Sunday 27 June 2010

Starting to Look at Book Art

The second direction my art has been taking is Book Art. I decided to start looking into this format of working because I always work in sequences and there is a certain story or 'life span' within my work that I feel suits the narrative, sequential feel of books. I also love books as objects in themselves, and am very interested in the idea of 'treating' old novels and text books!

Last year I had started moving into this art form, using books to neatly display my reducing images and also to explore narrative and movement in little flick books. I enjoyed the process of making the books and using different papers and cards to make the covers. However I do feel my knowledge of book making/ binding is very limited and unprofessional so I aim to improve on this.

I'm researching book art for my dissertation so I have been exploring not only influential book artists but also the fundamental meaning or definition of 'Book Art'. A very useful book so far has been 'Speaking of Book Art' by Cathy Courtney. In the foreword (by Eileen Hogan) it claimed that book art 'could be described as books in which the form was used by the artist both to represent the content and as a vehicle for ideas.' meaning the nature of books could become the concept I explore, at the same time I will use books to articulate my thoughts on my concept (the nature of books). Yeah... confusing! However I feel this would be a good place to start in my research.

As well as this I found the work of Ian Tyson who makes very linear artists books. They show geometric rectangles of colour next to poetry by Jerome Rothenberg that perfectly compliments the images. I like the idea of using 'swatches' of colour; almost like a deluxe colour card, but having some complex puzzle behind the work that gives it more depth than just colour testing. I've started to make books exploring the idea of colour patterns and swatches, however the colour is never random, being based on a numerical system of adding tints and black to adjust the colour. 

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Exploration of Reduction

I've got two  separate directions that my work has been taking recently, and even more are entering within those directions making my work very loose and difficult to follow at the moment. Therefore I will do two posts today to help clear things up (for everyone- including myself!).

The first is reduction. This came from my looking at the dismantling of rooms in my last project and led into a more process- based exploration of how to reduce the paints and materials and physical elements of my images rather than the actual content of the rooms. 

Moving into my third year I'm thinking I will carry this on, still exploring how different materials can be built up, layered then reduced, but also I might explore the reduction, and separation, of colours. Two of the pictures here show my initial experiments into adding water to freshly printed pictures, then pressing them down into my sketchbook so that the colours partly transfer across to the clean page, but also some linger on the original photo producing a partly reduced image. The concepts behind this process are yet to be discovered but I can imaging they will dictate the subject matter of my photos. 

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