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Artquest 30/30 Day 26 ‘Share your hack for being an artist’

The hints get more and more obscure but I think I can see where they are going. After much discussion with Mr Google (we are becoming quite good friends), I came to the conclusion it was about sharing any tips you have, what keeps you going, what is the secret of success. I’m not sure I’m the one to share any tips, especially about success, after all I signed up for this challenge as a result of being ‘stuck’. If I did have one tip though it would be take inspiration form wherever you can get it. There are many artists whose work I admire but they don’t necessarily inspire me to go out and make the sort of work they make; wildlife photographers for example. Our local camera club has a number of members who make absolutely beautiful wildlife photographs but I have no desire to follow suit. And whilst most of my photography is landscape based, I don’t want to get up before dawn to go and make the same photographs that many landscape photographers make. I want to do something different.

A few years ago we were on holiday in Avignon and I spotted that the local art gallery had the work of some famous painters so off I went to take a look. I have never been so disappointed. It was small, darkly lit and the artwork really did nothing for me. Chatting to the receptionist at the hotel, she suggested I also visit the ‘Collection Lambert’ which is the museum of modern art. I went along without expecting too much as modern art ‘wasn’t really my thing’, but what a revelation! Yes, there were some exhibits that could have been made by a 5 year old and lots consisting or just words that I couldn’t really get my head round but this is where I was introduced to Land artists Richard Long and Hamish Fulton, French artist Claire Tabouret’s The Lookouts and Detanico and Lain’s Ulysses, which blew me away. The exhibitions were very varied in terms of style and content and so refreshing, I have never since said that modern art isn’t my thing and whenever in Edinburgh, head for Mod 1 and Mod2 in preference to the National Gallery. I’m not suggesting that we should all go out and study modern art, just that we keep an open mind and be prepared to immerse ourselves in something different as invariably something will rub off and fire up the imagination.

This work is a composite of work inspired by some of the artists who inspire me. They mostly work in ICM, multiple exposures, alternative processes such as cyanotypes and Photoshop techniques such as stretching pixels.

Artquest 30/30 Day 25 ‘Use someone’s 30/30 post for inspiration’

I do try to scan through some of the other 30/30 posts every day. Some inspire me, others look as though a child has made then in about 5 minutes but I guess that is the nature of art and the guidance does say you can spend 5 minutes of 5 hours! One person whose work does intrigue me is a contemporary artist called Robert A Ireland. Much of his work is quite abstract and mainly, mixed media on wood but what caught my eye over the course of several days was a series of grids of cloud formations. I haven’t researched the thinking behind this work, that is something for when this project is over but I am now following him on the Artquest network.

It is my intention to make a book of my 30 pieces of work but that isn’t something I can do in a day. Robert’s grids on the other hand is doable so here is my 30/30 work to date, presented is a grid, to be continued.

Artquest 30/30 Day 24 ‘Make your art from your biggest stress’

Where do I start? I stress about every thing, mainly because I’m trying to juggle too many things at once, I hate saying no and I then expect everything to be perfect. Taking on two arty projects at the same time without giving something else up is a good example of that! Somehow I need to find a path through all the chaos and working on composite images a c0uple of days ago gave me the idea for this. The original photograph was taken at Bixlade, in the Forest of Dean and this is layered together with a cyanotype of oak leaves and blended in Photoshop. Maybe there is a path through the chaos!

Artquest 30/30 Day 23 ‘The future of art’

Today’s hint is ‘The future of art’ and that is the 6 million dollar question isn’t it? An artist’s life has never been easy and with all that is going on with AI, people are understandably, feeling more vulnerable than ever. As well as the artquest 30 works in 30 days challenge which I am thoroughly enjoying, I am also doing a 52 week challenge with Anne Brooks ‘Bobbin along’, where we are given a word to respond to each week and this week’s word is ‘hidden’. My mind linked the two. My artwork has traditionally been fairly standard photography based but more and more I am spreading out in different directions. By hiding a St. Christopher in my 52 week stitching project, I’m hoping for a safe journey wherever it takes me.

Artquest 30/30 Day 22 ‘Give in to your responsibilities’

So I could have just abandoned this challenge and gone and done the ironing but I’m over 2/3rds of the way there so not stopping now! When I searched the definition for this hint, I came up with things like ‘commit to something you have undertaken to do’ and it got me thinking about a project I tentatively started a few years ago, based around the iron industry in the Forest of Dean. I had been inspired by a photographer called Toril Brancher who was appointed Artist in Residence at LLwyn Celyn when the property was being restored in 2018. Rather than documenting the restoration, she wanted to find a link between the many generations of people who had lived in the property over several hundred years and focused on the plant life around the property for her project which she called ‘Could the grass remember?’ Whilst there is lots of information, including photographs of the coal industry in the Forest of Dean, there is very little about iron, even though it had been a main source of industry for many more years, since Roman times up until the early 19th Century. What hasn’t changed though is the plant life and this is where my work had started. My thinking was that I would use cyanotype to record the plant material and where possible, photograph where mines had been and somehow bring the 2 together. Early experiments seemed to work ok but by this time, I was coming to the end of year 2 of my photography studies, covid landed and that’s when I came to a halt.

My task for today’s work was to make another composite using some of the images I had made back then and maybe, just maybe, I will pick this up again and see where it goes. So today’s image is a wet cyanotype made from ferns collected at the Scowels near Bream, at a place known as the Devil’s Chapel and combine it with a photograph taken at the same place at the same time and modified in Photoshop.

I like the image, particularly the rust or iron effect produced with some of the filters in Photoshop but the photograph taken on the day doesn’t come through clearly enough, so whilst this meets the brief, it is back to the drawing board to see it this project still has any potential.

Artquest 30/30 Days 20 and 21

The hint for Day 20 was ‘Hate it’ and I didn’t have to think about this one. I absolutely loath the dreary wet days we seem to have had for weeks and yet again is was lashing down outside. I had recently learnt how to make abstract images using multiple exposures and custom white balance settings in camera and today, I would try this from the dry warmth of out conservatory. It took several attempts, but this image has raindrops on the window, rain falling in the pond and the barometer, which shows ‘change’, hopefully for the better.

Another odd hint for Day 21, ‘Make art from your last rejection’. I haven’t really had many rejections as I haven’t really submitted work for anything much. However, members of the RPS Landscape Group were recently invited to submit up to 2 images for the Landscape Exhibition 2025. We were advised that only 1 from each member would be considered and one of mine has been included, and so for day 21, I have gone for what is technically my rejection from this submission. I have reworked the image so that I can honestly say I have made some new work. Another infrared image which has turned out quite different from when I originally processed it.

Artquest 30/30 Days 18 and 19

I have a few days to catch up on so will do a few in the same post rather than separately as I don’t have great deal so say about some of them.

Day 18 was a case in point. The hint was ‘Make it green‘. My interpretation of green was environmentely friendly,but I got stuck with that so reverted to some work in progress, which was partly green and that I needed to get finished. A Mariner’s Compass that I had started at a workshop using a technique called Foundation Paper Piecing. I had done a little bit in the past but our tutor introduced a different way of working which I found quite tricky but having got the hang of it, actually quite like it.

I needed to get the piece done before Friday when we had out next meeting so this was an ideal opportunity to work on that. I had already done 2 of the 4 blocks so another one achieved my challenge and only one left to do to complete the work.

Day 19 hint was ‘Make your work commercial’, which I chose to ignore because my artwork is my leisure time and if I think of it in commercial terms it becomes too stressful. Instead, I went back to some infrared images I had taken a few weeks ago but not got round to processing and I must say I was pleasantly surprised by the result. I had always been told that in order to take decent infrared images, you needed sunshine. Not so. A few months ago I listened to a talk by a photographer who does quite a lot of infrared photography and he said, you can take infrared in any conditions, you just get different results.

Clearly this image needs to be processed but you can already see some definition in the sky so I thought it had some potential. You never know what you will get with infrared though so the end result was a pleasant surprise. A number of people have thought it was a frosty morning but no, just another grey day.

Artquest 30/30 Day 17 ‘Make a care package for someone who cares for you’

Another very obscure hint but it certainly got me thinking and I’m starting to enjoy trying to work out how to address them. So, I could have made some cheese scones for my other half but is that art? And then I started thinking about who else might like to know that I’m thinking about them.

I have a 98 year old uncle, my mother’s younger brother, who now lives in a care home in Falkirk. I visit whenever we are up north and write from time to time. I can’t phone as he is stone deaf but I’m in regular contact with his key worker and she keeps me up to date with how he is. For some while, whenever I’ve visited, I’ve come away with as stack of photographs and I’ve been thinking for a while that I should do something with them. I plan, eventually to make a book with some of them, with labels and little memories for my children and grandchildren but for now, a card made from some of the photos with a letter for Uncle Harry.

Artspace 30/30 Day 16 Rewild your work

How to address this hint other than deposit some of my old cyanotypes into the compost bin, though that is not a bad idea as they are made from natural materials. Instead I spent the morning in the Forest of Dean with a couple of camera club friends and @thewackyphotographer, who was showing us how to achieve some very abstract images using multiple exposures and custom white balance settings in our cameras. I realised that the area we were in is currently being returned to its natural state with trees having been felled and replanted and ponds and streams being introduced to encourage wildlife. This photo maybe isn’t as wacky as it might be and the colours certainly don’t look natural, but I think it fills the brief.

This technique is all done in camera other that a few tweaks with contrast post processing. It consists of 3 photographs, each taken with a custom white balance set to the extreme of a different colour. Lots of practice still needed, but I had an enjoyable morning.

Artquest 30/30 Day 15 ‘Today’s work should vanish by the end of the day’.

I’d like to know what makes the person, who chooses these hints, tick, if it is a person that is, which I’m beginning to doubt’. And yes, I know, I could just ignore them. I’m not sure what though, but something in me wants to keep responding to them. I suppose it keeps my brain ticking over. So, if I made a cake, it would be gone by the end of the day but is that a piece of art? Or maybe I should make a video of the freezer defrosting? Hmm, maybe not.

When I posted my alcohol ink piece on Instagram the other day, my daughter made a comment about collaborating as she likes to doodle and her work really is beautiful. I got to thinking that if I doodled all over that piece, the original image would disappear or at least be change beyond all recognition so I have made a start doodling. I used to draw eyes on all of my jotters at school, so I started with eyes, then progressed to flowers and some squiggles and before I knew it, I started to see faces. Maybe if I continue with this whilst watching the masked singer tonight, which I think is quite appropriate, I will cover the whole piece and who knows what I will reveal.