Nancy Bell Scott Collages

I have always wanted my blog to be a place where I could show my work and work that has inspired me and also work that I have just found wonderful. And not just master’s work, but the work of us, the everyday artists doing what we do because we love it and some times are frustrated by it. Artists that are doing things that confuse them or stay up all night doing something because they suddenly ‘get it’ and can’t stop. Or art that I find out about when I talk to other artists, work that I never knew existed. Links to things that spark those things in a artist mind that an artist really understands.
Anyway enough.
The following Pieces are from the blog of Nancy Bell Scott who besides being a collage artist is a mail artist and a member, like myself, of the International Union of Mail Artists.

sent to Ruud Janssen, the Netherlands

sent to Neil Gordon, USA

sent to Erni Bar, Germany

 

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Driving With Your Artistic License

Creating art is a journey and traveling it can be a very rewarding experience. Learning about technique through reading books and magazines and watching videos or talking to other artists is like looking out the windshield. Hands on painting and sculpting, the act of creating, needs to fill miles. There is no substitute for doing!

When you first got in a car you were sure you couldn’t drive. You probably even said it to yourself. I can’t do this, I’m not sure what I’m doing, and you may even believe you weren’t any good at it. Get over it. You are allowed to become an artist, tell yourself so! The process of creating art is fun and filled with mistakes and happy accidents that I guarantee will make you smile. So go along with it and have fun. That’s why you started.

My first few cars were beaters that ran on maypops (worn out tires). As the cars got better so did the experience of driving. Your art is the same. Cheap quality brushes and paint will have a lasting effect on painting that IS NOT GOOD. Use better quality materials and you will quickly find that the work you create will be better in quality. And you know that it’s hard enough to create without having to deal with the frustration that is caused by inferior quality brushes and paint.

Having artistic license means that you have a responsibility to driving the creative process. Make it interesting. You don’t have to travel down the same roads day after day. Experiment with getting from one point to another. Instead of long careful brushstrokes across a landscape, dab and stroke blotches to see how they relate to the rest of the surface. Instead of pressing forward with your eyes open, squint at the artwork. See the tonal relationship that makes up your art. Color can be important but tones and their relationships are part of the variety that makes a work of art. By changing the size, shape, color and texture of elements in a painting, you are creating an interesting visual environment that a viewer will be pleased to visit. This is the importance of using your artistic license.

Your journey will put you in touch with the elements of design, the rule of thirds and maybe even an exploration of the golden triangle. You will play with cool and warm colors and tints and use them to create depths and perceptions. Your textures might create movement across the surface where you make your marks. And who knows what medium you will choose to express your ideas. Your artistic license will not be revoked for mistakes or experiments. Enjoy the journey!

 

 

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Strappo Art Printmaking

 

I have recently had the opportunity to reform a friendship with an artist I knew in Levittown, NY. Harold Garde was a subtle art influence in my early development. His daughter and I were high school friends which led to hanging out at each other’s homes.  This of course put me in contact with her father Harold. After high school we again crossed paths in art classes he taught at the local community college.

I moved on with my life, he with his until both of us wandered into a gallery opening in central Florida. When I heard his name mentioned I introduced myself. After the fog of some 30 years was cleared away we found we liked each other’s art and enjoyed talking about of all things, art! This led to discussions about a technique that Harold developed and named “Strappo”. This technique is a printmaking monotype dry acrylic image transfer that has been recognized by the New York Metropolitan Museum. A sample of the strappo image is in the museum print library collection.

Specifically the Strappo technique is a combination of two procedures.

The initial process is developing an acrylic painting on a piece of clear glass. In my experience the glass used should be 8 x 10 inches or smaller to start off, my preference being 6 x 8 inches. If you have never painted this way there are a few things you should remember.

·       You are painting in an opposite progression and in reverse

·       So if you paint a background first and cover the entire surface, you will not be able to add any elements

·       If you paint images with dark edges, you will want to do the edges first.

·       Your paint will need to be thick and dry between layers.

I have found that keeping a wet cloth and a razor blade at hand for mistakes have helped in my compositions. Remember it will be easier if you plan out some of the elements of the images in your work. Once the work is completely developed and dried, to thicken the acrylic skin of the painting, additional layers of acrylic gesso should be added.

The second step is the image transfer process.  Fresh coats of acrylic gesso are applied both to the back of the glass plate and on the sheet where the image will be placed. To avoid any undue frustration place the image to be transferred on a sheet of paper with extra space around the edges. Some artists like large white areas around their work while others prefer only enough to provide an edge before the matting. Make sure weight is applied to insure bonding of the gesso layers as they dry. Once dry, the glass can be peeled away from the image leaving the monotype transferred on the paper and the glass plate left clean. You might need a thin blade to remove any dry anchor that might have formed along the edge of the glass to help coaxed the process.  The image having been developed on the glass surface will be exactly as it was painted and very smooth at once creating unique tactile and visual qualities.

Strappo lends itself to some interesting challenges as you work. Perspective and balance take on new meaning as you explore the picture plane. And I think I should mention that the finished art can at once stand alone or be introduced into another finished piece. Harold Garde has a significant body of Strappo work on display at MOFA, the Museum of Florida Art in Deland Fl. Also on display is a permanent installation of his piece Iconoclass that measures 8 feet by 24 feet. This is the 1st unveiling of the fully assembled original Iconoclass mural in 35 years.

 

 

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Harold Garde Iconoclass Mural at MOFA

The installation of new museum signage and the digitally reproduced vinyl and laminated Harold Garde Iconoclass Mural on aluminum panels will occur on Monday, April 23 from 10am until completion. This 8’x40′ piece will be installed on the outside front of the Museum of Florida Art building-facing Woodland Boulevard (State Highway 17-92) in Deland. For those that want photos of the actual installation-we would suggest early to mid-afternoon on Monday. For those that want to photograph the completed installation-we would suggest Tuesday.

In conjunction with the installation of Garde’s historic Iconoclass , the museum is adding separate signage that complements this important work. The identity of the museum, in the past was sometimes overlooked by pedestrians and vehicles along Woodland Boulevard. This facade element will be much stronger and clearly identify the museum. If measured with Iconoclass, close to 40’ of fabricated panels will be installed on the façade, adding color and impact to Woodland Boulevard, enhancing this main avenue through the Stetson University campus and leads to downtown DeLand. Harold Garde’s poetic and original masterpiece entitled Iconoclass will be unveiled at a private reception on Saturday, April 28, 2012. The original 8′ x 24′ will be unveiled and showcased at this event along with the newly installed outside façade reproduction and museum signage. The original Iconoclass is a part of the Museum of Florida Art’s permanent collection. This will be the 1st unveiling of the fully assembled original Iconoclass mural in 35 years. A public Opening Reception will be held on Sunday, April 29 from 2pm to 5pm. The Sunday event will feature the original Iconoclass work in the lower Main Gallery. The event will also feature the showing of the film Harold Garde-Still Painting in the museum’s theater. The Strappo exhibit which will also open at the Saturday, April 28 private reception and the public April 29 Opening Reception features 39 Strappo Mono Prints by Harold Garde in the lower Main Gallery and an exhibit of area artists who work with the Strappo method in the Chris Harris Gallery. The Saturday, April 28 private reception is by invitation only. The Sunday, April 29 Opening Reception admission fee is no charge for members/$10 for non-members. The galleries are open Tuesday through Saturday from 10am to 4pm and on Sunday from 1pm to 4pm. General Admission is $5 – Museum members and children under 12 are free. The Museum of Florida Art is located at 600 North Woodland Boulevard in DeLand, Florida. Additional information is available by contacting the Museum of Florida Art at (386) 734-4371 or by visiting the website at www.museumoffloridaart.org NOTE: Interviews with Harold Garde can be arranged by contacting Angela Martinez at martinez@museumoffloridaart.org

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Sculpture listing

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