Summative Assessment: Key Points for Presentation

5 key points – Documentation

1. Initially exploring environmental harm through collage and drawing – Initially, my practice visually aimed to explore and investigate the environmental harm that our planet experiences and to highlight the causes and effects of environmental issues. I wanted to bring to light the fact that our world is under threat and display some sort of reality of today’s landscape, rebelling against the natural landscape beauty idyll that people cling on to. I started exploring these issues by experimenting with different ways of collating imagery of environmental harm together. Some simple, combining images together into one, others were scratched and ripped and defaced, echoing the damage that’s being done to the earth. The small vibrant collages I had made at this point seemed as if they were not achieving my aims and were too attractive. I later realised that maybe this wasn’t the case.

https://gemmaschiebefineart3.wordpress.com/2015/10/11/experimenting-with-collage/

2.Experimenting through painting – depicting landscapes incorporating scenes of environmental harm and adding materials associated such as oil and litter – I started exploring similar ideas through painting. It was realised that this work didn’t represent a reality that is being overlooked. The landscapes weren’t believable and showed more or an apocalyptic view with no hope. There was nothing in them to attract the viewer. There is an attraction to the beauty of nature in images of natural landscapes, I realised that my work needs to rely on this attraction in order for it not to be overlooked as environmental issues are so often overlooked. There needed to be an element of attraction repulsion within my work and so I started thinking about using the beautiful landscape imagery that people hold nostalgia for to highlight environmental issues.

https://gemmaschiebefineart3.wordpress.com/2015/11/14/large-modern-day-landscape-work-painting-with-waste-oil-and-crude-oil/

3. Large Scale Painting – I decided to experiment on a larger scale to see whether it brought anything to my work. Now with contrasting nature with environmental harm at the heart of my practice, I painted a large natural landscape incorporating scenes of environmental harm. This was not successful at all. This piece was again not a believable image, my painting skill lacked, the image was flat and the perspective wrong. I hadn’t addressed an element that I now realise is key to my practice. I wasn’t painting from life or from a photograph, I had an image of what a landscape was in my head and painted from it. When challenging nostalgia for beautiful natural landscape paintings and representing our current surroundings there needs to be a sense of reality that echoes the landscape and it wasn’t apparent in my work so far. Depicting the reality of the landscape is impossible without a more realistic and believable image. This caused me to revaluate my practice, and to think about what was successful and how to move forward.

https://gemmaschiebefineart3.wordpress.com/2016/02/09/working-on-a-large-scale-landscape-exploration-nature-juxtaposed-with-environmental-harm/

4.Revisiting Collage and Painting from them – I came to the conclusion that my cut out collage works had been the most successful element of my practice so far, they had an attraction that they relied on to expose the viewer to imagery of environmental harm, a sense of reality without rules of perspective and challenged nostalgia for traditional landscape scenes by changing both the format and content. I don’t know why I hadn’t realised this and thought about painting them before but it was now obvious that that was what I had to explore. Before embarking on this, I had to improve my painting skill, I needed to be able to translate these collages into paint believably, I wanted the works to become a landscape piece in itself, not lots of different images stuck together, I wanted to make it evident that these different elements exist in the same world. I hoped they would be read as a landscape even though the perspectives and format was untypical. I started learning and teaching myself painting skills such as under painting and glazing to equip myself to make these works successful.

https://gemmaschiebefineart3.wordpress.com/2016/02/09/reflecting-and-creating-collages-combining-nature-with-environmental-harm-imagery/

5. Experimenting with a variety of Painting techniques to complete my degree show work and displaying my final pieces – After painting one piece with a sense of reality, It was mentioned that I needed to keep these works fresh for myself and fresh for the viewer. I was making paintings, not copying collaged photographs and that needed to be evident in my work. The photographs have been reimagined through paint. I explored a variety of different painting techniques including block colour, complementary colour, the use of silhouettes, impressionist mark making etc. which most definitely challenged me. As well as keeping it interesting for me, I think the different techniques help capture the interest of the viewer, if they were all the same, photographic copies of my collages with nothing standing out, the attraction may not be as prominent and I imagine they could also be easy to overlook. They are all different and so encourage you to take them all in.

In terms of displaying my work, I decided to keep the quality of the collage and display them evidently as paper works. I felt that framing them would separate them from the viewer, putting a barrier between them and the work. I decide to hang them in a line around the three surfaces, and place the piece I felt to be the most eye catching near the centre, hoping people will be drawn to it, walk closer and be surrounded by my work, highlighting the fact that they depicted environment is one they are part of, not separate from.

Progress 5th Painting: Block Colour, Simplified Shapes and Complementary Colours

5 Key Points – Contextualisation

1. Robert Bateman – Robert Bateman creates paintings that contrast the natural land, environment and wildlife with similar imagery incorporating environmental harm. Conceptually this work achieves things that I set out to achieve in my work. The examples on my blog show a forest contrasted with imagery of deforestation and wildlife with litter and oil that could harm the animals etc. This fits in with my ideas surrounding contrasting the natural land with environmental harm, although this work almost has a before and after theme to it because of the way the images are divided, which is something I definitely do not want in my work. I want to build on this influence and I want my work to integrate imagery and I don’t want my work to emit the idea that the natural and the harmed land are separate because they exist in the same environment.

Robert Bateman: Contrasts

2. John Akomfrah “Vertigo Sea” – John Akomfrah talks about imagery being put together and having a dialogue. Putting imagery together and seeing what they say, they in their own right have a conversation. Most influentially he talks about two opposites colliding in a dialectical way and a new meaning emerging – “the third meaning” – applying this to my work, I have brought together natural landscape imagery with imagery of environmental issues, on their own they could be very separate, the beautiful land that’s still left and the areas that are evidently affected by environmental issues, however a third meaning arises when put together, it highlights the fact that this natural landscape exists in the same world as the harm and is suffering because of human neglect, the work is then showcasing what could be lost if it is overlooked and ignored and exposes the viewer to the causes of this depletion.

John Akomfrah – Vertigo Sea

3. Keith Arnutt – “Miss Grace’s Lane” – Keith Arnutt’s series Miss Grace’s Lane parodies the work of landscape artist Samuel Palmer. Applying this influence to my work, My paintings partly rely on parody in that in order for my concepts to be present, they rely on an assumption on the part of the viewer about what the traditional representation of a beautiful natural landscape is. When I talk about people’s nostalgia for stereotypically beautiful landscapes, I am talking about aesthetically pleasing paintings of a scene of natural beauty, unpolluted and unspoiled. People cling on to these images of the unharmed land and hang them in their houses etc. overlooking the fact that in reality, our world is far more polluted and experiencing different kinds of environmental harm. My work challenges traditional sublime landscape paintings also, not only in the format of the landscape and the challenged perspectives but in the fact that it contrasts the natural landscape with scenes of environmental damage. The fact that the work contains imagery of natural landscape beauty acts as a signifier for the viewer to pick up on the fact that the beautiful land in the image is there firstly to attract them to the image and secondly for that attraction to develop into exposure to the negative environmental toll.

Revisiting the work of Keith Arnatt and Relating it to my Own

4. Dexter Dalwood – I previously looked at the work of Dexter Dalwood in the context of researching an artist that painted from collages.  I revisited this work and started looking Dalwood’s work in terms of how each section is painted. The paintings evidently portray the different segments of the collages as I wanted my paintings to but you view the work as a whole image, something key to my work and a variety of different techniques are employed to render the image. Some of the work is expressive and other areas simple in it’s approach. Elements of the work are also realistic next to segments that are more painterly. Other techniques that are employed include the use of block colour, outlining, pattern and texture, simplifying shapes and silhouettes. The use of simple shapes and silhouettes is an interesting idea and one that I would like to explore within my work. These works are paintings, not copies of his collages and that is what I wanted from my work, to make paintings.  His work also inspired me to research different ways of painting, different techniques of rendering an image, I researched artists such as George Seurat, Van gogh and Emil Nolde in terms of techniques and use of colour and applied their influences to my own work. This work also inspired me to combine a variety of techniques into the same image and produce a more complex  and confident outcome.

Revisiting the Work of Dexter Dalwood

5. Book: Painting of Modern Life – The Book “The painting of modern life” has helped me to understand the relationship between photography and painting and the concepts and ideas that emerge when you translate a photograph into a painting and apply them to my work. Mostly, I was encouraged to think about how the photographs I have been working from were insufficient and why I felt they should be translated into painting. The photographic collages, are many different images, all taken from different places and brought together, painting them allows them to exist in the same image and highlights the fact that these different images are not separate from each other, echoing the reality of our environment. The collaged images are repetitive and of a similar colour palette. I have painted them with a sense of vibrancy, an attraction making them harder to overlook, I have also employed different painting techniques to keep them fresh and keep peoples interest in each image as each is a different viewing experience. The images could be censored photographs, the photograph of natural beauty could in reality have been next to a power station or a cut down forest. My work confronts this and highlights the reality of our landscape.

https://gemmaschiebefineart3.wordpress.com/2016/04/25/painting-from-modern-life-1960s-to-now/
(this post was a variety of different posts but I have condensed it down to one for assessment purposes – hence it’s length)

Degree Show: Final Display: Images

My Degree Show is up. I have taken some good quality pictures of my exhibition space and am really pleased with the outcome. The works, really stand out against the white background of both the paper and the wall. They are attractive, and the vibrant colours against the white definitely attracts the eye. The viewer will be attracted to the work and then exposed to the realities of today’s landscape. My practice is successful in this way.

The actual display of the work is also successful. They are all carefully measured about and precisely displayed onto the three surfaces. I have deliberately put which piece I think is the most attractive, eye catching and successful so that the viewer will be drawn to walk closer to the centre of the work. When doing so they will be surrounded by my work, highlighting that the worlds they are viewing is a reality they are part of. This is the landscape, landscape beauty is used here to highlight environmental harm but also as a symbol of what could be lost if the causes of depletion are not acknowledged and acted upon.

Final Artist Statement

My practice aims to challenge and confront the sense of nostalgia inherent in traditional landscape painting that portrays unrealistic and romantic views of the land to highlight the harm to our natural environment as a result of human avarice, industry and neglect. It is easy to overlook the damage that is being done to our environment and cling on to the image of an unpolluted landscape. My work explores an attraction to the beauty of nature and relies on this to expose the reality of the harm the environment is subjected to. Contrasting fragments of our natural landscape and imagery of environmental harm are brought together in a dialectical way to provoke a reaction. This emphasises the reality of our natural environment, not some bucolic idyll, and underlines the actuality that the elements of unspoiled natural landscape may one day be lost and only a distant memory if the causes of its depletion are not acknowledged and acted upon.

My current practice explores these ideas through painting, drawing and collage. I use collage to create initial works in their own right and also to create amalgamations of imagery which then become translated and reimagined through painting. Working in this way I seek to break the conventions of a typical landscape painting challenging assumptions of format, spatial content and perspective. The multiple perspectives and scales of my final images develop into a new and believable image where natural landscape beauty is not separate from environmental issues but used to highlight them.

Planning the Hanging of my Degree Show

I have prepared my space ready for the Degree Show, today I made templates and measured out the space before marking out where each painting is going to hang. It took I have decided on six paintings on the back wall and two on each side. I have spaced them out across the three surfaces with enough of a gap for them to be separate from one another but close enough for them to be viewed as a series of work. I decided to display them in a long line around the walls as mentioned previously. They are surrounding, echoing the fact that we are surrounded by the environments depicted.

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I have tried to be critical and discount some of my paintings, I thought about showing 8 but I don’t think I can not use two. They are a series of works, each one created by learning from the one before and each one integrating a different painting technique. I have worked so hard to get them all done to the best of my ability and I can’t pick any out as being less successful than others.

Final Touch ups, Thinking about Degree Show Display

I have now done final touch ups and painted all the backgrounds white, in a textural cross hatched pattern using a flat brush. I am incredibly proud of all the hard work I have put in to complete all 10 paintings, last week I spent every evening in the studio working until midnight to get them finished to a high standard for the show. I definitely feel as if I am putting my best work into the Degree Show. I am now thinking about the degree show, I thought after I had created 10, I would critically reflect and maybe not show them all. However, I spent some time evaluating them and critically reflecting on them and I have decided that I want to show all 10 in the Degree show. There isn’t one that I think is particularly weaker than others and they all encompass different painting techniques and are successful in different ways. They show a journey of exploration and I don’t think the work would feel complete without them being all exhibited. Visually as a set of 10, I think they are strong.

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Degree Show Space Allocated: Thinking about how to Display my Work in the Space

I have been allocated my Degree Show Space and I now have to think about how I am going to display my 10 paintings within that space. I have 4 walls set out as in the diagram below, after thinking about possibilities, I will display 6 pieces on the back wall and two either side. So that the viewer is almost lead around them but also kind of surrounding them while they are in the space, relating to the fact that they are part of the world they are looking at.

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I am going to use magnets to hang the work as shown below. I am going to reinforce the adhesive on the back of the magnetic tape I am using, just to be extra sure they aren’t going to fall off the wall, using super glue for the back of my work and glue for the wall. I have to prepare my space now and my plan is ready for hanging.

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10th Painting Completed

I have completed my 10th and final painting. The series of works I have been working hard on over the past few months for my degree show is finished! The vertical mark making is definitely successful and breaks the piece out of being a copy of a collage and to a well thought out painting. My whole body of work is visually attractive, which is a successful element because it initially draws the viewer in through attraction and then exposes them to the realities of our landscape.

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I now need to go back, touch up and paint all of the white textured backgrounds that need painting on each piece before they are left to dry and boxed up while the exhibition space is built.

Starting my 10th and Final Piece: Realism and Vertical Mark Making

My 10th Painting incorporates the use of vertical lines/mark making and combines it with painterly areas and parts with higher realism. I am incorporating many different shades of similar colours into the vertical mark making and spending time working on my shading and tonal variations in other areas. The colour palette of this piece is quite neutral in comparison to previous works.

This is the last painting that I will produce before painting all the backgrounds with a white textural mark and thinking about starting to prepare for my Degree Show.

9th Piece Completed: Ideas for 10th Painting

My 9th Painting is finished! Which means I will be starting my 10th and final work tomorrow. I really let my instincts take hold with this painting and kept applying the paint with no real image of how I wanted it to look. The variety of different elements make this piece attractive to the eye. I find myself looking into this one the most so far. These pieces are definitely first attractive before they reveal the negative imagery associated with environmental harm that is within them.

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 I was never sure that I would get this far, I am incredibly proud of all the work I have put into my degree show outcomes and am very happy with how they are looking all together. I have produced a few complex works now, for my 10th final painting I think I am going to make it a bit simpler and just combine realistic elements with vertical mark making.

Progress 9th Painting: Diagonal Marks, Stripes, Coloured Outlines

There are a variety of different painting techniques included in my 9th Painting. I am Incorporating diagonal mark making, coloured stripes and outlining areas with colour. This piece is a highly complex image and so there is a lot of scope for experimenting with different approaches to painting. The diagonal mark making is highly successful and the patterned affect that is emerging when it is contrasted with the striped elements makes this work differ from the others in the series.

I am confident that my work is still looking fresh, each piece is different and I haven’t got tired of exploring a variety of methods, they are all individual in their own right but also are really coming together as a set.