So here goes
– my first post after a long battle with writers block. Since I last posted, I
have been drawing non stop, as well as moving and running my little family. I
am still working hard on an exhibition, though I am not sure where and when it
will be exhibit.
My hopes are
obviously somewhere spectacular as soon as possible!
My last post
was about drawing, and it seems the more I draw the more I discover and learn
through the process – as with creating anything I guess.
The process
of drawing is just such an intense, emotional one for me. At one stage after
and during the last years of university, I remember having this fear of subject
matter within drawing and painting. Is my subject matter valid?
I always
enjoyed the drawing and painting process – since I can remember – even as a
very small child. I remember having a best friend in grade two , I was 7 years
old, him too. I used to go to the library and take out a book called OTTO –
about a doggy and his mom. I used to think he was the most adorable little
character.
I would take
the book to class with me, and my friend and I would sit at the table with the
book open between us.
We created
this challenge of seeing who could draw Otto the best (without tracing him,
just looking at the page in the book.) I always won – which I am sure I loved
as my poor friend turned out to be not interested in art or drawing at all
later in is life.
He carried
on to finish both primary and high school with me. We sadly lost our connection
along the way though. Possibly because of our vastly different interests.
Another
recollection of drawing I had was in grade 3, I was now 9, and had to draw on a
large paper, a bicycle the teacher placed in front of the class.
I remember
finding it incredibly hard to draw from a real life object, and to get down all
the detail and proportions to my 9 year old perfection.
When I was
finished drawing the bicycle, I felt I had nailed it – I remember feeling as if
the bicycle was perfect and one of the things I felt proudest of drawing ever
before that moment.
The dilemma
came after – and this was maybe my first real encounter with subject matter. We
were instructed to place our bicycles into a setting.
I found this
odd, as I drew the bicycle with no intention and in the proportion of the
particular classroom with no one riding it. I had to do as I was told, so I did
– I drew a curved road, and decided the bicycle needed a man on it.
I drew a man
on it – but I was never ever more horrified with the proportions of a nose I
have drawn, than with this guy’s.
In an
artistic sort of transcendent angst (I get this still from time to time during
the creation of my artworks), I drew a red nose with the same crayon over his
face – to make him a clown…. It looked terrible….
Then I drew
some red hair on him….
I was losing
my shit – everything I did to cover it up made it worse for me.
I remember
starting to cry uncontrollably – something I never did in front of a class of
piers– not back then anyway.
The rest was
a blur!
I hated that
drawing.
The teacher
ended up putting it on the annual school exhibition, and I could not understand
why.I guess she might have felt sorry for my tears over it, or maybe she was trying
to teach me some lesson of sorts.
Nevertheless
– lesson not learnt ,if there was one intended, and I still hated the damn
drawing.
I threw it
in the bin as soon as it came off the show – I would die twenty deaths if my mom
ever had to lay eyes on it.
I was always
doubting what I drew as soon as the teachers stopped giving us a theme.
This is something
I feel universities can challenge students with – stop giving them themes – let
them broaden their horizons, and find their own way.
After not
drawing a few years, and all of a sudden starting again, I thought I would
start out drawing things I liked.
So I have
always enjoyed images – I have collected and taken them ever since I can
remember.
I used to
construct my painting themes by making my poor sister do the most ridiculous
teenagy things – like posing with a cigarette etc. To put that into a painting
with a much too broad theme for my hormone tortured 16 year old mind.
So now when
I thought of a drawing exhibition, I at first decided I will just draw images I
liked – of organic things. Little did I know these images will all be good
enough and valid in every way, subject matter and all.
This is
partly because I soon discovered that images (sourced from magazines and the
web) are much more alive than I could ever imagine. In a way one could say each
image has a life of its own.
Every time I
started a drawing with an image, it made me think of another image…. And after
a while I would pic images from magazines and other pop sources cause they
became applicable and somewhat iconic to my own life.
Whilst drawing a stock image I found in a magazine, it started reminding me of a picture I took on a magical day I spent with someone being the most in love I
think I have ever been. He always stands the same way the man in the stock image does for photographs, and he moves his hands in the same way. His pose on that day reminded
me of Jesus – as well as his peaceful way.
I started drawing the stock image, of a person I did not know, and it turned out to reminded me of a person I know personally.
The T-shirt my friend was wearing on the day contained a scull – a laughing scull – this reminded me of how
hard he lives. Almost as to try balance out this peaceful way. In ways that
makes me think he sometimes challenges life.
The colour red
is never something good in my drawings – the line serves as some sort of
connecting narrative–– in this case the red lines symbolized death.
Some examples of red (line) usage in some drawings
In this particular drawing the lines also
symbolize the fine line of balance between life and death and coming from the
wrists, Jesus’ hands bleeding on the cross (sin etc.).
I never draw faces on my figures - these stock images become part of my life, the figures become people or symbolic to my story.
Pictures of the final drawing
Because I did
not plan what, where and when before I began drawing again, I started on a
piece of paper that’s size I liked (and had), not knowing what I was going to
draw….
The first
drawing I did became larger, as it started relating to my life and therefore other
images I found needed to be added. I had to just add a piece of paper, and I
did.
I thought
about this. I liked how the drawings was still growing, yet they can still fit into
my drawer. They found a way to fit into my life organically, whilst maintaining
their freedom.
I realised
that is how art, relationships, drawing and essentially life should be.
Free.
Free to
grow.
Free to be
what it wants to be.
Free to tell
my story in its own language.
I feel as if each drawing comes alive. The
more I draw, the more I remember.
The drawing
shapes itself around these nostalgic emotions. Each line is considered carefully
on basis of these thoughts. Both in intensity as well as shape.
A simple
stock image or advertisement becomes something along the lines of a personal
diary. It morphs itself to fit into my life.
I try keep
it as free as possible. I don’t confine it to a single paper. If it wants to be
larger, I add another paper (and another) paper.
Even the
lines between the two joined papers in this way becomes symbolic to me.
Both drawing
and painting has proven to me that the process will always transcend the
subject matter. That it is vitally important to keep the process free in order
to achieve the maximum from the subject matter.
XXXX
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