+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by...

Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by...

Date post: 22-Jun-2020
Category:
Upload: others
View: 4 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
26
Sketchbook stories Take your first step towards creating work that maers by sharing in the processes, techniques and studio secrets of ten mixed media Textile and Fiber artists TextileArtist.org An e-book by
Transcript
Page 1: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Sketchbook storiesTake your first step towards creating work that matters by sharing in the processes, techniques and studio secrets of ten mixed media Textile and Fiber artists

TextileArtist.orgAn e-book by

Page 2: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

IntroductionSketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set exercise as a way of developing an idea in their sketchbooks, the page or pages they created wouldn’t look at all alike. As artists you can’t help but express yourself uniquely. And the sketchbook is the perfect place to develop that unique voice, experimenting with new ideas, colour combinations, materials and tools.

Sketchbook Stories explores how 10 influential contemporary textile artists use their sketchbooks and why this is a cherished part of their process.

Joe and Sam Pitcher

Page 3: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

An e-book by www.TextileArtist.orgBren Boardman – Mind map for exhibition plan

Page 4: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

An e-book by www.TextileArtist.orgBren Boardman – Mind map from sketchbook

Page 5: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Bren BoardmanMy studio shelves are filled with my many sketchbooks of all shapes and sizes, that span over 15 years of my ideas, some developed, some random – combining photos, lists, drawings, postcards, scraps of samples, and other paraphanalia.

I have always urged students to help their own creative process by working in sketchbooks, journals, scrapbooks, diaries, call them whatever you want, but to use them as an important place to gather any visual research and thoughts. Sketchbooks are often art projects in themselves, or can be the stepping stone to further development in any media you choose.

Just as with athletes developing muscle in training, artists develop confidence and ideas through practice in using their sketchbook to test paints, draw ideas, jot down thoughts, stitch random samples… these are all practice to help build “artistic muscle” or “mileage on the pencil”!

So, when I appear to produce a picture without back-up work, this is unlikely to be the case. If you were to watch me draw a flower onto a background fabric, then you were to delve into some of my sketchbooks, you would be sure to find similar colour combinations, flower drawing or stitching method. We do not come to this without some practice and a sketchbook is a form of organising this process.

Sketchbook stories Bren Boardman An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 6: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

When I start a new sketchbook I try to reserve the first two facing pages to produce a mindmap so I can keep referring back to my notes and ideas during the project.

If, like me, your head is full of ideas for a project and you dont know where to start, then consider adopting this practice and using the first page of your sketchbook to draw a mindmap. A mindmap is a diagram starting in the centre of a blank page where you write a key word or phrase. From this central “idea” you can draw branches and sub-branches to write associated words, ideas and even images that all relate to your main idea. Since the brain doesn’t usually think in list fashion, but randomly, then the shape of this tree-like structure can help aid your creativity and serve as a dumping place during the project process.

www.brenboardman.com

Sketchbook stories Bren Boardman

“Just as with athletes developing muscle in training, artists develop confidence and ideas through practice in using their sketchbook”

An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 7: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Lynne Butt – Sketchbook An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 8: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Lynne Butt – Sketchbook An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 9: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Lynne ButtMy sketchbooks are very special to me, they are works of art that can can be held, and felt and smelt!

They are never finished, I can go on changing them, adding to them or taking bits away. The whole book can be taken apart, rearranged and put back together in a different order or the pages can be incorporated into another book or even stuck together. Sometimes I can spend more time on my sketchbooks than on the finished piece of work! They contain ideas and reminders and lots of excitement.

I like to work on different types of paper, and often put a coloured wash over pages, I paste in scraps of paper to add texture to drawings, I like to use charcoal and pastels for drawing so that I can smudge them (it’s a bit messy though, especially when you’re out and about). I tear the edges of the pages and then carefully paint along the torn edge (giving an aged effect), layers of pages with torn edges are wonderful and I often photograph these sections using a macro lens which gives lovely blurred out of focus edges.

I am now experimenting with a sketching app on my iPad. It is amazing and very different, I am having a lot of fun with it (and fingers stay clean!). I like the idea of taking photographs with the iPad and then working into them. The possibilities are endless, but it could never take the place of something that is so tactile, the feel of the cover and the immense variety of paper, paint, ink, glue and any number of ‘found’ objects that find their way into a sketchbook.

www.phoenixcontemporarytextiles.com/lynne_butt

Sketchbook stories Lynne Butt An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 10: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Jette Clover – Metropolis 1 (detail) An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 11: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Jette Clover – Words 1 (left) & Winter Wall (right) An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 12: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Jette CloverI have a general idea in mind and collect a pile of possible materials and start pinning pieces on my design wall until it feels right. I respond directly to the materials. If I had to plan out an idea first, I wouldn’t be interested in making the piece. I am a hands-on person, and I like the handling of materials and making spontaneous decisions about what works. The collage medium is ideal for me.

For several years I have been starting my day by making a small paper collage, spending about 1/2 hour with myself and my materials and training my hand-eye co-ordination. I feel this daily routine has increased my confidence in making compositions based on my intuition. And this way of working, following my intuition, I then take with me when working on bigger pieces.

I also have a stack of note-books with a collection of images and writing. I try to organise them by subject matter, eg. street signs, graffiti, textures, collage, individual colours, etc. but with no luck. Too much overlapping. These books are my collected memories. They are really me ‘talking to myself’ about my thoughts, ideas and inspirations, and I can spend hours or a whole day just looking through them.

www.jetteclover.comSketchbook stories Jette Clover An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

“For several years I have been starting my day by making a small paper collage, spending about 1/2 hour with myself and my materials and training my hand-eye co-ordination.”

Page 13: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Siân Martin – Notebook An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 14: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Siân MartinThinking, research, thinking, making notes, sketch drawings, more thinking, exploratory drawings – yes on paper, to get the ‘thinking’ out of my head and in front of my eyes so I can do more thinking and writing of notes!

I have got into the habit recently of working initially into a tiny note book, then onto bigger sheets of paper. I spread a selection of these onto a large whole-wall pin board along with previously made drawings and samples that seem to make a connection with the new ideas. My father always said you only do one piece of work in your life time – just fine tuning and developing it over the years. As you do about the wise words from a parent, I used to think that was ridiculous – but not now as I’m finding a more consistent story that I am enjoying. So I can see value in the recurring thought and I start a new piece of work by re-building, removing, and adding to my pin board wall with a collection that I feel will trigger the first thinking stages of a new piece of work.

I am currently working in a very small sketchbook as I find it easy to carry around with me and has an immediacy of recording fleeting ideas – quick marks and notes that occur without it turning into an art book. When wishing to take some of these marks forward, I turn to much larger sheets of paper that give me the freedom to enjoy the physical act of drawing, using a range of drawing media, although my favourite is a bottle of black ink and a selection of drawing ‘tools’ like sticks, a candle and large paint brushes. These larger drawings are stored in a plan chest drawer or portfolio – with a few selected pieces finding their way onto the wall to take me onwards to the next stage of thinking and playing.

www.distantstitch.co.ukSketchbook stories Siân Martin An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 15: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Carolyn Saxby – Sketchbook An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 16: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Carolyn Saxby – Sketchbook An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 17: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Carolyn SaxbyI consider myself to be pretty much self taught. I have always worked my way through experimenting with techniques found in books and magazines and stuff I stuck in my sketchbooks.

Really, I consider my books are not so much sketchbooks but rather are gathering books. Everything gets glued in and a visit to an art exhibition may inspire a splash of colour with my paints or small stitched samples … a line of stitches or a textured fabric glued in.

I experimented with these mood books for a long time before I consider I became an artist … perhaps I was always an artist … are we not all artists just expressing our feelings in different ways in life?

I did a whole project on just the blue/grey pebbles with lines of quartz running through them … pursuing this topic in many different media.

… another sketchbook focused completely on the fishing paraphernalia found on Smeaton’s Pier for instance.

carolynsaxby.blogspot.com

Sketchbook stories Carolyn Saxby An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

“Really, I consider my books are not so much sketchbooks but rather are gathering books.”

Page 18: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Cas Holmes – Sketchbooks An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 19: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Cas Holmes – Sketches An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 20: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Cas HolmesDeveloping your artistic narrative is an individual journey. There is no short cut or easy way. I spend considerable time thinking through ideas and developing the processes behind them, both as an artist and a teacher. Why do I consider the act of drawings and keeping a record is important?

• Your own references are important because you have been there• You build your own relationship to the experience; the places you have been, the objects

you see, as part of the act of making a record• You train your eye and stop to look as part of an investigative approach• Your own drawing, notes and photographs act as a memory prompt

Make notes as you go either directly on the material or page. Keep them in a binder or sketchbook ‘journalling’ your thoughts about what inspires you (peeling walls, patterns from a building, flora). Learn all the techniques that interest you but don’t be afraid to experiment with processes, adapt them and make mistakes. These failed ‘experiments’ are time well spent. Work without fear, it will take time but constantly referencing what is around you, combined with practice, helps to inform your work, develops your subject and leads to the development of your ideas.

www.casholmestextiles.co.uk

Sketchbook stories Cas Holmes An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 21: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Linda ColshI use a variety of workbooks; many are simply collections of images or notes about things that I find inspiring or want to just not forget. These are very non-linear recordings of all sorts of things, not just ideas or thoughts about things. Photos, postcards, clippings and ephemera, my sketches, writing and drawings, quick collages.

My workbooks are also a way to keep hands and mind active in downtimes, time when I am not actually involved in the making of an artwork. These workbooks are the place where I begin, where I try out, flesh out, modify and even abandon when things don’t come together; a place where I don’t have to finish; or a place that provides the point of going into the studio. Some things do get lost, especially in the older workbooks, but ideas stand a greater chance of being lost for good if they aren’t noted in image or writing at all. I need to take more time to read the old workbooks to rekindle.

I have workbooks where I record words or phrases; I think of these as my “titles workbooks” because the words & phrases sometimes percolate to become the titles of my artworks. I really care that my titles are part of my artworks – kind of like finishing the edges of a piece or applying the hanging sleeves or stitching the label on the back. So, I spend time to think about the title and make it illuminating. Sometimes, a piece will have a title before the work is even begun; other times, the title isn’t settled until the last moment.

Sketchbook stories Linda Colsh An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 22: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Also, I have my technical workbooks. These are full of rather dry pages of the puzzle-working of numbers, calculations and rough lines, squares and rectangles that are my construction diagrams for piecing – the patchworking. I have a master construction workbook that records the size-numbers I need to work to for the various formats I work to.

A number of years ago, I decided to work to some standard sizes & shapes for presentation reasons (1-meter & 1-1/2 meter squares; tall, narrow rectangles and less strictly sized horizontal rectangles; & some small format work, which are the bread and butter sizes). To work this way requires more planning and repeatable planning (pieces don’t just grow to whatever they become); thus, the master construction workbook.

www.lindacolsh.com

Sketchbook stories Linda Colsh An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

“My workbooks are also a way to keep hands and mind active in downtimes, time when I am not actually involved in the making of an artwork. ”

Page 23: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Shona Skinner – Sketchbook An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

Page 24: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Shona SkinnerI have several sketchbooks on the go. I have recently been running workshops for the Shetland Embroiderers entitled ‘Sketching to Stitching’.

This was to encourage the group to work from their own drawings and then to develop them into free-machine embroidered pieces. Some of the ladies had not sketched since they were at school and they all seemed delighted with their results. I think I have converted many of them to keeping a sketchbook on the go!

I have one particular sketchbook which I would be be very sorry to lose. When I was teaching the A Level Textile course I put all my samples into this little book and it has become my bible of techniques that I am constantly referring back to. I also make fabric books full of experimental pieces using ripped fabrics, which are reconstructed and then stitched, burned, beaded, etc.

www.shonaskinner.com

Sketchbook stories Shona Skinner An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

“I put all my samples into this little book and it has become my bible of techniques that I am constantly referring back to.”

Page 25: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Jan BeaneyA sketchbook is the essential start to any work. In most cases, I make a rough painting to scale in order to sort the composition before starting the textile.

Building up the surface with dye, print and fabrics often precede hand stitch and machine work. Working with soluble film entails fabrics and threads being placed before the machining. I like working in my studio with little distraction so I can give the piece the necessary concentration.

I would be lost without sketchbooks, both for recording observations and developing ideas. Nothing happens without visual research.

doubletrouble-ent.com

Sketchbook stories Jan Beaney An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

“A sketchbook is the essential start to any work.”

Page 26: Sketchbook stories - Amazon S3 · Sketchbook stories Cover image by Lynne Butt An e-book by Introduction Sketchbooks are personal. If a group of artists were to follow the same set

Corinne YoungI am a prolific user of sketchbooks, and have several. The ones I keep for ‘best’ are quite precious and consist of pictures gathered from various sources, along with tidy detailed sketches.

I then have another working one for quick sketches which I use on a daily basis, and a box for samples – very important to work out any problems before embarking on a full scale work. My old sketchbooks are usually the first thing I refer to when researching for a new piece of work.

www.corinneyoungtextiles.co.uk

Sketchbook stories Corinne Young An e-book by www.TextileArtist.org

“I am a prolific user of sketchbooks, and have several.”


Recommended