage fabric on paper
I’ve been working with this Water Witch motif for a few years now… since these L.A. Mirages from 2003. So long that they’ve taken on a bit of a persona and go about performing actions as any other character might.
Part of the initial reason for the birth of the water witch in my work was because Los Angeles was so dry and I was always craving and wanting to divine water and rain. So, the divining rod, also called the “water witch” seemed the likely trope for such urges.
The other reasons for the motif and my preference for the name “water witch” over "divining rod" were political. There is the more obvious governmental politics behind Los Angeles moving and stealing water from other locations, but I was more interested in acts of divining in terms of gender and art politics.
While I was working on the very clean photographic L.A. Mirages and similar video work (where my hands never got dirty), I began to step-up the other part of my materially-based practice of painting, drawing and fiber (what I’d moved away from in graduate school).
In moving back to materials and studio, I felt like (because I’d been trained to have this response) that I was doing something “witchy” and outside the mainstream of contemporary art practice. In other words, I was doing things that had become feminized within the field of art. I had turned myself into something of an “art witch” as I heretically toyed with ideas and materials and styles that were considered outside acceptable practice for someone of my background and training.
Despite the heaviness of all that… these are fun and playful little pieces for me.

pencil, machine stitching and fabric paint on paper

pencil, machine stitching and fabric paint on paper

pencil, machine stitching and vintage fabric on paper
I’ve been working with this Water Witch motif for a few years now… since these L.A. Mirages from 2003. So long that they’ve taken on a bit of a persona and go about performing actions as any other character might.
Part of the initial reason for the birth of the water witch in my work was because Los Angeles was so dry and I was always craving and wanting to divine water and rain. So, the divining rod, also called the “water witch” seemed the likely trope for such urges.
The other reasons for the motif and my preference for the name “water witch” over "divining rod" were political. There is the more obvious governmental politics behind Los Angeles moving and stealing water from other locations, but I was more interested in acts of divining in terms of gender and art politics.
While I was working on the very clean photographic L.A. Mirages and similar video work (where my hands never got dirty), I began to step-up the other part of my materially-based practice of painting, drawing and fiber (what I’d moved away from in graduate school).
In moving back to materials and studio, I felt like (because I’d been trained to have this response) that I was doing something “witchy” and outside the mainstream of contemporary art practice. In other words, I was doing things that had become feminized within the field of art. I had turned myself into something of an “art witch” as I heretically toyed with ideas and materials and styles that were considered outside acceptable practice for someone of my background and training.
Despite the heaviness of all that… these are fun and playful little pieces for me.
Labels:
daily drawings,
feminism,
mirages,
stitched drawings,
water,
water witch
Monday, April 09, 2007
The Gallery and some earlier work


Above are a couple of images from a series I did in 2003. I just updated this page on my gallery blog with the series of 7 mirages and thought I'd copy a couple over to here because I like this series so much... and sometimes it's fun to visit older work (sometimes less so).
I printed these photos on different media from waxed paper to vellum to photo paper, but none to satisfactory results. I intend to print them on photo fabric and stitch them together where they join, but have yet to do that. Until then, here they are digitally, which is how they continue to exist... and maybe all they ever need to be.
I explain the work more on the gallery page.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)