I'm back from Ohio after an uneventful flight. I really do love Southwest. Nobody's perfect, but they're way better than average.
After a week of hard work at the Barn I've been thinking a lot about just that--hard work. Yes, I have my lazy, slack-jawed moments in front of the TV, but generally I think I'm pretty hardworking. Or, perhaps it's just that I'm in constant motion--mental and/or physical. The last week has reminded me of the importance of spending time on an idea or design and going deeper; approaching it from different angles and resolving issues. Looking back at my work for the last year it has been, to a large extent, a series of one-offs. Now I'm feeling the need to focus on design work and to do more series work. In doing so I think that I will improve my critical eye and ultimately improve as an artist. I've also got to develop a mentoring relationship of some sort, either here or somewhere reachable by mail. I need some consistent critical feedback.
For the last couple of years I've tried to set a developmental goal. The goal for the last 12 months was to improve my knowledge of color theory and my use of color. I believe I've achieved that, though clearly a lifetime of applying and refining lies ahead. I think that the goal for the coming year is going to be to create a body of work that:
- Covers a limited number of themes
- Explores each design through several media (e.g., art cloth, art quilt, painting, drawing, photography)
- Includes design and color iterations (i.e., the same piece executed in multiple design variations)
- Applies what I have learned about color
- Requires a deeper study of design principles
3 comments:
I'm exhausted just reading about your week. You've set quite a goal for yourself - good! Knowing you, you'll get there.
R.
I'm looking forward to seeing how art unwinds out of all plans :-)
I think you've come a long way since I started following your blog... and you inspire me to do more! Your class sounds exhausting, but it also sounds like you got a lot out of it, so that is all good... now go forth and create! (Don't forget to have fun!)
Judy
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