Tuesday 16 July 2013

Process


I thought it might be interesting to share my thoughts behind the John Clare pieces that I am working on.

 It started with me drawing and painting the hedgerow plants that surround this village into which he was born.  I had very little idea of where I was going with these drawings until I realised that the plants I was gathering contained lots of strewing herbs which had been used in medieval times to sweeten the air and to walk upon in homes that often had dirt floors. Certain plants would keep vermin away, others had antiseptic properties, some were purely for their perfume. My link to J.Clare would be the poetry that yearned for that ancient past and his pleasure at the simple plants and wildlife of his native village. I can see the medieval past in the grassland around here, the seeds that lie dormant for generations and when conditions are right provide us with a tapestry of historical plants, self heal, scabious,violas, thyme's, lady's mantle, meadow sweet to name but a few. So among my  herbs will be little 'cameos' of Elizabethan crewelwork or 'slips' as they were called, they were often based on plants or animals. I will take a line of relevant verse and make a stencil of it to weave into the scene. At the moment I see it on cotton organza but I'm not sure if the weight of the crewel work will be too heavy for the fabric, but that is what sampling is all about and as you can see I have started.


I have finished my final drawing/painting, the only one I feel precious enough about not to scribble notes all over it as I have the others. It has taken me from marker pens, to working with paint, mainly down to cost. These images are large and I was going through Promarkers  and various other pens at a rate I couldn't sustain. I have a lot to learn about painting but a start has been made.
   

4 comments:

  1. Thank you for sharing the thinking behind your pieces. The samples are looking good.

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  2. Always wonderful to see the process people go through in developing their work - I was so looking forward to hearing your talk at the Bedford Guild meeting tonight, but it clashes with a leaving do at our youngest daughter's school, so I'm sorry to have to miss it - good luck - I'm sure you'll have a lovely time.

    Best wishes

    Anny

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  3. oooh, hills and holes, havnt been there for many a long year, my childhoods all coming back to me, must take the kids, ,thanks for the memory pam and that looks like really interesting work,love it as usual..tina

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  4. It is a very special painting Pam ... it has great potential and is stunning.
    Thanks for the talk about herbs and there usage in the past ... I will re-think the weeds around me !
    Wonderful work !!

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