Last year I signed up for the Fiber Arts Take Two online course with Sally Tyrie called Visual Narratives. This was the second FATT course that I took. The course description reads:
Your training will begin with researching and examining areas of interest, before revealing ways of reimagining mark-making and collage from Sally’s considered and painterly approach. Use various print techniques without a press, including gelli plate, photo litho and collograph printing whilst learning to abstract visual narratives from any source of inspiration to create an ambitious body of work.
I was intrigued and looking, as always, for a way to expand my mark making. She taught many different approaches and we were encouraged to make lots of samples. I was familiar with some techniques, learned some new things, and discarded a lot of them as not being something I wanted to explore further. One of the best things about the course is that FATT provides and opportunity to submit a piece of work done during the class and then they create an online catalog (which you can also get in print through Blurb).
I had been working quite a bit on printing and copying (with my Epson printer) on pages from a vintage Japanese account book. I built up layers of imagery on the page and pushed my printer to do things it was not meant to do. I thought creating some small themed books (Japanese style) would be a way to create my catalog piece. But I felt like something was missing to bring the project together.
While out one day I saw an old box at a thrift store. It may have been an old painters box but any inserts were missing and it had no paint marks. I thought the box might make a great container for all of my book samples. Now all I had to do was clean it up, decide how to use the interior space, create it, finish the books, make a cover! Step by step I worked my way through. It was really great to work on something totally different. I had done quite a bit of bookmaking and box making loooooong ago and this project brought me back to doing that kind of work again and how I like the precision of it and the play of images across pages.
I created a Kanji signature for my name to use on the back of the box.
This is the statement that is inside of the box explaining the process, naming and techniques.
Daifuku-cho
A Box of Good Fortune
I was inspired to make this artwork by two disparate things- finding an old
artist’s box and a Japanese ledger titled Daifuku-cho (Good Fortune),
that I have long wanted to use in my work. Although a mundane object in Edo Japan,
the calligraphy and paper in the ledger are beautiful. Ledgers were used to
record a merchant’s debts and payments. The box and ledger are the elements I
used to build a collection of samplers that explore the various techniques from
the Visual Narratives course.
I used pages from the old ledger as the base to explore printing, overprinting,
painting and collaging with a variety of imagery. The samplers developed in
different directions under these themes.
Meditation
Introspection
1 comment:
So very interesting! How to refit a box to hold your pages-seems almost magical! Looks like you had a lot of fun doing this, and it all looks very engaging.
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