This semester was one of experimentation and research. Before I began the MFA-BLR program, my practice was engaged in an exploration of the idea of monumentalism as well as the concept of memory. I was also engaged in a search for my own visual language to express sacredness. This focus hasn’t changed all that much but I am currently focusing on various ways to create work that narrates these concepts to the viewer.
During the June review, Paul Briggs mentioned the aphorism “the medium is the message” which caught my attention and I began to review my work with this statement in mind. Initially, I accepted the statement at face value but have since come to question its broadness. I think a more accurate statement would be that art work “functions” best when “the medium amplifies the message”. But even this rewording doesn’t quite get to the heart of what I think is missing. Regardless, I began to closely consider the various mediums I use and what their contribution to the messages inherent in my work might be with the idea that I might be able to further tighten the relationship.
Obstruction and Experimentation
Also, during this semester, I specifically began to work towards more tightly aligning my drawing with my painting. My drawings have always been in service towards working out concept, composition, and value with the idea that, once I was satisfied, I would move forward into painting, But they contain a certain quality to them that is really inviting and very satisfying creatively. However, I’ve not been completely successful when taking these images into painting as I often lost the openness and “fresh” quality of the drawing when doing so. After a conversation with my mentor, Preston Wadley, and a conversation with Sharon Dunn, I set up an obstruction to work towards a more open paint style. The obstructions were two-fold and simple; I would use a reductive technique to create my paintings but I could only work on the painting for an hour. This served two purposes; first, it made me rely less on painting in detail and more on allowing the viewer to create detail themselves. Second, it made me approach the painting process in the same way that I approached my drawing process; toning the canvas and then wiping away paint to create the composition. In my drawing, I often tone the paper with several layers of hatch marks before using an eraser to mass in the subject highlights. This is followed by more graphite hatching to define the shadows.
The reductive painting technique held a number of surprises. I’ve been incredibly satisfied with what I’ve produced so far and am moving towards working in additive techniques that don’t overwhelm the reductive layer but, instead, support it without closing it down.
This technique also allows me to take full advantage of layering to create complex narrative. Instead of nailing the painting down completely in the beginning layers, I am able to leave the painting open and allow it to move in whatever way that it wants.
Mentored Goals – Cumulative Narrative
Early in the semester, my mentor suggested I focus on cumulative narrative as well as complex narrative. My work has always been narrative in scope but is often focused on a single subject and, when grouped, my work suggests a linear kind of narrative.
Mentored Goals – Alternate Media
Aside from my painting and drawing, I’ve engaged in a renewed interest in small bead work. This is partially in service to my exploration of monumentalism and partially due to my continued push against the exclusion of “craft” from the fine art world. I consider the boundary between craft and fine art to be artificial. It’s there, in my opinion, to exclude work that is most often done by women and cultures outside of the Western world. I’ve begun to consider my bead work with the dual idea that, as a medium, it has an inherent message and that it pushes against this boundary.
Study Plan Goals
Lastly, I began and continue to work on an annotated bibliography. I started this document primarily to more deeply research Native American paints, pigments, and painting techniques and have morphed it into including articles on survivance and Native American beading techniques. I am currently doing a lot of research on Native American Ledger Art. The bibliography can be viewed here.