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Wednesday, October 05, 2011

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The Object

Chris Meyer | 10/05

One of most recent works was the cause of serious soul-searching over the nature of my art.

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Ever have one of those pieces that you put in a drawer for a couple of years, pulling it out periodically only to shove it back in because your head wasn’t in the right space yet to deal with it? That’s the underlying story behind this piece, The Object. In this case, it wasn’t just the image I was having trouble with - it was also the text I decided to attach to the image to give it a story. But sometimes, you just have to challenge yourself.

In this article, I want to share both the technical details of how this piece came together, as well as my internal conversation over the nature of abstract art and how it relates to photography.

The Wide Shot

Most of my recent photography-based mixed-media pieces - such as Seeking to Understand and Avian Aspirations - use close-ups of the cracks, veining, and strata in rock as the structural pattern for my shapes. Combined with cropping that hides the edges, perspective is removed, helping to abstract the shot. However, every now and then I back up, widen out the lens, and shoot a mountainside for my patterns. I still crop out the ground and the sky, but the scale is much different, and the underlying image is often more recognizable as being a mountain rather than just colors and shapes.

In the spring of 2009, we visited Arches National Park in Utah. In addition to its namesake arches, there is also a wonderful section known as Park Avenue which contains a number of huge, monolithic slabs of rock arranged at varying angles:

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As you can see, it was an overcast day, which resulted in a featureless sky and lack of strong shadow patterns. This would normally be a bummer for nature photography, but actually helped in creating evenly lit surfaces for me to work with.

A large section of one of these rock faces served as the underlying photo for this piece. Here is the untouched Camera Raw file; the gnarled tree in the lower right helps give a sense of scale:

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A problem with the flat lighting was a corresponding lack of vivid color. I increased the contrast and saturation to give myself more variety in the values and hues:

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As this was shot with an older Canon 10D DSLR with a maximum of 3072 pixels, I restricted myself to a print size of 12"x18” so I could get at least 150 dpi resolution for the print (I prefer at least 200 dpi for sharpness; 100 dpi tends to be too soft). I printed a pale version on heavy art stock as my “paint by numbers” guide, and then turned to deciding what papers to tear to match the patterns in the rock.

Shooting the Message

I often like to include text as part of my collage “underpainting” to help hook in the viewer. Sometimes I use foreign languages and alphabets to evoke a sense of mystery; sometimes I use explicit texts in English to set the mood for the rest of the piece (such as was the case for Avian Aspirations).

For these texts, I rely on old dictionaries, encyclopedias, and textbooks, both to ensure the sources are in the public domain, and also to present a different take on what may now be commonly accepted knowledge. Sometimes I borrow from fringe practices, such as phrenology which opined you could determine a person’s behavior by the details in the shape of their skull.

As part of this study, I came across the writings of the influential phrenologist George Combe, who assembled a number of his earlier submissions to The Phrenological Journal and Magazine of Moral Science into a small tome titled Phrenology Applied to Painting and Sculpture, released in 1855. It includes a passage titled “Object of the Artist.” In it, Combe - a self-admitted novice in art, who was appalled by the reliance on opinions and impressions over reasons and principles in the field of art criticism - states:

The object of these arts is to represent, by means of form and color, the most interesting and beautiful productions of Nature, invested with their highest attributes. Until the things themselves be scientifically understood, the science of representing them will remain imperfect.

Although there are certainly excellent representative-style artists who hone their craft by studying the makeup of their subjects in intimate detail, such a statement denies entire fields of impressionistic, expressionistic, abstract, and other non-representative art. Indeed, the equation of art to the “science of representation” is enough to cause many to bristle.

The irony, of course, is that photographers - by the very nature of their craft - are usually involved in representative art. Then how dare I call myself an abstract artist, when the source of most of my recent work has been photographs?

This inner conflict was recently resolved when I read Fran Boas’ classic (1927) text Primitive Art where he states up front that “It is essential to bear in mind the twofold sources of artistic effect: the one based on form alone, the other on ideas associated with form.” I indeed focus on the ideas as much as the form. For example, when I take a photo of a bird, I am not as interested in the object “bird” as much as trying to capture a movement, pose, or expression that yields insight into what the bird might be thinking - the essence of the bird in that moment. Many accomplished photographers have he same goal: to get at the essence of the scene or being they are photographing; not just the surface appearance.

Additionally, one must keep in mind that Combe wrote “Object of the Artist” well before modern or abstract art became major forces, let alone were widely accepted as legitimate forms of artistic expression.

Still, although I felt compelled to use Combe’s words to compel the observant viewer to think, my own issues with their assertion kept this piece in a drawer for nearly two years. I finally made peace by accepting the irony of creating a piece of abstract art with these words at its core, and pushed forward.

next page: creating custom collage papers from scans; assemblage and framing decisions

 

(Page 1 of 2 pages for this article  1 2 >)

               


 

Seeking to Understand

Chris Meyer | 08/20

My process for creating a mixed media piece about knowledge systems.

image

It’s been awhile since I walked through the creation of one of art pieces that started life as a photograph, so I thought I’d pick one of my favorites: Seeking…

Digital Printing 101

Chris Meyer | 02/18

The basic steps to getting what you see on paper match what you saw on your screen.

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One old theory of knowledge was that we were born knowing everything (having gained that knowledge in a previous life), and it was just a matter of “remembering” that which was obvious…

Avian Aspirations

Chris Meyer | 01/29

A journey from a landscaping rock to an abstract collage.

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The primary reason I agreed to write this Hybrid Artist blog was to share information about using photographs as the basis for creating collages as well as other forms of abstracted…



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The Object

Chris Meyer | 10/05- 08:29 AM

One of most recent works was the cause of serious soul-searching over the nature of my art.

Ever have one of those pieces that you put in a drawer for a couple of years, pulling it out periodically only to shove it back in because your head wasn’t in the right space yet to deal with it? That’s the underlying story behind this piece, The Object. In this case, it wasn’t just the image I was having trouble with - it was also the text I decided to attach to the image to give it a story. But sometimes, you just have to challenge yourself.

In this article, I want to share both the technical details of how this piece came together, as well as my internal conversation over the nature of abstract art and how it relates to photography.

image

Seeking to Understand

Chris Meyer | 08/20- 08:06 PM

My process for creating a mixed media piece about knowledge systems.

It’s been awhile since I walked through the creation of one of art pieces that started life as a photograph, so I thought I’d pick one of my favorites: Seeking to Understand. Although it was created a couple of years ago just after I moved to New Mexcio, the process is similar to that of many of my current works.

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